Some people hope to achieve it through their work.
The comedian, Woody Allen said that he did not want to achieve immortality through his work.
. . . He wanted to achieve immortality through not dying!
![Cheers](images/smilies/modern/cheers.gif)
If you legally set a maximum life span how do you decide between Stephen Hawking and Osama Bin Laden? Do some people get more and others less. You give Hawking more time based on his intelligence and can't someone sue because they did not get the IQ to compete? Can you just imagine someone evil, rich, and connected living forever. Do we really need a 500 year old Charlie Sheen? Originally Posted by JD BarleycornThere certainly would be ethical and legal issues as a result of dramatically increased life spans and over population. It's similar to the ethical and legal issues connected to pulling the plug on a coma patient that can be artificially kept alive or aborting a baby that we know will be imperfect because of information learned from ultrasound or amniocentesis. We have to change our culture to adapt to advances in technology.
I believe that nature already has a built-in system to thin out the herd that works with grim finality.The natural system of the most fit living longer and breeding more (natural selection through accidental variation) has been short circuited by the social welfare system. Now the least fit out breed the most fit. We are going backwards in America and most of the western world.
The system in place is called "Survival of The Fittest".
The system is really brutal as hell and is totally unfair, but in this world, you don't get to choose the cards you are dealt.
. . . The rules are that you can only play whatever cards you are dealt as shrewdly as you can!
Originally Posted by Fast Gunn
I got the joke... you seemed to have missed mine. Originally Posted by KenMonk