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Global Aging and Longevity Science | Colin Farrelly | TEDxQueensU 

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By 2050 there will be over 2 billion persons over the age of 60. Colin Farrelly is a political philosopher who has published 2 books and over 30 academic journal articles on the ethical and social significance of the “genetic revolution”. Farrelly characterizes the story of the aging of the human species as the story of the 3 “S’s”- (1) Success, (2) Significant Challenge and (3) Science. First, global aging is a SUCCESS story. Historically, life expectancy at birth for humanity did not exceed age 30, due to high rates of early and mid-life mortality. Life really was, as Thomas Hobbes eloquently phrased things, “nasty, brutish and short”. Today life expectancy is age 72, and will rise to 81 by the year 2100. The second story of global aging is the SIGNIFICANT CHALLENGE of promoting health in a world where the chronic diseases of late life are prevalent. As we get older our risks for multi-morbidity increase. Never before in our history has the inborn aging process itself posed a significant health threat to human populations. The third, and final, chapter in the story of global aging is the story of the SCIENCE and innovation needed to ensure we increase the human healthspan and compress the period of frailty, disability and disease at the end of life. This is most likely to come from an applied gerontological intervention that targets the most significant risk factor for all chronic diseases- aging itself.
Continue the conversation with Colin and TEDxQueensU @ www.thinkwire.com/series/tedx... Colin Farrelly is Professor and Queen’s National Scholar in the Department of Political Studies at Queen’s University. He has also held academic appointments at UCLA, Oxford University, Waterloo University, Manchester University, Birmingham University and the University of Waterloo. In the fall of 2018 Colin was the Fulbright Visiting Research Chair in the Social Sciences at the University of Hawaii.
Colin is the author and editor of 6 books and approximately 50 journal articles in political science, philosophy, law, science and medicine. Most of his research focuses on the ethical and social implications of the genetic revolution (especially altering human aging). His recent books include Biologically Modified Justice (Cambridge University Press, 2016) and Genetic Ethics: An Introduction (Polity Books in 2018).
Colin is also involved in volunteer initiatives to teach political philosophy and ethics to both inmates and children. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx

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30 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 17   
@sapphirus3023
@sapphirus3023 3 года назад
10:56 I really like this slide about bingus!
@tret6362
@tret6362 3 года назад
bingus sent me. thanks bingus!
@tret6362
@tret6362 11 месяцев назад
4 years later, still thanking bingus!🤓🌯
@jamebozo
@jamebozo 5 лет назад
similar to Nir Barzilai, M.D presentation. This topic is as important, if not more important than AI or SpaceX or all those other topics. Since pushing back on age related diseases for even a few years, would save billions of government medical spending.
@extraterrestrial16
@extraterrestrial16 3 года назад
The issue is where not ready for c this level of ageing.
@JulesLife
@JulesLife 5 лет назад
This man's children refused to help him with his Powerpoint presentation.
@danielrodgers3002
@danielrodgers3002 4 года назад
they didn't help him get the right size of pants either.
@increasemaximumlifespan2502
@increasemaximumlifespan2502 4 года назад
Ugh so frustrating when researchers are so inadequate at describing research in aging
@mistwalker11
@mistwalker11 5 лет назад
Great talk! Love it! :) And I totally agree with Colin, a preventive approach to age-related diseases (I mean addressing the root mechanisms of aging to postpone a spectrum of diseases at once) is going to be much more effective than the modern medicine that is palliative in nature. Medical interventions to do that are already in human clinical trials, thankfully. :) The first ones are expected to get to the market in the next 5 years.
@rafareliyev9851
@rafareliyev9851 5 лет назад
I like this speech
@raunaklanjewar677
@raunaklanjewar677 3 года назад
"Centenarians" already sounds like an alien species.
@ldragon8er
@ldragon8er 4 года назад
A very good speech. However I much ask, is there no limit to human population growth and isn't extending human life span just going to make it more difficult to address degradation of the planet's finite amount of clean water, healthy food, breathable air, etc? Perhaps if enough is invested in the rich 1% living longer, the poor with wither away, thus solving the population problem. A win-win for the 1% and the planet. Sorry if I don't sound very very up-beat.
@9xqspx6
@9xqspx6 3 года назад
Uhm... I might be the first mean commenter, but I really think a better title for this could have been "How to speak for 16 minutes without saying anything". :/
@philipbuckley759
@philipbuckley759 2 года назад
nothing here...
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