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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter December 22, 2007

Medical Nanorobotics: Breaking the Trance of Futility in Life Extension Research (A Reply to de Grey)

  • Robert A. Freitas

Biogerontologist Aubrey de Grey has suggested that one of the reasons we as a society invest so little in research on combating aging is because we are in an intellectual trance. We think the effort will be futile: aging is immutable, so why try? A healthy skepticism can be a good thing but it is a major mistake to bet against the irresistible force of inexorable technological progress. Over the next few decades, nanotechnology will come to play a pivotal role in the solution to the problem of human aging. Medical nanorobotics, if it can be made to work, can unquestionably offer convenient solutions to all known causes of age-related damage and most likely can also successfully address any new causes of senescence that remain undiscovered today.

Published Online: 2007-12-22

©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston

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