tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post3325850384420347598..comments2024-03-28T07:57:49.338+00:00Comments on Poul Anderson Appreciation: Immortality?Ketlanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08588156788583883454noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-54518233402460390112022-11-01T22:42:26.258+00:002022-11-01T22:42:26.258+00:00Kaor, Jim!
Never thought of that, accidental or v...Kaor, Jim!<br /><br />Never thought of that, accidental or violent death might prevent many from suffering memory overload problems. Many, not just a few.<br /><br />Ad astra! SeanSean M. Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13973738112230622557noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-28757791187859243612022-11-01T20:25:21.293+00:002022-11-01T20:25:21.293+00:00Or earlier experiences might just be forgotten so ...Or earlier experiences might just be forgotten so that there is no overload.paulshackley2017@gmail.comhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17704115766930975286noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-23964907259130420182022-11-01T16:50:32.072+00:002022-11-01T16:50:32.072+00:00Unaging doesn't mean immortal.
If the chance o...Unaging doesn't mean immortal.<br />If the chance of accidental death per year doesn't change then unaging humans would have a 'half life' of about 800 years, if I recall the calculation correctly.<br />Memory overload might not become a problem for many people.Jim Baerghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03182949391365921637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-77833369962377351712016-02-19T17:43:14.282+00:002016-02-19T17:43:14.282+00:00Kaor, Paul!
Of the list of characters from the wo...Kaor, Paul!<br /><br />Of the list of characters from the works of Anderson, Blish, and Niven whose lives were extended by medical technology, I found Dominic Flandry's case the most convincing. That is, the "antisenescence" we see in the Technic Civilization stories does not give its beneficiaries implausibly extended lifespans. The most I've seen in those stories was how it allowed people to live in good health and vigor up to about age 100, 110, or 120.<br /><br />Mind you, I don't think it's necessarily impossible advances in medical science may extend human life spans in our real history, I simply don't think it would be for more than 150 at the most. In THE HARVEST OF STARS books genetically unmodified humans could hope to live about 130 years (genetically modified Lunarians about 140-50 years).<br /><br />And, of course, there's the problem of memory overload driving people mad if they lived a thousand years or more. I admire how Poul Anderson seems to be one of the very SF writers who thought of that (which he did even as early in his writing career as 1951 in his story "Pact").<br /><br />I'm frankly surprised that even S.M. Stirling does not seem to have thought of the memory overload problem in his four Draka books. THE STONE DOGS and DRAKON shows us how the Draka and their most favored serfs received life extending treatments, which if continued, could give them "indefinite" life spans. But no mention is made of how memory overload could lead to insanity or how it was handled.<br /><br />Btw, in Jerry Pournelle's Co-Dominium/Empire of Man stories, people in that time line could receive life extending medical treatments. I think they could live up to about age 140. Such treatments are mentioned in THE MOTE IN GOD'S EYE and THE GRIPPING HAND.<br /><br />And, of course, death has theological implications. While the bodies of men are naturally mortal, death was not what God had originally destined for us. God had planned for the first man and woman (whom we might as well call Adam and Eve) and all their descendants to have immortal lifespans on CONDITION of the first parents not failing a test of obedience God gave them. However, as Wisdom 2.24 says: "But, by the envy of the devil, death entered the world, and they who are in his possession experience it."<br /><br />But, our first parents were given a hint or promise of One to come who would overcome the malice of the devil and the consequences of man's sin. Moreover, as John 3.16 explicitly says, God would not forever leave mankind to endless death: "For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that those who believe in him may not perish, but may have life everlasting."<br /><br />SeanSean M. Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13973738112230622557noreply@blogger.com