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   KEYWORDS : IMMORTALITY
News Resources Bibliography
Old People May Hold Key to Human Success -Study -- Maggie Fox  -- Reuters  -- July 06, 2004

Old people may hold the key to human civilization according to new research. They found evidence that, around 30,000 years ago, many more people started living into old age, in turn fueling a population explosion.


Where is thy sting? -- Nicholas D. Kristof  -- New York Times  -- August 12, 2003

Nicholas Kristof considers the implications of genetic engineering research into delaying the aging process.

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When brains meet computer brawn -- Ed Frauenheim  -- News.com  -- August 05, 2002

A new report from the U.S. Department of Commerce predicts that with the proper investments in technology, futuristic scenarios such as mind uploading, or humans living past 100 years, or people linking their brains together to form a global collective intelligence could come to pass in this century.

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Immortality and Sentencing Law -- Richard Haigh and Mirko Bagaric  -- Journal of Philosophy, Science, and Law  -- May 01, 2002

A forward thinking article that examines the implications of medical advances in human longetivity on sentencing law.

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Scientists find key to eternal life -- Alastair Dalton  -- The Scotsman  -- February 04, 2002

The search for the secret of eternal life has advanced a step, after scientists claimed they had located the gene responsible for healthy old age. Icelandic biotechnologists said they had isolated the Methuselah gene, which they believe could lead to the development of drugs enabling people to live longer.

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Discovery of 'Methuselah gene' unlocks secret of long life -- Robin McKie  -- Observer  -- February 03, 2002

Scientists have pinpointed the Methuselah gene - a stretch of DNA that confers healthy old age on men and women - raising the prospect that researchers may one day be able to create drugs that extend human life.

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Scientists Warn on 'Fountain of Youth' enzyme -- Patricia Reaney  -- Reuters  -- June 14, 2000

Scientists issued a warning on Wednesday about the potential danger of using an enzyme to immortalize cells for research or grow tissue to treat disease. They found that telomerase, the so-called fountain of youth enzyme that helps cells live longer, is linked to a cancer-causing gene and could increase the risk of disease.

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Eternal youth? It's all in the genes -- Damien Broderick  -- The Age  -- April 18, 2000

Dr. Damien Broderick considers the implications of new advances in life extension research.

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Do You Deserve to Live -- Virginia Postrel  -- Forbes  -- April 17, 2000

Virginia Postrel criticizes the viewpoint of ethicists who are opposed to life extension research.


Why science may bring curse of immortality -- Roger Highfield  -- The Telegraph (UK)  -- April 07, 2000

Dr. John Harris, a professor of bioethics, warned recently that better treatment of disease could lead to "generational cleansing" as people live longer. The elderly could be condemned to death by suicide or euthanasia after an allotted lifespan as medical advances raise the maximum age beyond 120.