Sunday Evening Update April 19th, 6pm EST,...
Mind
09 Apr 2009
Watch here: Sunday Evening Update Channel
Imminst TV
From Wikipedia:
Aubrey David Nicholas Jasper de Grey (born 20 April 1963 in London, England) is an English biomedical gerontologist.
De Grey is the author of the mitochondrial free-radical theory of aging, and the general-audience book Ending Aging, a detailed description of how regenerative medicine may be able to thwart the aging process altogether within a few decades. He works on the development of what he has termed "Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence" (SENS) - a tissue-repair strategy intended to rejuvenate the human body and thereby allow an indefinite lifespan. To this end, he has identified seven types of molecular and cellular "damage" caused by essential metabolic processes; SENS is a proposed panel of therapies to repair this damage.[1]
De Grey has been interviewed in recent years in many news sources, including CBS 60 Minutes, BBC, the New York Times, Fortune Magazine, the Washington Post, TED, Popular Science and The Colbert Report. His main activities at present are as chairman and chief science officer of the Methuselah Foundation[2] and editor-in-chief of the academic journal Rejuvenation Research.
Q&A with Aubrey from the Methuselah Foundation Website:
1. Get to the point. How long do you think I could live?
The answer to that question is of course very speculative, because it depends enormously on (a) how fast the research goes and (b) how long one is naturally predisposed to live even without these advances. I've said in the past that the first person to live to 1000 was probably born by 1945, and the first person to live to 150 probably by 1935, but those are people who would naturally live to 110. Conversely, lots of people are not predisposed to live beyond 70, and they have very little chance of benefiting from these therapies if they are already 50 or older.
Because of this uncertainty, I find it preferable (both for myself and when discussing this with others) to think not so much in terms of how long I can expect to live, but instead to focus on three other things:
1. Whatever one's probability may be of living to a given age, one will increase that probability by acting to hasten the research and by looking after one's own health.
2. Younger people obviously have a better chance of benefiting, since they're be more likely to still be alive when the therapies arrive, so if you don't think your chances are very good, focus on the fact that your kids' chances will be improved if we accelerate this work.
3. Globally, 100,000 people die of aging every day. Thus, if we can bring the defeat of aging even one day closer by our actions today, we'll save 100,000 lives. If we advance it by a year, we save 35 million lives. These are pretty staggering numbers, and pretty good reasons to get our act together without delay.
Attached Files
brokenportal
10 Apr 2009
Please rsvp here.
Also let us know if you want to get in on the promoters team for this show. We are setting up a temporary team to promote for this Sunday Evening Update show. We will meet at imminst.org/tv from an hour to two hours before the show to promote. We will go over strategies then. We also need permanent promoters to fill the positions. If your interested in one then let us know and we'll sign you up. The incentive is that your helping this huge, crucial, vital, growing cause. The only other thing we offer so far is that all team members will be published in the imminst newsletter for sure, and then probably other sources also. Another thing that some of us are working on is a prize system for volunteers. That may come along too, but again, most of all, its for the cause.
The cause is growing every where in general, the electricity of the meme is slowly charging the world. As fast as the Immortality Institute is growing, the Methuselah Foundation and everything it works with is growing ten times faster. Youll want to be there for this important Sunday Evening Update for sure. Amongst many new exciting developments are the new SENS Foundation materializing, and a monument for the MF 300 going up.
Edited by brokenportal, 10 April 2009 - 09:03 PM.
JediMasterLucia
10 Apr 2009

And I've sent an email to the members of Heales.
Edited by JediMasterLucia, 10 April 2009 - 06:12 AM.
Anthony
10 Apr 2009
I'll be there
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And I've sent an email to the members of Heales.
I'm going to try to make it. By the way, how do I get rid of the default screen name (and change it to Anthony)?
Mind
10 Apr 2009
Mind
10 Apr 2009
AgeVivo
12 Apr 2009
I'll be thereI'll be there
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And I've sent an email to the members of Heales.
Mind
13 Apr 2009
As always, whether research or outreach related, please list questions for Aubrey here in the forum so we can compile a list for the show.
Mind
15 Apr 2009
kismet
15 Apr 2009
Question 2: Is Aubrey happy with the MFURI project? Does it provide the hoped for bang-for-the buck? (i.e. cheap undergrads doing some meaningful research

tunt01
18 Apr 2009
AgeVivo
19 Apr 2009
marainein
19 Apr 2009
Last call for questions. Show starts in about 50 minutes.
If it's not too late:
I've seen the list of proposed therapies for each of the the 7 SENS strands...is there any sort of backup list, in case some of these therapies hit stumbling blocks?
Anthony
19 Apr 2009
BTW, I think the individual who mentioned "Butler" is referring to Robert N. Butler, who authored 'The Longevity Revolution.' The book deals, in large part, with ageism and societal issues surrounding aging. Butler does not discuss programmed theories vs. damage related theories in his work. In fact, I don't think Butler is (was) a bench scientist; he's an administrative type.
lunarsolarpower
19 Apr 2009

I definitely agree - when it comes to cat food, stick with the dry stuff.
brokenportal
19 Apr 2009
Last call for questions. Show starts in about 50 minutes.
If it's not too late:
I've seen the list of proposed therapies for each of the the 7 SENS strands...is there any sort of backup list, in case some of these therapies hit stumbling blocks?
Good question, some of us think we should help to facilitate the growth of such a list more directly. If you want to get in on more discussions about that, you or anybody, then let us know, pm me and mention it here. There are a couple of projects developing surrounding the concept. For example, a contest, and a researcher forums with peer reviewed journals included. Then also a lab that is for a broader range of projects, and a couple of undergrad funds that can all potentially tie into this.
brokenportal
19 Apr 2009
Excellent interview--even with the technical problems.
BTW, I think the individual who mentioned "Butler" is referring to Robert N. Butler, who authored 'The Longevity Revolution.' The book deals, in large part, with ageism and societal issues surrounding aging. Butler does not discuss programmed theories vs. damage related theories in his work. In fact, I don't think Butler is (was) a bench scientist; he's an administrative type.
Right, I was surprised to see that that book was about longevity "revolution" but that it didnt talk more about stuff like sens. It gave it a mention on one line in one paragraph and wasnt even the point of the paraghraph. I would think that it would have gotten its own paragraph at the very least.
Some people think that compression of morbidity in longevity research is a revolution. Wait till they see whats coming. That guys going to want to go back and write that into his book more.
JediMasterLucia
19 Apr 2009
Mind
19 Apr 2009
View the interview here.
One of the most interesting things I learned is that Aubrey will not be involved with Methuselah much at all, only with the SENS foundation. He confirmed that MFURI will become SFURI (SENS Foundation Undergraduate Research Initiative). He said the biggest advances he has seen in the last year or so have come from stem cell therapies. He admitted to being surprised that the Theil donation did not spur other big donors to come forward. They are going to try to generate some revenue in the future through licensing of IP instead of exclusively through donations. SENS is going to partner with a lab in Germany quite soon, but he could not say which one as of yet (they still have to sign the paperwork).