Aging: The Paradox of Life: Why We Age


Product Description
For centuries people have puzzled over the inevitability of human aging. At the end of the 20th century a remarkable scientific discovery emerged, based on a series of important interconnected insights over quite a long period of time. The aim of this book is to dispel ignorance by explaining in non-technical language what are the reasons for aging and the myth of excessive prolongation of life.
</p>Aging: The Paradox of Life: Why We Age Review
This book is well written and easy to follow. I disagreed with many of the authors conclusions, but I thought he brought up some interesting ideas, like the brain being a single point of failure. But he fails to realize the single points of failure are common in any system, and as long as they have lots of redundancy built in, like our brains do, then this isn't really a problem. He also seems to recognize places where single points of failure (heart, brain) have little or no _natural_ repair, but disparages medical advances that make such 'natural' issues irrelevant. For example, for heart replacement, stem cells could make surgery unneeded, but if you like surgery as an answer, there are some really amazing things on the horizon that make his arguments somewhat dated [...]In fact, it feels like the author has a negative thesis that people can't live longer, and then sets out to prove that aging is not a solvable problem. I'm afraid that he makes some good points, but fails to prove his thesis.
Nevertheless, I found the book interesting reading, and thought provoking. And it could be valuable teaching aid, albeit a bit dated (2007)
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