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Entrepreneur backs research on anti-aging
Scientist says humans could live indefinitely
Monday, September 18, 2006
A controversial scientist who hopes to help humans live for thousands of years has received a multimillion-dollar grant from a Bay Area entrepreneur.
Peter A. Thiel, co-founder and former chief executive officer of the online payments system PayPal, announced Saturday he is pledging $3.5 million "to support scientific research into the alleviation and eventual reversal of the debilities caused by aging."
The recipient will be the Methuselah Foundation, a Springfield, Va., nonprofit started and run by the most colorful scientist in aging research: Aubrey de Grey, a 43-year-old English researcher who says he hopes to "radically postpone aging, giving indefinite life spans."
In short, de Grey's thesis is that there are seven main causes of aging, and that if those can be licked, then people could live indefinitely.
Among aging experts, de Grey's reputation is so widely contested that a headline over an article last year in an MIT-based publication, Technology Review, asked: "He's brilliant, but is he nuts?" In a tongue-in-cheek letter to the magazine in response to the story, top authority on aging Richard Miller, of the University of Michigan, wrote that he would like de Grey to help him solve a similarly complex technological problem: how to make pigs fly.
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Luther Blissett wrote:...Meritocracy is worth keeping around as a reference or topic of discussion or idea. I don't think we should just throw the term away. Something resembling meritocracy could be a natural byproduct of democratic socialism at some point in the future.
vanlose kid wrote:Luther Blissett wrote:...Meritocracy is worth keeping around as a reference or topic of discussion or idea. I don't think we should just throw the term away. Something resembling meritocracy could be a natural byproduct of democratic socialism at some point in the future.
meritocracy, rule of the what? the meritorious? is that not aristocracy?
on edit: not saying that you're promoting aristocracy, LB, just can't see any substantial difference.
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Luther Blissett wrote:vanlose kid wrote:Luther Blissett wrote:...Meritocracy is worth keeping around as a reference or topic of discussion or idea. I don't think we should just throw the term away. Something resembling meritocracy could be a natural byproduct of democratic socialism at some point in the future.
meritocracy, rule of the what? the meritorious? is that not aristocracy?
on edit: not saying that you're promoting aristocracy, LB, just can't see any substantial difference.
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I always thought that it was rule by the most intelligent and talented. That we, if we were truly free and living in a pure democracy, whereby the people make the decisions, that we would raise up our best for instances when leadership is required?
Luther Blissett wrote:vanlose kid wrote:Luther Blissett wrote:...Meritocracy is worth keeping around as a reference or topic of discussion or idea. I don't think we should just throw the term away. Something resembling meritocracy could be a natural byproduct of democratic socialism at some point in the future.
meritocracy, rule of the what? the meritorious? is that not aristocracy?
on edit: not saying that you're promoting aristocracy, LB, just can't see any substantial difference.
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I always thought that it was rule by the most intelligent and talented. That we, if we were truly free and living in a pure democracy, whereby the people make the decisions, that we would raise up our best for instances when leadership is required?
vanlose kid wrote:Luther Blissett wrote:vanlose kid wrote:Luther Blissett wrote:...Meritocracy is worth keeping around as a reference or topic of discussion or idea. I don't think we should just throw the term away. Something resembling meritocracy could be a natural byproduct of democratic socialism at some point in the future.
meritocracy, rule of the what? the meritorious? is that not aristocracy?
on edit: not saying that you're promoting aristocracy, LB, just can't see any substantial difference.
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I always thought that it was rule by the most intelligent and talented. That we, if we were truly free and living in a pure democracy, whereby the people make the decisions, that we would raise up our best for instances when leadership is required?
as per the myth (or sale-pitch) anyway.
but that aside, in a true democracy, why would we need rulers?
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gnosticheresy_2 wrote:Luther Blissett wrote:vanlose kid wrote:Luther Blissett wrote:...Meritocracy is worth keeping around as a reference or topic of discussion or idea. I don't think we should just throw the term away. Something resembling meritocracy could be a natural byproduct of democratic socialism at some point in the future.
meritocracy, rule of the what? the meritorious? is that not aristocracy?
on edit: not saying that you're promoting aristocracy, LB, just can't see any substantial difference.
*
I always thought that it was rule by the most intelligent and talented. That we, if we were truly free and living in a pure democracy, whereby the people make the decisions, that we would raise up our best for instances when leadership is required?
What is and who are "our best"? I don't think we need to be living in a "pure" democracy to decide that...?
Stephen Morgan wrote:If only there was some unit, possession of a surfeit of which could serve both to distinguish one as a meritorious individual and to gain a superior place in society.
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