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Views & Reviews - Between the Lines How long is a life?

Date published: 
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
News source: 
BMJ - Theodore Dalrymple, writer and retired doctor
Region: 
International

Not long ago I was asked (being a doctor) to appear in a public discussion on the subject of longevity. My ignorance of the subject seemed to the organiser a novel—and indeed a not quite sufficient or respectable—reason for refusal.

One of the proposed panellists was an eminent scientist who believed that we were on the verge of abolishing death; which abolition, were it ever to be brought about, would be grossly unfair to all those people who had died in the previous centuries.

However, I suspected (without having an evidence base for my suspicion) that the scientist was talking nonsense. Of course, the natural span of human life has long been a matter of speculation. For example, Lionel Arthur Tollemache (1838-1919) wrote an essay in the 1870s on the question of whether or not there were any true centenarians and, if there were, how many there were.

Tollemache is . . . [Full text of this article]

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