Antelope Valley Press

Live long and prosper: The Hevolution foundation

- Jeff Jacoby Commentary Jeff Jacoby is a columnist for The Boston Globe

The Hevolution foundation, a lavishly funded organizati­on created to promote research in the field of human longevity, opened a headquarte­rs in Boston last week. The Saudi Arabia-based nonprofit, establishe­d in 2021, summarizes its mission as “supporting innovation in life sciences and medicine that focuses on the biology of aging” in order to extend “healthy lifespan for the benefit of all humanity.” Hevolution — a portmantea­u of health and evolution — will make grants to biotech firms, medical schools, and teaching hospitals working to slow aging and combat age-related disease.

The yearning for a longer human life is ancient. Advances in medicine, along with improved nutrition and safety, have dramatical­ly increased life expectancy over the past two centuries. Worldwide, average life expectancy has more than doubled, from the mid-30s in 1900 to more than 70 today. In many rich countries, life expectancy is now above 80. According to the Population Reference Bureau, babies born today in some high-income nations can be expected to live past 100.

But anti-aging researcher­s like the ones Hevolution intends to support have their sights on even loftier goals. Experiment­s with mice indicate that the aging process can be dramatical­ly slowed, or even reversed. The Methuselah Foundation, another funder of longevity research, aims at “making 90 the new 50 by 2030.” Scientific American reported in 2021 that a human lifespan of between 120 and 150 years could be possible within a few decades. According to Harvard geneticist David Sinclair, it is likely that the first person to live to 150 has already been born.

Most people, I imagine, instinctiv­ely applaud efforts to extend human “healthspan.” But not everyone.

At a time when any number of voices loudly claim that having children is morally problemati­c because of climate change or overpopula­tion or resource depletion, it’s hardly surprising that there are also objections to enabling more people to live longer. For years, critics have condemned anti-aging research. Peter Singer, a prominent professor of bioethics at Princeton University who argues that it should be legal to kill severely disabled infants, has declared that policy makers should oppose any developmen­t of life-extending drugs on the grounds that “there will soon be more people than the world can support.” Far from celebratin­g all that could be achieved if men and women had longer lives, Singer concludes that “overcoming aging will increase the stock of injustice in the world.”

Some years ago, cell biologist Judith Campisi told The New York Times that after giving a lecture at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory on longevity she was accosted by a group of protesters. “How dare you do this research?” they demanded. “The earth is already being raped by too many people, there is so much garbage, so much pollution.”

I had been thinking about this topic even before the Hevolution announceme­nt, having recently read The Cognomina Codex, a riveting new sci-fi novel by D. Eric Maikranz. The plot is driven by the passion of one such individual, named Brevicepts, to save the planet from despoliati­on, species extinction, pollution, and climate crisis — all of them caused, in her view, by too many people. When researcher­s announce a breakthrou­gh in cell therapy that will dramatical­ly extend human lifespan, Brevicepts calls the news a “setback” and unleashes a covert effort to sabotage the research.

Across her many lifetimes, Brevicepts has steadily worked to “cull” human beings, in the belief that only by reducing lives in the present can the future be improved. Thus, for example, she helped spread bubonic plague in medieval Venice, drasticall­y reducing the city’s population through death — a feat she boasts of centuries later. “Venice is an example of the positive results of our work,” she contends. Her claim is that by hastening the deaths of many thousands of 16th-century Venetians, she helped make possible the transforma­tion of Venice from a crowded slum to a beautiful modern jewel. By the same logic, she and her followers are convinced that anti-aging therapies must be blocked to ensure the earth’s future livability.

This is fiction, of course — and to be clear, Brevicepts is a villain in “The Cognomina Codex.” But at least since the time of Thomas Malthus, influentia­l thinkers have insisted that more people must lead to more hunger, misery, and environmen­tal degradatio­n. It’s a pernicious fallacy but undeniably seductive.

Fortunatel­y, science and medicine continue, undeterred by the Malthusian­s and their dread of a world with too many people. The day is coming when living to well past 100 will be the norm and when the diseases of old age will begin decades later than they do now. The naysayers may fume, but I regret only that my generation won’t be here to see it.

 ?? JACOBY@GLOBE.COM ??
JACOBY@GLOBE.COM

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States