Below are five common objections to human immortality with my responses to each of them.
#1: “Old people don’t change their minds.”
Elon Musk famously espouses this objection against immortality. He’s concerned about society getting static as a result of people living for a very long time because according to him, “the truth is, most people don’t change their mind. They just die. So if they don’t die, we will be stuck with old ideas and society wouldn’t advance.”
This line of thinking is completely misconceived. Progress is not inevitable “one funeral at a time”. Society was static for hundreds of thousands of years before the Enlightenment. And in those days, humans used to live far shorter lives than today. The uneventful period before the Enlightenment was a result of irrational memes ingrained in society’s culture. These memes inhibited questioning what was known and survived by disabling the critical faculties of people that are responsible for advancing our knowledge.
Society getting static is a real concern. But letting people die is not the solution. As Popper wrote, “We can let our ideas die in our place.” Additionally, even today, most leaders of anything are removed long before illness or death force the issue.
#2: “We’ll run out of the planet’s resources.”
People are our most important resource because only they create the knowledge required to turn useless matter into what we can call a resource.
As I wrote in a recent newsletter, “It is misleading to call coal a ‘natural’ resource. Without our knowledge of how to extract and use coal as a source of energy, it would remain just a rock. We find ourselves in an environment that is the product of ideas. Just look around you at the evidence of civilization. Look at how the natural world has been pruned and modified.”
Without technology, many parts of the Earth (and beyond!) would be uninhabitable for us. Mother Nature is far more threatening than she is benevolent. People will go on turning useless matter into something that can be utilized for their productive purposes. And since space is practically infinite, this transformation of matter into resources can go on indefinitely. People are the solution, not the problem.
#3: “It is unnatural to live forever.”
False. The Turritopsis dohrnii aka the immortal jellyfish is a jellyfish that’s virtually immortal. This marvelous creature can revert to its juvenile state after reaching maturity and then grow up again, repeating the process indefinitely. Evolution has its wonders
Besides, humans have been creating tools to increase their inherent abilities ever since they emerged in the African Savannas. That is how we came to the top of the food chain. It is almost unnatural for us not to go against—primarily to advance—our inborn capabilities or instincts.
And you know what else is natural? Earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis, floods, droughts, asteroid impacts, and many more threats to all life on Earth. “Natural” does not mean good.
Death is not a part of life. It is the end of it. There is nothing good about death. Parochially, it can be caused by this or that disease. But the deeper explanation for death is always ignorance. No fundamental law requires it. We should treat it just as it is: another problem to be solved.
#4: “We’ll all run out of things to do and life will get meaningless without death.”
Contemplating their mortality seldom pushes people to achieve things they want to achieve. People do things to improve their lives, and the life of an immortal can improve indefinitely. There is always more work to be done, more space to be transformed, and a better world to aim towards.
For some, infinity is a bit hard to comprehend. It can help to reframe the question “Do you want to live forever?” to “Do you want to live tomorrow?” Most people do. Most people don’t have plans to die. If they’re feeling physically and mentally healthy, most people would say yes to tomorrow.
Creativity knows no bounds. Our knowledge can keep on growing deeper and broader in all fields without limit. As long as this is true, life need not get boring, the fun need never stop. As Leonardo da Vinci, someone who lived up to the very end of his life like a child said, “Learning never exhausts the mind.”
#5: “Only the rich will be able to afford to live forever causing greater inequality.”
Initially, it is true that only the rich will be able to access the metaphorical pill to immortality. But this doesn’t mean we shouldn’t work on it! Almost any new revolutionary product or technology has high unit cost before it can be made affordable for the masses.
And it eventually always is made affordable for the masses. The time period depends on how fast we innovate. But indeed, as John F. Kennedy allegedly said about capitalism, “A rising tide lifts all boats.”
In the pre-modern, poor world life expectancy was around 30 years in all regions of the world. Even the richest would have to see their children die before the age of five, and they wouldn’t live long either. Since then, the world has witnessed a rise in income inequality yet in every world region people today can expect to live more than twice as long compared to the 18th century. Not only do people live longer but their lives are arguably better in every way today than 300 years ago.
The weekly roundup
1. Book I’m reading
Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson
2. What I’m listening to
3. A review of How Innovation Works
I recently revisited Logan Chipkin’s brilliant review of Matt Ridley’s book How Innovation Works. Here’s an excerpt from it:
As fundamental as the innovation is to the story of humanity, Ridley argues that innovation predates our species by a few billion years. Touching on an almost spiritual note, he writes that “The beginning of life on earth was the first innovation: the first arrangement of atoms and bytes into improbable forms that could harness energy to a purpose…” Of course, there are differences between the creativity of a human mind and that of the biosphere, but many of the same principles govern both: the necessity of trial-and-error, a tendency toward incremental improvement, unpredictability, and trends of increasing complexity and specialization.
Compliment Logan’s article with an interview of Matt Ridley by Naval Ravikant.
4. Faraday on treating your theories
“I hold my theories on the tips of my fingers, so that the merest breath of fact will blow them away.”
— Michael Faraday
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Great post Arjun!