Monday, October 17, 2011

Life After Steve Jobs

(February 24, 1955 à Oct. 5, 2011)
By Christie Ewen

"No one wants to die. Even people who want to go to heaven don't want to die to get there. And yet death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it. And that is as it should be, because death is very likely the single best invention of life. It is life's change agent. It clears out the old to make way for the new." -Steve Jobs, Stanford University commencement speech, 2005

Just believing is where I find religion to play a significant role in what is possible.  Unfortunately, Steve Jobs accepted that mortality is a necessary part of life: in his own words, “And that is as it should be”.  How could a man worth over 8 billion dollars who lived every day of his life as if it was his last not live forever?  I believe the cure is in reprogramming the genes.  If only he had contacted me ...

Steve Jobs has done so much for humanity in liberating knowledge and I’m ever so grateful.  I wish he could have stayed true to himself to the very end – “stay foolish” and ultimately defied death.

References:
Steve Jobs: 20 Best Quotes

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Nature vs. Nurture

"The winner was a mouse that did not receive any dietary or pharmacological treatment at all, just an enriched environment. The mouse lived for 1551 days (about 4.2 years)." -- http://www.methuselahfoundation.org/


We have polluted the earth almost to the point of no return.  I am astonished by how many plastic bags are distributed in stores.  Consumerism for economic recovery does not have to be irresponsible spending in plastic and toxic wastes.  Protecting our environment is critical for longevity.  


I have this idea for a business and longevity (you are more than welcome to implement this particular cemetary/agriculture idea): What begets life begets death and vice versa.  How about a cemetery that accelerates this process?  Cremation is not the answer for reincarnation rather a cemetery that is also used for agriculture.


(c) Christie Ewen 2011

Monday, January 17, 2011

How does something old turn new again?

Life and death go hand in hand.  What gets old need to turn new again and that usually happens by destruction.  Imagine if people were like bacteria, never to die but get old complete with the accumulation of the diseases of mind and body - Mankind would be wiped out as we know it.  The multi-priceless question is: How does something old turn new again? and how can we go about this in a continuum?  How can a person be immortal?

Reproduction through intercourse was through evolution and the next evolution will come about by self reproduction.

Is there an example of life where something old turns new again through which humans can imitate?

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

It has been a while ...

I was reminded what's been going on in the NYTimes article about "Awaiting the Genome Payoff". I can't believe the daily obstacles that are getting in the way of progress. Progress has been slow but there is progress. The most awesome news to date is the creation of artificial life.
I'm going to raise the question again: "Where is the soul?" In the DNA. Simply the recreation of an individual is the recreation of the soul.


Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Why are we here?

I am fascinated by the NYTimes article about our existence. Can our existence be explained by simple mathematics? Given more matter than anti-matter we exist ... as opposed to being less than dead?
What is the difference between positive and negative in magnetism? They are opposite forces where morality doesn't even play a role. We understand positive to be good and negative to be bad when really they are just labels.
We could exist in an alternate universe if we made it happen ... not in binary but whatever distribution we want.

(c) Christie Ewen 2010

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Hydra

by Christie Ewen 2/13/10

This fresh water organism deserves more attention. Hydra may be immortal because they regenerate their tissues and organs without an apparent end state. There's not enough data to make a conclusion but Daniel E. Martinez's study appears to suggest Hydra are indeed immortal.

An interesting point raised about evolutionary biology in both sources listed below is about TIMING. Just having the desired genes (that includes the so called "junk" DNA) is not enough to make an organism immortal, switches need to turn the genes ON and/or OFF at specific times.



REFERENCES

by Daniel E. Martinez


What is the difference between aging and senescence?

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Training to Be Young Again

How about training to be young again? In the movie, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, a man regresses from an old man into a baby. Rather than just growing into an adult how about switching gears to be young again?
Do you remember what it was like to be young? so carefree? happy? hopeful? Your heart beats differently. No bills to worry about. No worries about invisible invaders called germs. All the stress that goes hand in hand with growing up. What if we could pick what we can forget? like selective amnesia?
And if we can regress like in the movie, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, who will take care of us? Interestingly, the Dali Lama monks believe in reincarnation and they take it as so far to take care of a child believed to be an incarnate of someone deceased. Perhaps, these monks have been preparing for the day when reincarnation is made possible through science. Maybe science is not exactly what they expected but the idea of living forever and how to deal with immortality is the same.