Is Longevity Research Inherently Immoral? - Reason Online (blog)
Posted by admin / Under Strategies For Engineered Negligible Senescence![]() Reason Online (blog) | Is Longevity Research Inherently Immoral? Reason Online (blog) I suspect that people interested in SENS [Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence] are likely to be especially averse to the kinds of risks involved in clinical trials. They are, after all, being enticed by the promise of millennial life spans. |
Published on Thursday 9th of February 2012 03:07:30 AM
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To Live Much Longer, We'll Need Dangerous, Ethically Troubling Clinical Trials - Slate Magazine
Posted by admin / Under Strategies For Engineered Negligible Senescence![]() Slate Magazine | To Live Much Longer, We'll Need Dangerous, Ethically Troubling Clinical Trials Slate Magazine The busiest person in this area is Aubrey de Grey, founder of the Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence Foundation, or SENS. De Grey aspires to a future in which we become negligibly senescent: People will no longer experience advancing ... |
Published on Thursday 9th of February 2012 03:07:30 AM
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Demonstration for Radical Life Extension in Tel Aviv - Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies
Posted by admin / Under Strategies For Engineered Negligible SenescenceDemonstration for Radical Life Extension in Tel Aviv Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies Greetings were sent by Dr. Aubrey de Grey, Chief Science Officer at Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence (SENS) Foundation Further greeting came from Prof. Frank Tipler of Tulane University, the author of “The Physics of Immortality” who was ... |
Published on Thursday 9th of February 2012 03:07:30 AM
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The cyborgs are coming! Living brains implanted with electronic chips to ... - Daily Mail
Posted by admin / Under Strategies For Engineered Negligible Senescence![]() Daily Mail | The cyborgs are coming! Living brains implanted with electronic chips to ... Daily Mail Mintz, who recently presented his research at the Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence meeting in Cambridge, UK. In the future, this robo-cerebellum could lead to electronic implants that replace damaged tissues in the human brain. |
Published on Thursday 9th of February 2012 03:07:30 AM
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