Stanford CIS

The Tricky Ethics of Living Longer

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"“We can't cherry-pick the costs or savings to focus on,” says Patrick Lin, director of the Ethics + Emerging Sciences Group at California Polytechnic State University. Instead, he says,to fairly examine the ethics involved, we should consider impacts both on the individual and society level. “Yes, healthier people may mean lower health costs and more productivity, but that's a partial picture at best. We'd also have to consider the impact of extended lives on, say, Social Security, pensions, job openings given fewer retirements, crime from unemployment, natural resources, urban density, copyright durations, prison sentences, and many, many other effects.”

Still, the research that could lead to life extension is happening, so the conversation about its implications should, too. “Personally, I'm cautiously optimistic about life extension research, but we need to be careful to manage the hype and not ignore the risks,” says Lin. “Will we ever become immortal? I don't know, and no one else can see that far, either. But even extending our lives another 20-100 years or more, to start with, is a game-changer.”"

Published in: Press , ethics