Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

I don’t think I’m important enough for it to matter, and I’m fairly sure the fact I will die is a significant component of what makes the brief time I have so valuable.


An enormous amount of resources are wasted on treating specific, often rare, individual age-related conditions that doesn't efficiently transfer to other conditions. Clearly, people are hurting and it'd a net positive to society to treat the single underlying cause, and save the resources expended on everything else, for an equal if not improved overall health outcome.

Even if you don't consider yourself important to the world, surely you are important to yourself. At least I as an atheist consider my limited time alive here— conscious and healthy— to be infinitely valuable to me personally as it's really all that I have. And I think if your life isn't valuable to you in the same way, there's something wrong. Hence, extending it is a worthwhile goal.

Longevity research is difficult and it's not as if a breakthrough improving our lifetime by an order of magnitude is around the corner. So, I see little risk in ambitious research that'll probably only yield humble results anyway, at least until we're reaching 200 years old.


> Even if you don't consider yourself important to the world, surely you are important to yourself. At least I as an atheist consider my limited time alive here— conscious and healthy— to be infinitely valuable to me personally as it's really all that I have.

I agree with this completely, so long as it doesn’t actually cause problems for younger people born into the world. At the moment it’s arguably a good thing that we die and let new generations have their shot at things. I’m only 37 and already excited to see what people in their teens manage to accomplish before I die. By the time the they’re full swing and doing cool stuff, I’ll probably be looking for my keys for a car I haven’t owned for 20 years in a bingo hall. No one will need more of me.

Fundamentally though I believe our time is rarely spent as well as it could be, and fixing that might be best to come first. Should I live longer if I don’t cherish it? Should I want more days when I’ve admittedly wasted many? Perhaps the best thing I could do is learn to use the time I have to its fullest.

And of course, I go to great lengths to protect my health and lifespan — I want to live as long as I reasonably can, and I want to be able to enjoy it. I don’t think for a second that I should prolong that to any degree which begins to hinder the opportunities and possibilities of younger people, though. Maybe that sounds crazy. I just don’t think I matter more than another person, just like me, wanting all the same opportunities in their own life. I guess I don’t believe old people should be in the way of young people fully living their lives.

As long as that’s not happening, sign me up. Until then I’d like to learn to use my time more wisely. On the Shortness of Life totally transformed how I think about longevity and lifespan extension in general. It seems to pale in importance compared to the practice of living better to begin with.


> surely you are important to yourself.

Depends on how depressed a person is I guess. ;)


Is your life more valuable the briefer it is?


If 1/x where x is the current age, then yes. I say it as a joke but makes me think why more mundane experiences on my childhood stuck more than profound ones on later life.




Consider applying for YC's Winter 2026 batch! Applications are open till Nov 10

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: