I will most likely live to be 200 years old or more
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 3 votes and with 19 points ahead, the winner is...
- Publication date
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- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 4
- Time for argument
- One week
- Max argument characters
- 10,000
- Voting period
- One month
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
I think I have a better than coinflip chance of living to be 200 years old. I am 40 years old, a white male. I don't smoke. I am 5 ft 6 in and weigh approximately 190 pounds. My father died of heart disease at the age of about 55, but he also smoked 2 packs a day and was an alcoholic. My mom is 57 and has diabetes but is doing well other than the fact she smokes a pack a day and drinks a lot. My paternal grandmother died just after 70 years old, paternal grandfather at about 65 years of age both from heart related reasons. My maternal grandmother made it until about 65 but was a chronic smoker and has a lot of relatives who made it to 100, my maternal grandfather died from smoking and was about 70 he also drank heavily.
Rules
1. No kritics
2. obey the spirit of what is intended in the resolution if you misunderstood the resolution just ask in comments so we can be on the same page. You don't have to rush to accept the debate if you don't like the terms, I am more than willing to debate 2 people at a time on the same topic.
3. All citations within the debate itself. Do nont like to an external document with citations listed for you, don't put your citations in the comments so voters have to scroll potentially through 100 comments to find them. respect the voters and make the citations easy to find within the debate.
4. If you feel like we are not of equal debate skill and that you have a tremendous advantage over me, than handicap yourself by not using the letter F during the course of the debate.
- The Turritopsis dohrnii is a type of Jelly fish that scientists have called immortal due to it's ability to revert to earlier cellular states when it needs to and theoretically, some may have been around since the time of the dinosaurs.
- The hydra doesn't seem to have any senescence (cellular decay) at all and the genes responsible for it (FoxO genes) are also prevelant in humans and apparently is a signal to the cells for when to die. By altering the signal to match the FoxO signals in hydra, may be our ticket to eternal youth.
- Lobsters do not age, because there telomeres seem to stay the same size indefinitely, when they do die it isn't usually from aging, but by becoming so large the energy to create a new exoskeleton becomes too much.
- The mole rat doesn't appear to face a larger chance of death as they get older.
“An analysis of the history of technology shows that technological change is exponential, contrary to the common-sense “intuitive linear” view. So we won’t experience 100 years of progress in the 21st century — it will be more like 20,000 years of progress (at today’s rate). The “returns,” such as chip speed and cost-effectiveness, also increase exponentially. There’s even exponential growth in the rate of exponential growth. Within a few decades, machine intelligence will surpass human intelligence, leading to The Singularity”[3]
- PRO will likely live to be at least 100
- Biological immortality is possible
- We will likely reach “escape velocity” by 2030
- The previous prediction is supported by the Law of Accelerating Returns
- COUNTER1: PRO is using anecdotal/unfalsifiable evidence by using the life expectancy of his relatives.
- He has also asserted that his “base” life expectancy would be the average of his relatives – a baseless proposition.
- COUNTER2: PRO’s statistical analysis of his likely lifespan is faulty.
- He claims that because he doesn’t drink or smoke, and those take years off his life, then he should get those years “back.”
- Using relative life expectancy as a “base” life expectancy is false, as shown in COUNTER1.
- Not drinking or smoking will only extend your lifespan to its natural maximum length – not beyond that.
- PRO has also failed to source his claim that not drinking alcohol will extend lifespan by 8 years.
- COUNTER3: Many of PRO’s “lifespan-extending interventions” are unproven.
- PRO claims that his diet extends lifespan.
- This is false, as evidenced by this quote from the same article:
- “Neither of the two new studies argues the benefits of CR necessarily add up to a longer life. Longevity in humans is still an unpredictable by-product of our myriad variations in individual biology, behavior and circumstance. The objective, according to researchers, is merely to make the healthy portion of our lives last longer.”
- PRO claims that metformin extends lifespan.
- This is also false, as shown by this quote from the study in the article that PRO linked:
- “We conclude that despite data in support of anti-aging benefits, the evidence that metformin increases lifespan remains controversial.”
- Furthermore, the study only shows that metformin has positive effects on healthspan, not lifespan.
- PRO claims that TA-65 extends lifespan.
- This is unproven, and research on this subject is limited.
- Furthermore, there is also significant publication bias. Several studies that have studied TA-65 have been funded by the same company that produces it.
- For reference, TA-65 can cost over $500 for a month’s supply – there is certainly a significant financial motivation.
- In addition, PRO has not claimed any precise figures for how much TA-65 lengthens lifespan (if at all).
- CONCLUSION:
- PRO has shown no real evidence that he will likely live to 100.
- His rough estimate of his “base” lifespan is based on faulty or incomprehensible assumptions.
- Two of his treatments do not actually extend lifespan.
- The last one is unproven and has only limited effect.
- Considering this, CON asks voters to reconsider PRO's first argument.
- It makes more sense to evaluate PRO’s base life expectancy at around 77, the average lifespan for an American male.
- This entire section is simply a non-sequitur.
- PRO asserts that biological immortality is possible in carbon-based lifeforms.
- CON does not contest this, as it is irrelevant to whether Wylted, a human, will likely live to 200.
- Whose arguments are “defeatist, pessimistic, or inaccurate” exactly? PRO seems to be attacking a straw man.
- This entire section borders on a non-sequitur, but there are some relevant arguments that CON will address.
- First, PRO uses the example of Samuel Seymore in order to show how small technological advancements add up over time.
- COUNTER1: The increase in life expectancy can only go up to a certain point. This has been achieved by reducing premature deaths, not extending lifespan.
- For example, there were records of people in ancient times living to 100 – but no one contests that average life expectancy was lower.
- Second, PRO claims that because we are adding 3 months of life expectancy for every year we are alive, he will live to 118.
- COUNTER2: As mentioned earlier, PRO has given no concrete evidence that he will even live to 100.
- COUNTER3: PRO conflates life expectancy with lifespan extension.
- Increasing life expectancy by 3 months each year doesn’t simply mean that you will live 3 months longer for each year you’re alive.
- As mentioned above, gains in life expectancy are achieved mainly by reducing premature deaths.
- For a more intuitive example of how life expectancy changes don’t equate to actual changes in possible lifespan, let’s look at COVID-19.
- Life expectancy in the US dropped an entire year from 2020 to 2021.
- Does this mean that everyone is going to live a year less? Clearly not.
- For people who got COVID and died, they lost all their remaining years.
- For people who did not get COVID, they lost none of their remaining years.
- This demonstrates how life expectancy, which measures the average of a population, can be misleading if cited out of context.
- CONCLUSION:
- PRO has shown no evidence of how increases in life expectancy will help him live several decades longer.
- CON urges voters to consider PRO’s claims of living to 118 nothing but unsourced speculation.
- This section can be summarized as a logical syllogism with two terms:
- C1: Ray Kurzweil’s predictions for the future are likely to be true.
- COUNTER1: Kurzweil’s predictions aren’t as impressive as they first seem. Many of his predictions are ambiguous enough that they would be marked as correct regardless.
- Almost all of Kurzweil’s predictions use broad standards, or cover a an undefined range of technologies. Let’s go over a few claims in the “health and medicine” section, which is most pertinent to this debate.
- “Bioengineered treatments have reduced the toll from cancer, heart disease, and a variety of other health problems.”
- Obviously, if bioengineered treatments result in one less death, then they would have “reduced the toll.” So, this is a meaningless statement.
- "Diagnosis almost always involves collaboration between a human physician and a pattern recognition-based expert system."
- Kurzweil admits this is partially incorrect. Notice that as soon as he gives a clear standard (“almost always”), his claims fail.
- “Doctors routinely consult knowledge-based systems (generally through two-way voice communication augmented by visual displays), which provide automated guidance, access to the most recent medical research, and practice guidelines.”
- This isn’t the reality today, and it certainly wasn’t the reality in 2010.
- COUNTER2: Knowledge in one field doesn't necessarily translate to expertise in another. Ray Kurzweil has been variously described as a computer scientist, author, entrepreneur, inventor, and futurist.
- Notice how none of these occupations involve actual knowledge in biology.
- Kurzweil has demonstrated his lack of knowledge by trying pseudoscientific medical treatments, such as taking massive overdoses of vitamins.
- Paul Myers, an associate professor of biology, has criticized Kurzweil as “failing to understand basic biology.”
- COUNTER3: Kurzweil’s prediction of functional immortality is on a far greater scale than his other predictions.
- His predictions with a so-called “86%” accuracy rate only covered a scale of 10 years.
- Most of them were based on the development of existing technologies.
- In contrast, his prediction of functional immortality is based on predicting technologies decades in the future.
- If he’s going to make such a bold claim, he needs to have some concrete evidence, not just hand-wave some “law of accelerating returns.”
- C2: One of Ray Kurzweil’s predictions for the future is functional immortality.
- If lifespan is extended by 1 year per year, then this would indeed be functional immortality – a difficult claim to uphold.
- Due to fundamental biological limits, such as telomere length, the maximum possible lifespan of a human is estimated to be around 125-150.
- Although it’s possible that this maximum lifespan could be extended, it would likely not be implemented until PRO has already gone through most of his biological life.
- Furthermore, the maximum lifespan of the most long-lived member of a species is completely distinct from the average lifespan of a species.
- Since the debate concerns whether it is likely for Wylted to 200, not whether he can live to 200, even theoretical technologies wouldn’t be enough to prove his case.
- P1: Immortality is likely to be true.
- Because this is a syllogism, only the major term, or the minor term, must be refuted in order to negate the conclusion. I have refuted the major term, and proven that if the minor term was true, it would contradict biological laws of aging.
- OV1 has been refuted as based on unrealistic assumptions, as well as faulty and unsourced data.
- OV2 has been refuted as being a non-sequitur.
- OV3 has been refuted as also being irrelevant.. Crucially, advances in life expectancy are the result of decreased premature deaths – they don’t mean that maximum lifespan has been extended.
- OV4 has been refuted as relying on an appeal to authority, as well as contradicting all known biological principles.
- Vote CON!
Full forfeiture. Particularly enjoyed CON outline style of arg
FF .
more than 40% forfeit. Con had more science backed sources and arguements compared to pro.
extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, since it was not provided by pro, i consider this a non sequitur arguement
This is not looking good, I am half way done with writing my round and I am already at 15,000 characters. I am going to act like I have unlimited characters and write the whole thing before revising it, but I think the biggest issue is I have 30 citations taking up a ton of space. Sometimes I forget that debating is not really a good place for really complex arguments
I would prefer you don't use the letter f because I think you are ilon the leaderboard but whatever.
I can beat anybody if they are having a bad day and my meds are being taken
DART Sidious vs Barney Kenobi.
Since you claimed you could beat Barney, I will assume that you're the better debater. Therefore, I will copiously use the letter F.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8iYpxRXlboQ
I am very curious to see what strategy you're going for here.