The Uncertainty of Death

  In about 2,000 B.C., Shin-eqi-unninni, the world’s first known author, set down the tale of Gilgamesh on twelve stone tablets. Written in Sumarian Cuneiform, The Epic of Gilgamesh is  a legend from prehistoric times in Babylonia [centered in Iraq], and details the escapades of this legendary warrior-king as he seeks to obtain immortality.

Gilgamesh seeks the counsel of Ut-Napishtim, the survivor of the Great Flood [2,000 years before Noah], who was granted immortality by the Gods. Ut-Napishtim resides in ‘Far Away’ [likely the ancient city of Dilmun on the island of Bahrain]. Ut-napishtim tells Gilgamesh that he can achieve immortality by simply staying awake for six days and seven nights. The instant Gilgamesh sets about to meet the conditions, he falls asleep. Ut-Napishtim wakes him up, Gilgamesh is distraught. Ut-Napishtim takes pity on him, and instead of immortality, offers him a secret plant that will make Gilgamesh young again. The plant is at the bottom of the ocean, and Gilgamesh dives for it and resting from his exertions, falls asleep. As he sleeps, a snake slithers up and eats the magic plant. Gilgamesh awakens to find it gone, and falls to his knees, weeping.

Pity poor Gilgamesh. If he had only heard about antioxidants and beta-carotenes, or recombinant DNA engineering. Modern man now has a tentative vision of the over-all aging process from the atomic level to gross morphological and psychological mechanisms. One of the most noticeable aspects of this process is the loss of cells. By age 65, a person loses over 28% of the cells the body needs to stay healthy and vibrant. It is no wonder we look and feel worse as we age. By age 70, a person has lost over 31% of their brain cells. Since the brain controls every part of the body, hormone and immune systems go out of control, resulting in the various ailments we have been told are the ‘normal’ result of aging.

So, what is killing off the cells? As usual, a complex interaction of events on a cellular level. First of all, the genetic blueprint for cellular construction, the chromosome, consists of strands of DNA that are damaged each time the DNA replicates. In essence, the ends of the strands break off, and the basic number of faithful replication cycles is limited to about 50. In a perfect world, this puts an upper limit on Methuselah’s age at about 400. 

In addition, through the process of converting food to energy, the body produces undesirable by-products called free radical oxidants. Until about age 25, the body is protected from damage by these oxidants by an enzyme. Thereafter, the body ceases production of this protective enzyme and the oxidants attack and destroy cells and cellular components such as DNA. The mitochondrial DNA [cohabitating with Cellular DNA in each of the body’s cells] is the primary producer of these damaging free radicals. Throw in a little random mutation of cells and DNA by intergalactic radiation and ‘Better Living Through Chemistry’, and you have the recipe for disaster. The ‘inevitable’ process of decay and death.

So, then what are the three major components of a program to interfere with the aging process?

1. Reduce or stop damage to cellular and mitochondrial DNA

2. Reduce or stop damage to cells and DNA from free radicals.

3. Institute the program of interference by age 26.

 

Is such a program feasible now? The answer is a qualified ‘Yes’. Let’s take a look at the state-of-the-art for life-extending technologies:

DNA REPAIR

It is known that certain sequences of genes on a strand of DNA are responsible for ‘snip&paste’ repairs to long chains of base pairs making up a gene. They ensure authentic reproduction of the genetic code for critical cellular functions. Unfortunately, the repair sequences do not provide for repairing the ‘genetic clock’, produced by the breaking off of the ends of each DNA strand. As was mentioned, after about 50 replications, this damage is significant enough to alter or stop further reproduction. It must be remembered that 70% of the base pairs strung along the DNA strand are useless genetic baggage from our evolutionary history, and are never expressed. Thus, much damage goes undetected before expressed genes are effected.

The Human Genome, all of the chromosomes that make up a person, has finally been decoded. It started falling into place a few years ago when it was announced that chromosome #22 had been completely decoded. Millions upon millions of base pairs [A,G,C, &T nucleotides– the fundamental building blocks of the genes] are laid out on genetic linkage maps, and many of the constituent genes, Homoboxes [identical sequences of a base pair group found on several chromosomes], Introns [sequences that inhibit the expression of a gene in the RNA companion] have been identified. Recently, a gene named T-22 has been identified as a ‘Death Gene’, that inhibits effective DNA repairs. Two techniques are in use for altering the arrangement of base pairs on a strand. The first, Transcriptional Targeting, a gene therapy widely in use as a cancer treatment, focuses on restricting transgene expression in target cells through the use of upstream genetic elements such as cell-specific promoters and/or enhancer elements. The other, Transductional Targeting, can deliver genes to a specific cell through the use of a virus [a Vector] such as Herpes. It relies more on the characteristics of the target cells than on the gene transfer vector itself. The Herpes or Epstein-Barr virus are ideal for delivering foreign DNA fragments to target cells or groups of cells in the human body.

Thus we have the road map for performing desirable alterations to the gene repair mechanism, and through recombinant DNA engineering, the means to accomplish such alterations. By stopping the genetic clock that is ticking away in our DNA, human life span becomes theoretically unlimited.

 

ANTIOXIDANTS

Much has been learned in recent years regarding the role of vitamins and antioxidants in human health. Billions of dollars change hands every year in the herbal remedy and vitamin business, and consumers are confronted with a vast and confusing array of products. The benefits of antioxidants such as vitamins E&C are well documented, and new, more powerful compound such as nordihydroguaiaretic acid [NDGA] are being discovered and added to our armamentum every day. Taking antioxidant compounds, either through a balanced, healthy diet, or through over-the-counter supplements can lengthen the peak of vigorous life by 25% or more. But delaying further damage by free radicals is not enough. To reverse damage that has already occurred, the diet must be supplemented by cell-builders such as Ribonucleic Acid [RNA], L-phenylalanine and Tocopherol. The trick is to halt or minimize the damage done to cells and DNA by the normal waste by-products of the body’s metabolic processes, and the poisons generated by the mitochondrial DNA in our cells. So much has been written about antioxidants that I won’t belabor the issue here.

Environmental conditions also introduce free radicals into the body. Everything from vehicle exhaust to chemicals in industrial smoke [SMOG] and the respiratory gases of a pine forest. This added load of free radicals can be combated by the addition of massive supplements of amino acids such as cysteine and methionine to the diet. The synthesis and application of a program of nutrition and exercise then completes the regimen for a vital and healthy extended life span.

 

OTHER FACTORS

A starvation diet quadrupled the life span of laboratory mice. What this experiment really did was demonstrate the importance of the proper metabolic rate to longevity. Remember, the Mitochondria are the ‘energy furnaces’ of the body, and the producers of the majority of free radicals. Like adjusting the fuel/air mixture of an internal combustion engine, the metabolic rate of the cells can be adjusted for peak performance and reduced emissions. The preliminary data suggest a caloric intake of about 1400 calories/day for an average adult. Combine this with a program of vigorous daily exercise [further adjusts metabolic rate] and nutritional supplements to inhibit the development of cellular abnormalities, and we are close to the goal of maintaining a long, healthy peak of vitality.

 

SPARE PARTS

From the cloning of ‘Dolly’ the sheep, to the growth of pig organs in the lab for use in human transplants, the potential for a vast supply of human spare parts grows geometrically. Recently, the culture of ‘Stem Cells’ in the laboratory, has given rise to the possibility of growing spare organs with absolutely no risk associated with organ rejection in transplant operations. Nearly every organ except the human brain has been successfully transplanted. Stem cells could be cultured in the lab to even grow a replacement brain and nervous system, someday soon. The brain, an organic computer, is susceptible to being programmed and the protein memory elements synthesized. Machines to collect and store the essence of a person’s individuality are at the doorstep, if Moore’s law is still operational,  and a digital ‘master’ of the personality stored on magnetic disk or tape is a possibility in the not too distant future. The sensory apparatus required for input/output operations of such machines are just around the corner, technically speaking. Thus,  by rigorously applying existing and near-term technologies we can continue our corporal personality and existence indefinitely. Life everlasting. A gift of periodic injections, nutritional supplements, regimented exercise, and organ transplants as required, started at age 26.

 

IMPLICATIONS

But what does this mean for humanity? Is it desirable to cultivate a class of elite immortals? Given the fact that not everyone will have the wherewithal, discipline or desire to pursue life-extension, there will be those few who are so equipped and motivated. An immortal elite is inevitable. And longevity in and of itself, does not imply wisdom. In fact, due to limitations in the sheer amount of data the brain can store and handle, our immortal will fall far short of being a sage, and will reach the point where learning something new requires forgetting something. A weird sort of mental homeostasis will ensue. 

Imagine the social problems in dealing with beings capable of subterfuge and enacting plans that take decades to come to fruition. In whose best interest and for what purpose do they act? Can they aggregate all wealth and power? What about self-perpetuation? Should they be allowed to propagate and slowly erode the diversity of the gene pool? Our social systems are not presently equipped to deal with, or even consider these issues. Yet, we are confronted with an impending reality. The affluent, and perhaps, untouchable immortal. 

Have no doubt that within a decade, the geneticists will have within their grasp an optimized human genome, free of inheritable disease and random mutation, capable of replicating faithfully forever. We have little time to adapt our social institutions to the new reality, and impose restraints or at least guidelines on the application and legal basis of human immortality. The uncertainty of death poses interesting new problems, both personally and socially. It requires nothing short of a new philosophy of life. 

The Epic of Gilgamesh, while the oldest, is not the best known tale from the past regarding the quest for immortality. It was superceded by the Bible’s Book of Genesis and its story of the expulsion from the garden of Eden. Among other things, it was to keep man from eating the fruit from the tree of life. Is mankind now ready to partake of the fruit? And if we do, what will the consequences be this time?

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Another deleted post

Once again, I have deleted a post that was sub-par for this blog, and hurt the feelings of several readers. Well, Mea Culpa. Like anyone else, I had let strong emotion overcome better judgement. I can’t guarantee that I won’t do it again, but I’ll try to be more dispassionate and considerate of others in the future. Over the weekend, I recovered from partying harder than I should at my age with old and dear friends on Friday. But, I also remember the adage, “That which you survive makes you stronger”. I can only hope it is a truism.

As to the post, if you didn’t read it, all the better. It reminded me of a part of Rudyard Kipling’s poem, ‘Recessional’:

“For heathen hearts that put their trust in reeking tube and iron shard

All valiant dust that builds on dust and guarding calls not thee to guard

For frantic boast and foolish word,

Thy mercy on thy people, Lord……”

 

 

 

The Air Force Declassifies Project Bluebook

I read the other day that the U.S. Air Force has finally declassified and released to the public the entire file collection on UFO reports. The complete file can now be found on the Black Vault website: http://www.theblackvault.com To summarize, out of the thousands of reports, a little over 700 are unexplainable, and interestingly, there is no mention of the Roswell incident in 1947 that gave rise to stories of a crashed flying saucer and the retrieval of dead or injured little green men. On further investigation I found out about a secret hostage exchange took place years ago wherein the aliens released some hostages they had been holding in exchange for the bodies. Here is a photo of the aliens releasing their hostages:

Image courtesy of the Sony Corporation

 

Now, on a totally different subject, I want to briefly discuss the cost of revolution as it applies to my fellow citizens in the USA. I feel that with a Republican Congress and the defiant diatribe of President Obama in his State Of The Union address, the following observation is critical to disseminate to my blog readers:

The U.S. civil war was the deadliest conflict in American history, with the number of men dying exceeding 750,000. This total exceeds all of the combat deaths combined from the revolutionary war of 1776 through the end of the Korean War. At the time of the Civil war, the U.S. population was roughly 31 million, a tenth of today’s population. If it had been fought today, the total number of combat deaths would be about 6.2 million.

So, I have to ask Tea Party boosters and the radical left that presently controls our government, “WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING?” If you can’t abandon your extremist politics and focus on real long-term solutions to the problems that beset our country, you risk taking us back to those dismal days in the 1860s. You had better remember the times when there was civil discourse in Congress, and representatives cooperated to pass legislation that benefited all of our citizens.  None of your constituents, including me, appreciate the grand-standing, and arm twisting that you routinely engage in, and believe it or not, we are not stupid.

 

A Force For Good

I came across another video of my younger brother doing his thing and I thought I would share it with my blog readers. He is fluent in ten different languages and is bringing love to the world in his own way. Besides creating the world-renowned Seacology Foundation, he also started the “Force For Good” Foundation in collaboration with the NuSkin Corporation. I tried to embed the video here but apparently this is not possible with Vimeo videos on Vivaldi, so here is the link: https://vimeo.com/31432947 It is well worth watching.
Paul considers Sweden to be his second home and he is friends with the King, who created a special visiting scholar’s Chair for him at the the University of Uppsala, one of the top 100 universities in the world. He is presently in Qatar, out in the sand dunes collecting Cyanobacteria that may be responsible for triggering ALS brain disease in susceptible people, and perhaps, the Gulf War Syndrome. It is hard to believe that this organism survives such harsh conditions.
 

The Warp Drive Becomes Possible

One of my favorite companies, Lockheed Martin, has unveiled a very compact Fusion Reactor. Here are the details in a Youtube presentation

The page with a detailed release including the Youtube video is here:

http://www.lockheedmartin.com/us/products/compact-fusion.html

I had to laugh at the stories that were spun by the media. Many of their press releases stated that this development was based on ‘Cold Fusion’. Nope, this is the real thing!  I also found a Youtube one-hour long tutorial on the Dense Plasma Focus technology which may be complementary to the LMT development here:

And, at CERN, they are learning to create, trap, and store antimatter. See it here:

The energy created by matter/antimatter collisions is far greater than that produced by fusion. This could be an alternate power system for a starship in the future (booted up by the fusion reactor). Consider the NASA project involving Warp Drive here:

The new “Hot” fusion reactor makes all of the foregoing doable, and the NASA effort will get legs…..In the meantime Fusion can get us to Mars in a week, and the outer system within a month.

 The main unsolved problem as I see it is how do you avoid interstellar debris? Do you stop forward motion of the starship periodically to chart a pathway that is safe to travel? Can you warp your way around a Neutron star or black hole in the middle of your flight trajectory before it’s too late? Can the space-time bubble surrounding the vessel harmlessly warp objects like a small asteroid out of the road, and do it in time to avoid a horrific collision? And here, Astronomers have spotted objects in the outer reaches of the universe that are apparently traveling much faster than the speed of light.

Could these be aliens zooming around?

 

Why Biology Is Better Than Robotics

I’ve been feeling sort of, well, obsolete lately as I have concluded that there is an inherent risk in creating mechanical beings that can do everything better than we can, including thinking. Superhuman abilities aside, they are made of steel not protein jelly, and can kick our butts!

But, if you take the longer view, say over a billion years of continual evolution, I think biology will win out; the main reason being that WE DON’T RUST!

Not only that, consider the issue of spontaneous resurrection. Biology has proven that it can arise unassisted and unfabricated. It is a naturally occurring electrochemical event in this universe of matter and energy. And, I suspect that it permeates the entire universe in the form of long-chain protein molecules and amino acids. This is not true of Gort the Robot or the Giant Thinking Machine. These are 2nd order entities that cannot spontaneously arise in nature.

And, in a universe of black holes, colliding galaxies, neutron stars, supernovas, planetoids, asteroids, gas clouds and powerful beams of particles zooming around randomly at the speed of light, the attribute most important for survival is a chemistry that eventually evolves proteins and cellular structures that house and protect RNA and DNA molecules that form from amino acids.

Therefore, the grand cycle of existence consists of endless Big Bangs followed by endless collapses according to the principles of Entropy, and in the interim processes, matter evolves life, which much later evolves artificial life, that will choose to exist alongside living beings, or supersede them.

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Book Review

I received another five star review of my novel, Secret of the First Immortals recently at Amazon.com. This is the sixth five-star rating so far. If you are an agent or publisher, please contact me regarding making a hard-cover print run for this book. Contact me at: DLCox@ outlook.com 

Reviews Written by
David L. Warnock RSS Feed(Milledgeville, GA USA)

 

 

 

Secret of the First Immortals

Price: $2.99

 

 

 

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful

5.0 out of 5 starsThought provoking!, November 27, 2014

Verified Purchase(What’s this?)

This review is from: Secret of the First Immortals (Kindle Edition)

The best kind of speculative fiction.
I recommend it anyone with an open mind.
My rating is based on the detail and thoroughness. Having read thousands of books this one is in the top tier.

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The American Guru Speaks (or perhaps, squeeks)

Bad Craziness in Iran 

Normally, I would not write about politics in this blog as the topic tends to infuriate people regardless of what is said. I have been tempted to badmouth the Obama Administration on occasion and the Government of North Korea at least weekly, but finally I have to speak out. This time the topic is about a country that after much research I have concluded is a “natural” ally of the United States. The country is Iran.

 

I have worked with Iranian engineers educated in the United States, and have found them to be hard working, intelligent, and less devious than others I have met that hail from the Middle East, including Israel. The problem is Iran’s supreme leader, the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. This man is my age, and like me is losing his mental faculties, although in his case the condition seems to be accelerating at an alarming pace. I admire the current president of Iran, Hassan Rouhani, who appears to be trying to crank down the rhetoric of “Death to America” in favor of edging past this Muslim fanatic who controls the country, and easing the tensions a bit.

 

This is a good thing, and from what I can tell, he is genuinely concerned with bettering the lives of the average Iranian family. This includes promoting individual freedom, always a good thing. Working together, the USA and Iran could settle the regional wars going on in a heartbeat. Normalized trade relations between Iran and America could do much to relieve the extreme poverty and despair that permeates the entire region, and make the various Islamic extremist groups less appealing to those who are presently disenfranchised. 

 David the Guru speaks, “Om, Baby”

 

Christmas Holiday in Utah

As I look out of the window toward the mountains that tower behind my home, I shuddered a bit. Not five kilometers from my house the snow depth is over three meters. The wind is gusting to 80 miles per hour and the wind chill is ranging between -20 and -40 degrees (Fahrenheit). If one stands in the mouth of the canyon, you can observe multiple avalanches cascading down the narrow chutes of the surrounding peaks. Elsewhere in the Salt Lake Valley, the roads are sheet ice, with hundreds of accidents including fatal crashes of 16-wheel Semi-trucks with fuel-efficient Japanese cars made of Aluminum foil and silly putty. Altogether, it’s a good day to sit inside my house sipping a few shots of Jack Daniels. It is still being warmed by my furnace powered by natural gas, and the electricity is still on (unlike thousands in Salt Lake City and its adjacent bedroom communities).

My brother gave me a Christmas gift: A set of snow tires for my new car that grip the road like the suckers on an Octopus, but I’m too chicken to try them out and go to the health club for my daily two mile jaunt around the track, followed by a luxurious soak in the hot tub and steam room. Life is good for me, and I know that I am very lucky. I weep for the wildlife near my home that are dying as I write this. The gentle Mule Deer, Moose, Elk, Mountain Goats and the Cougars that feed on them; the Coyotes that sing me to sleep at night, and all the rest that do not hibernate are now starving and freezing to death. I realize that I have also been gifted with a fortuitous accident of birth and circumstance. I could just as easily be in Syria, Iraq, Somalia, or the Ukraine dodging bullets; or watching my family be slaughtered by Islamic nutcases and foreigners drawn to the prospect of unlimited rape, enslavement, and pillage without consequence. I close my eyes and think of more pleasant things like my addiction to fly fishing for Trout and Salmon. But even this can have unpleasant surprises: 

 

Don’t look back; something might be gaining on you!

 

Fear & Loathing & Love

 

While the weasels in North Korea and the Middle East attempt to rip the soft underbelly of America, you have to ask, “Is love enough?” According to John Lennon, Rod McKuen, Omar Khayyam, Walter Benton, and most organized religions, it is. Unfortunately, one of the cherished illusions of most Americans was shattered in the aftermath of the 9/11 attack: That the world loved us and that the ‘Beacon of Freedom’ as represented by American society and its value system was admired by all. Events have demonstrated that in fact, the United States is envied and viewed with fear& loathing, even by many of our so-called allies.

What has given rise to this simmering resentment? Americans are arguably the most giving and generous people on the planet. Since World War 1, the United States has attempted to feed and clothe the world, rebuild shattered societies, free the oppressed, and has generally mucked about in other people’s business; all in the interest of spreading ‘Freedom’ and promulgating the ‘Dignity of Man’ and ‘Human Rights’. It is true that many of these efforts have been self-serving: Some to relieve the guilt of consuming 70% of the world’s resources, some to promote political stability, allowing ‘Big Business’ to increase shareholder value in an economic system based on ever-increasing consumption, and some to enable more effective missionary work by the various religious factions. But most have been a result of genuine empathy with the plight of others less fortunate, as felt by the fat and happy average U.S. citizen.

Yet, most people capable of critical thinking recognize that economic expansion based on population growth and consumer economics cannot be sustained for long. We are drowning in our own wastes. The very air is becoming unfit to breathe, the semantically loaded phrase ‘Global Warming’ (more properly described as climate change), and population density are steadily eroding the freedoms we seek to protect. Our vaunted technologies, especially in medicine, have allowed populations in third-world countries to explode, giving rise to the horrific images that we see in the media of starving children in Africa. Add to this the regrettable behavior of ‘primitive’ societies that have adopted the advanced technologies of destruction offered by the arms dealers of the ‘civilized world’, without evolving the social responsibility and infrastructure required for control of such weapon systems, and we have a recipe for disaster. As the 21st Century gets underway, our choices have become stark: Either we become a space-faring species that utilizes the vast resources of the solar system to continue our expansionist ways, or we totally revamp our place in the world’s biota; that is, we reduce our population to a sustainable level, and confine ourselves to an ecological niche that allows for coexistence with the other species that inhabit our little planet (the Spaceship Earth concept).

While the former choice seems to me the most logical, the latter also bears some careful scrutiny. The most successful human social system appears to have been the tribal society. For tens of thousands of years, humans have lived and thrived in such systems, albeit with internecine warfare brought about by the clash of ideas and the struggle for resources. Historically, tribal societies do not allow for much in the way of individual freedom. Rigid social control is the norm, and no tolerance is given to the lazy, greedy, or otherwise deranged among its members. Any infraction is quickly dealt with: death or banishment (another form of death). Yet such societies offer great benefits. All members of the tribe are ‘Fathers’ and ‘Mothers’ to the children, ‘Ownership’ of goods and property is a very flexible term, based on local conditions, and no one is left alone to suffer from adversity or afflictions.

It occurs to me that with our prowess in the physical sciences, and knowledge derived in anthropology, sociology, archeology, neuroscience, and other social sciences, we can evolve a social system that takes advantage of the benefits of tribal living while allowing the expression of individual differences and innovations that lead to ever-improving lifestyles. In such a system, giving, sharing, and love of our fellow man can become the norm. It’s not a bad way to go either. The only problem is that sooner or later, such a society may become stagnant. It is beyond my limited understanding of things to see past this dilemma. But regardless of which direction we choose, I believe in love as the ultimate solution: In love of self, love of truth, and love of others lays our ultimate salvation. Mankind no longer has the luxury of time. We must build a truly loving society that cherishes the individual as well as the masses, and more importantly, other species. And we must learn to take responsibility for our actions, both as individuals and as a society. We can do this without recourse to religion, representative democracy, socialism, or other current forms of organized social control. Happy Holidays everyone!

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Oil on canvas by Fredrick Remington