Meticulotron

joined 1 year ago
[–] Meticulotron@kbin.social 6 points 1 year ago

And yet we are somehow allowed to issue billions in forgivable loans to churches that don't pay taxes.

[–] Meticulotron@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

The change has already begun. Today in conversations about how it will impact us and tomorrow how we'll actually deal with it but I believe it's arrival is imminent.

We have to see beyond our current problems. Look further down the road.

Social upheaval and massive changes, absolutely. Something comes after that though. An immortal being would seem to be far more concerned about the world we live in than a recent news station saying something like "why take care of the earth when we have heaven?"

You do have a great point about those fossils and outdated viewpoints but it's a massive generational social construct built off of generations of life existing in the way it has for millions of years. It is changing in more ways than just immortality though. We're already on the bleeding edge of replacing people with AI (wendys drive through) and it will grow.

Put it all together and you have robot/ai workers to fill most of the slots people currently work along with immortality, advances in every field of science... So much is changing so fast. Faster than it's ever changed.

Ok, I apologize for my jumbled not very connected or well thought out response but my imagination is over caffeinated.

[–] Meticulotron@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago

I'm not interested in where my atoms go when I'm gone. I want to jealously hoard my atoms and become a living Theseus ship of repaired/replaced organs/parts.

[–] Meticulotron@kbin.social 5 points 1 year ago

Also super appealing. Achieving this advancement will be our first step in exploring the universe. Seeing as we've as yet found no others, it falls on us to become the "precursors"

The prospect of getting older - now that I'm older - and running out of time, ability or mental sharpness has had a negative impact on me in the last couple years.
There are so many things I still want to do, try, and create. Some of which I have a lot of regrets that I haven't done yet. Some of which I fear I've grown too old to accomplish.

I'd really like to live a lot longer. Now, fear of death, running out of time and my body and mind degrading have established a firm purchase on part of my mind.

What I'd love to be able to do is survive the trip to another planet and spend a couple decades researching and exploring the local flora/fauna.

I agree that billionaires will own it but... advanced tools like the crispr are available to almost anyone today and as science progress is posted and talked about, I think there will be a lot of people that can duplicate the work.

[–] Meticulotron@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago

The idea that one could live indefinitely would really change a lot of things about how our current world works.

What's something you think would change?

[–] Meticulotron@kbin.social 7 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Fun

Comical - do you think immortality is more likely to be achieved by science or religion?

I'm pretty sure religion is more concerned with preventing/resisting progress in just about anything.