RE: In the future men will be able to carry children just like women
September 15, 2016 at 7:02 am
(This post was last modified: September 15, 2016 at 7:50 am by Excited Penguin.)
(September 15, 2016 at 6:46 am)Alex K Wrote:(September 14, 2016 at 6:52 am)Excited Penguin Wrote: I wouldn't even consider it, but I'd be happy for the people who would benefit from it.
I liked Alex's prediction about the future, though. He seems to share my kind of thinking on the matter. I believe as we start leading longer and longer lives we'll start focusing more on threats other than aging that threaten to end them. This is what you had in mind, right Alex?
That will also be the case, yes, but that's not exactly why I made that prediction.
Anyways, I don't remember where I heard it said, but it goes exactly along the lines of your argument and I found it very fascinating to think about: If we naturally lived to be a million years old, we would judge everyday risk entirely differently - for example, getting into a car or crossing a pedestrian crossing on foot would be considered an unbelievably high risk, because on one hand if you'd otherwise live to be a million, you are rather certain to die in traffic before you even approximately reach your full age, and also, there's more life at stake.
It could've been Ray Kurzweil we've heard these ideas from.
I believe transportation will continue to get safer and better. Self-driving cars are right around the corner, for example.
I didn't miss your point. I completely agree. But I also believe that by the time we improve on our healthcare technologies to such a degree as that we'll have also improved on eliminating or at least avoiding more obvious risks than those related to sickness and aging.
Violence between people might forever remain a concern, unless we're ready to give up significant rights. That might also be the case with rejuvenation technology. Everything comes at a cost.
We might have to submit to mind-reading technologies, ubiquitous surveillance, supervised and controlled birth rates, eugenics, behaviour-altering substances as a form of "treatment" and so on. This might all sound very bad, but it could also become the very best thing, if done right.