It has led to overcrowding, increased taxes (to pay for medicad and social security), the continuation of some genetic diseases that we should wipe out, higher demand in food and medicines, etc
12/15/2006 2:19:50 PM
If y'all keep this up, some of these threads are bound to get locked. There are advantages to having more folks alive, though, as much as population control folks might prefer you believe otherwise.
12/15/2006 2:26:14 PM
12/15/2006 2:26:52 PM
Eugenics is fairly oldschool, really.
12/15/2006 2:33:25 PM
^^There's a difference between eugenics and letting natural selection work itself out.
12/15/2006 3:15:59 PM
Riiiight. There's also no difference between telling people they can't have treatment and telling people they have no right to live.
12/15/2006 3:18:18 PM
12/15/2006 3:41:34 PM
if we got rid of undesirable genetic traits i would no longer be able to watch obese children fight over the yogurt machine at golden corral
12/15/2006 3:44:30 PM
SYSTEMS THEORY FTW
12/15/2006 3:44:35 PM
One thing we can spank them for (in honesty) is creating a culture of medicine addicts. Ever notice how few medicines there are that only require you take them until your ill is cured? No, what you see instead are medicines prescribed for a person to take for the rest of his or her life.Anyone else remember back when you just took a medicine until you fucking felt better?Another thing modern medicine has killed is humor on television. How do you get back to laughing at the Daily Show after hearing the phrase "anal leakage" listed as a side affect about three or four dozen times during the commercial break? Medicine commercials used to be few and far between. Now they practically own the entire commercial break after 8pm.
12/15/2006 4:01:01 PM
especially VD commercials...they're always so happy they have herpes though.
12/15/2006 4:05:27 PM
i hope i get the herp just so i'll be motivated to hike and kayak
12/15/2006 4:17:16 PM
this thread is stupidmodern medicine improves quality of life
12/15/2006 6:10:53 PM
12/15/2006 6:25:34 PM
in the sense that we're deluding ourselves into believing we won't die, surebut society will live on
12/15/2006 7:37:40 PM
i cant wait til we figure out the human genome and start cloning and shitthats gonna be awesome
12/15/2006 7:41:25 PM
12/15/2006 11:46:47 PM
Are you really this stupid in real life?
12/16/2006 1:33:52 AM
12/16/2006 5:45:29 AM
12/16/2006 11:07:00 AM
yeah i can't help but wonder sometime how some people reproduce.like the 300lb fat woman at walmart w/ 3 kids, i wonder how drunk the father had to be
12/16/2006 11:13:45 AM
12/16/2006 11:43:38 AM
12/16/2006 2:19:51 PM
Oh come on. Combine the advances in nanotech with the advances in AI and I think there might be a little smoke to the idea, if not a fire.
12/16/2006 2:45:13 PM
Seriously, if you knew how much work went into making even one computer chip, you wouldn't say "We'll totally cure death in our lifetime!"That's just absolutely insane. I have no idea why nanotechnology is viewed as some kind of miracle worker, but no, I really don't see that happening at all.
12/17/2006 12:52:14 AM
12/17/2006 1:29:44 AM
hempster, speaking in absolutes, "overpopulation" has not yet been invented. According to a U.N. study with existing technology (the study was back in 2001 or something) this planet could easily support 20 billion people. By the time we have 20 billion people (the demographics say never) we will have technology the likes of which are unknown today. As for your analogy that "people need to understand", it is bullshit: people are as unlike cells as can be possible. For example, to use a 17th century example: the more foxes introduced into an ecosystem, the fewer chickens there will be; conversely, the more humans introduced into an ecosystem, the more chickens there will be. This example was driven from an odd correlation noticed in rural areas: as the human population grew, so did the fox population (later traps were introduced and this correlation was broken) because more humans meant more farms and therefore more opportunities for pilfered chickens. To your example, the more cells there are, the less nutrients are available for new cells. Conversely, the more people there are, the more nutrients will be produced through the application of intellect for new people.
12/17/2006 1:51:26 AM
12/17/2006 4:07:10 AM
12/17/2006 8:58:08 AM
everytime i stumble in here im amazed at how much you people care about so little.
12/17/2006 9:42:31 AM
hempster, I got your analogy. I did not miss it, it was just incorrect. Curring mortality DOES NOT automatically lead to lethal overpopulation. If I wanted to fix your analogy, it would look like this:animal cells : programmed cell death : cancer : nutrient starvationindividual humans : natural human mortality : higher population : higher carrying capacityDo you get my analogy? The more people you have the more people can be supported. The more cancer cells you have the fewer cells can be supported.
12/17/2006 10:11:17 AM
12/17/2006 2:11:48 PM
An overall increase in life span won't necessarily lead to an increase in population. In the short term, it would, but as more people started living longer, people would likely naturally have less kids, or have kids later in life, causing population growth to even out.It would probably fix some problems if we could live as long as we wanted to, with people not feeling desperate to achieve certain life goals before they die.
12/17/2006 2:36:12 PM
Not losing the most knowledgable members of society could also be a plus. Or a minus. Those old bastards might hold back change. Who knows.
12/17/2006 2:54:55 PM
12/17/2006 5:59:30 PM
12/17/2006 7:32:52 PM
12/17/2006 8:21:18 PM
12/17/2006 8:49:44 PM
What is this "supposed" to? Doesn't sound very scientific to me.
12/17/2006 8:51:14 PM
If we all die in less than 4000 years, then evidence suggests humans can't and won't live that long. I don't see what's wrong with nature's death system.fucking semantics bullshit[Edited on December 17, 2006 at 9:00 PM. Reason : .]
12/17/2006 8:53:59 PM
It's not semantics bullshit. You're assuming that humans are built with some sense of purpose or design.
12/17/2006 9:15:46 PM
No, I just don't see why this is the final aim of medicine. Why is longevity the most important thing?And by saying that, aren't you also assuming our purpose is to cheat death eventually?I definitely think science can solve problems, but I don't think death should be one of them.[Edited on December 17, 2006 at 9:28 PM. Reason : .]
12/17/2006 9:25:38 PM
12/17/2006 9:28:32 PM
By all means, try to do so. I'll believe it when I see it.
12/17/2006 9:37:43 PM
It might be hard to do, it might not be possible. But you oppose the quest for longer life with a weird amount of vitriol. Not everybody hates life as much as you.
12/17/2006 9:43:11 PM
12/17/2006 9:49:22 PM
12/17/2006 10:08:35 PM
I agree it might take a long time, though I rather doubt it. If something stopped research (and there are a few things that could), it might even never happen. But I don't see how it could be physically impossible.
12/17/2006 10:13:20 PM
12/17/2006 10:23:05 PM
And you presume an answer. Your attitude towards this is defeatist. You've provided no good argument against the possibility of this other than "we haven't yet" and "lol like to see you do it."
12/17/2006 10:26:00 PM