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![]() This is for real. Telomeres are our bodies cells natural signal to induce cell death, and they have been working on stopping them for years. Well, now that is a reality and they have induced an old mouse to become young. Holy fucking shit.
http://www.newkerala.com/news/world/fullnews-94421.html http://www.prokerala.com/news/articles/a184877.html http://www.nature.com/news/2010/1011....2010.635.html
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J/K.... pretty sick stuff science-wise. | |||
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#4
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![]() that's awesome!!! That is part of why Cancer Cells live infinitely. Their telomeres never get shorter..... soooooooo The scientists will have to find a fine balance between increasing longevity and inducing cancer...actually I don't know if extra amounts of telemorase would create cancer but if you have a cell that will never die...the DNA has much more time to mutate.
Interesting. I've always been fascinated with genetics and cell and molecular biology. My degree is in just straight biology but I've had trouble deciding which direction to go with my masters - either a cell & molecular biology type masters or wildlife management. Thank you for posting this!! | ||
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#5
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Good luck in your school!! [You must be logged in to view images. Log in or Register.]
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#6
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![]() Very interesting articles, thank you for posting them! I wonder what effect this would have on our perceived speed up of time with age.
http://everything2.com/user/Professo...p%20with%20age Cognitive capacities may also be another problem. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interfe...e_Interference This assuming if we would actually be able to use this method of of preventing cell death and live for hundreds of years.
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Watch out for the medallion, my diamonds are reckless.
Feels like a halfling is hangin' from my necklace. | ||
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![]() Leonard Hayflick is probably shaking his fist about this.
Might I remind you, resveratrol also worked on mice. Someone in Russia was working on a drug - SKQ1, and started touting similar results (but he is a charlatan, seriously) -- ameliorating chronic degenerative disease isn't going anywhere, any time soon. No telomerase, leading to over-short telomeres is easy to deal with the downstream problems (TERT/cancer) in mice if you engineer them from the ground up. Drug therapy now, gene therapy in future technologies ... but really to take any type of advancement from this type of "breakthrough" aside from over-hype in the press, you're going to have to start engineering humans like we have with the mice. I mean I guess that'd get rid of back hair if we bred humans hairless, which is a plus... but telomerase reverse transcriptase is serious business. | ||
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#8
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![]() http://www.nature.com/news/2010/1011....2010.635.html
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That was my first thought. My second thought is that it would be hulluva expensive because the pharma industry never passes up an opportunity to make cash. Think how big it would be. No one wants to die. No one wants to see their loved ones grow old and increasingly hold a balance between chronically ill and just coping. They'd have us all over the barrel. Just like travel. We all want and need to travel and since oil is the most common fuel they can call the shots because they own the oil. My third thought is that there's another way to live forever. Believe in god and in an afterlife. If you're wrong, it won't matter because you'll be too dead to know the difference. It's the most popular fountain of youth. Another popular way to live forever is to not focus on yourself. Focus on society and civilization and humanity. If you treat those things as your identity and purpose, then your own death is not the death of your identity or your purpose. Until society or civilization or humanity dies, then for these people they will live forever. I've often wondered what would it be like to copy myself with 100% accuracy. So sitting across from me would be my duplicate. He would be exactly as I was at the moment of the copying process. So I'd be looking, effectively, at me. He would probably be thinking the same things as me. He'd be looking at me and thinking something like: "That guy over there is probably thinking what I'm thinking!" The only difference between us would be that I know I'm the original, but other than that it's a matter of opinion. The question would arise: If one of us had to die at that moment, would it really matter? Because one would still remain... Is the death of "me" really the death of me? Or is it only the death of an illusion? How do we know that we're really separate in the grand scheme of things anyway? Something leads me to believe we're all the same, just in different clothes. There're nearly 7 billion other people on this planet that have experienced things differently from me. My current philosophy tells me that if I had been them then I would have turned out exactly as they have. This means that I already have lived as them. So there's no need for me to wish I was someone else or wish I could live forever so that I could experience all that life has to offer. I have lived every life on this earth since the beginning of time and will live every life to come. Why do I say this? Because if I had been any other person in any other time or place, I would have lived my life exactly the same way as them. So why worry? Because I will die, but is death really the death of me or am I worrying about an illusion that does not exist? Can we as people learn to appreciate what others have as opposed to what we have? I doubt life in this universe will ever be equal or fair. So is it possible to see ourselves in others such that the experiences of others can be appreciated by ourselves without prejudice or jealousy? If you're them, they're you, then yes! A sublime way to explain this is that we're all the same beam of light broken up by a prism into different colors. This gives the illusion of different beams of light when in reality they all originate from a single source.
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Full-Time noob. Wipes your windows, joins your groups.
Raiding: http://www.project1999.com/forums/sh...&postcount=109 P1999 Class Popularity Chart: http://www.project1999.com/forums/sh...7&postcount=48 P1999 PvP Statistics: http://www.project1999.com/forums/sh...9&postcount=59 "Global chat is to conversation what pok books are to travel, but without sufficient population it doesn't matter." | |||
Last edited by stormlord; 11-30-2010 at 01:29 PM..
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You should probably read about mind uploading (protein kinase C/C zeta mapping for long term memory structure, and thorough understanding of neurogenesis for mapping real time data) -- through human ingenuity, one day your illusion idea might come to full fruition. There is nothing to suggest that in nature exists such a thing though, other than wishful thinking. It's been suggested that even hydra age, and eventually die. | |||||||
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#10
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It's easy to talk about reality and about rationalizing circumstances, but when you confront it in a very personal setting, it's not so easy. For example, what if you're facing your dad and he's hurt because of a loss, and he turns to his religion to find council. Would you seriously approach him and tell him that he's acting irrationally and that his religion is just him willing away the pain of loss? I ask you this because i've faced many predicaments like this. It's one thing to think that religion is insanity and it's quite another to say this to somebody in tears who will only understand a fraction of what you're saying. It feels pointless to me to fight against the mass ocean of emotions and limits that exist inside people. If religion is his medicine, then I won't interrupt him. I'll only interrupt him when I feel his religion is directly hurting someone in an obvious way. I attended a funeral yesterday, the second one in a year. The attending pastor drilled into our heads that the deceased has went to a better place and that despite the sadness we feel there will be better times and merry songs to come. The whole point of his sermon was to attempt to relieve our worries and to encourage a sense of closure so that we can both remember the person who died but also carry on with ourt lives and not be destroyed by the grief we feel. It's a way to open a door in a very dark place, a door that offers hope and light. It's a way to see what's around us without feeling crippled by it. I did not believe the actual religious doctrine. I am not a christian, but I fully understand the point of all of it. It's a way to cope. It's a way to love. It's a way to connect and to not feel lonely. How is that bad? I am a human being. I am not going to stand up in the middle of the sermons and proclaim that this religious ceremony is foolish and that the person in the coffin is officially dead and that there's no afterlife and that wasting our time worrying about the dead is not productive because nothing we do can bring them back or give justice to them. I am not saying that I am right and that you're wrong. I am saying that... what good does it do? It's like winning a race in the special olympics. It means nothing unless you're disabled too. I freely admit that, deep down, I feel that death is the end and there's nothing more and that any meaning in life that exists is temporal and passing. However, I'd love to be proven wrong. That's why I entertain these thoughts. I want to wonder: What if? What if we're not as different as we think we're? What if the moon really is made of cheese? Quote:
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Full-Time noob. Wipes your windows, joins your groups.
Raiding: http://www.project1999.com/forums/sh...&postcount=109 P1999 Class Popularity Chart: http://www.project1999.com/forums/sh...7&postcount=48 P1999 PvP Statistics: http://www.project1999.com/forums/sh...9&postcount=59 "Global chat is to conversation what pok books are to travel, but without sufficient population it doesn't matter." | ||||
Last edited by stormlord; 11-30-2010 at 03:06 PM..
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