Animal domestication is really wild.
So we first select for neoteny (playfulness, dependency on caregiver, physical features people like) basically prolonging the juvenile state. Then we put them in controlled environments of abundance, were all their needs are met. Which further diminishes need to reach adult state (with traits like aggressiveness to compete for resources). This abundance causes them to mature/breed earlier and reproduce more than in the wild. Basically a population of children that can produce children. Then we want this population of children to live longer.
scotty79 18 days ago [-]
Recently I had an interesting thought that basically people did almost the same to themselves spontaneously through culture. Which might influence various aspects of human behavior, like social interactions in general, cooperation and means of competition, mate selection. We might have genetic changes that are not maladaptive only in the culture that introduced them. As technology forces culture to evolve it might turn out that huge swaths of human species have their evolutionary fitness suddenly reduced.
bumby 18 days ago [-]
Although humans may be reaching reproductive age faster, aren't we generally reproducing later in life? That seems counter to the OPs point.
Jensson 18 days ago [-]
Those two are naturally related. If getting pregnant at 10 usually lead to death, then your genes will avoid that if getting pregnant at 10 is common.
However if socially we prevent girls from getting pregnant at 10 then biology can make them go through puberty at 10 without risk, since they will not get pregnant anyway.
Edit: As for the playfulness point, for us humans we punish kids for being playful when they reach 7, so it makes sense that we will evolve to stop playing around at 7 and hence becoming adults already by then. We don't punish pets for being playful though, at least not today.
bumby 18 days ago [-]
I'm finding it hard to understand your point or not finding that argument particularly convincing. We can socially change much faster than we can biologically evolve. Meaning, the change in birth age can be heavily influenced by social factors (birth control, resource abundance, requirements for self-sustainment in adulthood) much faster than biology would adapt. We can be extremely socially different than those who lived when it was the norm to be pregnant at 14 while being essentially biologically identical.
Further, we can have multi-modal distributions that undermine the biological assumption. Some groups show much lower birth ages because it's not culturally disadvantageous than other groups. In that context, even if the average age increases, it doesn't mean lower birth age is biologically disadvantageous.
>humans we punish kids for being playful when they reach 7
This needs a citation or at least a definition of what is meant by "playfulness", because I find it hard to believe. I don't know any parents who would want their child to stop playing at 7 years old.
Jensson 18 days ago [-]
> I don't know any parents who would want their child to stop playing at 7 years old.
Parents don't decide what happens to the kids at school though.
> We can socially change much faster than we can biologically evolve.
If the genes were always there but they died constantly 200 years ago it just meant that we no longer cull those people early, and after a couple of such generations we now have them around. Early puberty is still not common, it just exists, that makes it more likely to be biological than social, if the social changes did it then early puberty would be the norm today rather than a very rare exception.
18 days ago [-]
bbarnett 18 days ago [-]
Visually humans have neotenistic characteristics compared to other primates, so this is quite plausible.
xapata 18 days ago [-]
And mentally. We never stop playing.
Note the popularity of memes about "adulting".
scotty79 18 days ago [-]
What's interesting is that rigid culture that forced us to do adult behaviors despite retaining juvenile traits, now when it's getting lifted and replaced with freedom to do whatever you please might leave many individuals maladapted from the evolutionary standpoint to prolonging their genetic line. Which I think is perfectly fine. New generations that are better adapted to the culture of hi-tech freedom will arise from the few that currently accidentally already do the evolutionarily correct thing.
skissane 18 days ago [-]
> New generations that are better adapted to the culture of hi-tech freedom will arise from the few that currently accidentally already do the evolutionarily correct thing.
That's one possibility. Another is subcultures which prioritise reproduction over personal freedom will end up demographically dominant in the long-run. Look for example at Kiryas Joel, New York, and similar ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities, whose growth shows no signs of slowing down in the foreseeable future. Of course, exponential growth can't last forever, but nobody knows what exactly the limit is and when it will be reached – it might not be reached until they've become a very substantial percentage of the population, maybe even the majority.
pavel_lishin 18 days ago [-]
> And mentally. We never stop playing.
Do animals stop? There are plenty of examples of play in adult animals:
My elder female dog loves to play and the way in which she plays has only gotten more nuanced over time. She's even adapted to play with me, play with other dogs, play with smaller dogs, and play with puppies.
The basic semantics of her language of play are all the same: she bows, she'll yawn, she barks and does that side-eye glance. Sometimes she'll dance. If she gets really hyped up she'll get the zoomies.
Dogs, from what I've observed, are incredibly intelligent and social animals as they exist today.
skissane 18 days ago [-]
A lot of dog play is rehearsing hunting-related behaviours. For example, playing tug-of-war over a toy is practising playing tug-of-war over the kill, which helps to break it up into manageable portions. I wonder if adult domestic dogs are more prone to play because they have limited opportunities to use these natural instincts for real? Maybe in a pack of wild dogs where they are constantly being used for real, they would be less likely to rehearse them
dennis_jeeves2 18 days ago [-]
>Recently I had an interesting thought that basically people did almost the same to themselves spontaneously through culture.
I think this already well known in evolutionary biology circles though not through culture.
I don't recollect but it was most likely Robin Dunbar who said it, people ganging together to kill of the most annoying/bullying/maladjusted members.
scotty79 18 days ago [-]
It's not really about killing maladapted. In each generation of humans more than 10% of them don't pass their genes to next generation. From the point of view of evolution it is as if they got killed young. Mate selection is way stronger mechanism of evolution then plain survival.
dennis_jeeves2 18 days ago [-]
>It's not really about killing maladapted.
I'm sure I did not misunderstand Robin Dunbar, He actually said homicides were common. If a bunch of people hated someone they ganged up and killed him/her, leading to humans being relatively more neotenistic than other primates.
(I used maladapted in a very loose way: especially being maladapted socially, we are not talking about being maladapted phicially and other ways)
pavel_lishin 18 days ago [-]
> evolutionary fitness
But there's no such thing as an objective "evolutionary fitness". It only makes sense to speak of evolutionary fitness in a given niche.
scotty79 18 days ago [-]
Yes. And this niche moves as culture evolves.
flippyhead 18 days ago [-]
Just like the Eloi!
mclau156 18 days ago [-]
"Animal domestication is really wild"
Beijinger 18 days ago [-]
Dogs domesticated us. Wolves are hunted but dogs a fed, given shelter, love and access to medical care.
BiteCode_dev 18 days ago [-]
You'll let me know the next time you'll have to require the permission of your dog to pee, or when it can trigger surgery to cut your balls or put you down.
ben_w 18 days ago [-]
That humans are dominant doesn't preclude us having co-evolved.
BiteCode_dev 18 days ago [-]
Co-evolved is a very different word than domesticated.
throw839298 18 days ago [-]
> neoteny
What domesticated animals were bread for "cuteness"? Cats are mice hunters. Most popular dog breeds were selected for killing and dog fight! That "big smile" is not for laughter, but to crush bones!
And many domesticated animals can not even reproduce without human assistance. How they would survive in wild?
JumpCrisscross 18 days ago [-]
> What domesticated animals were bread for "cuteness"?
Dogs.
> Cats are mice hunters
Cats blur the line between domestication and taming.
> Most popular dog breeds were selected for killing and dog fight
One can breed for more than one thing. (Dog fighting as a selection pressure is very modern and very limited.)
Dogs literally evolved a muscle to make them more appealing to (and help them communicate with) humans [1].
> many domesticated animals can not even reproduce without human assistance
Dog fighting is limited, but most dog breeds have been bred primarily for a specific practical purpose.
> Dogs literally evolved a muscle to make them more appealing to (and help them communicate with) humans
Not necessarily exactly cuteness. The other explanation suggested is better communication in general - by exposing the whites of their eyes we can see what they are looking at, which is an important cue for humans (we use it between ourselves too) to indicate the direction of attention.
JumpCrisscross 18 days ago [-]
> most dog breeds have been bred primarily for a specific practical purpose
Sure. But most of those traits are shallow. Let the breed go stray and many characteristics go away. The neoteny does not.
> Not necessarily exactly cuteness
The neoteny—large eyes and heads, for example—is precisely cuteness. Not all breeds are equally neotenic. But they’re very much not wolves.
graemep 18 days ago [-]
> Sure. But most of those traits are shallow. Let the breed go stray and many characteristics go away.
A lot of characteristics seem to be bred in and instinctive - breed specific behaviour occurs without training. Strays do not breed pure so of course breed specific characteristics are lost.
> The neoteny—large eyes and heads, for example—is precisely cuteness
To an extent yes. The specific trait mentioned in the comment I was replying to was not neotenous. Not all neotonous traits are physically cute.
JumpCrisscross 18 days ago [-]
> breed specific behaviour occurs without training. Strays do not breed pure so of course breed specific characteristics are lost
My point is neoteny almost isn’t breed specific. Let strays breed and it’s preserved—stray dogs are cuter than wolves.
Wild dogs don’t become wolves. (They also stop being French bulldogs.)
> Not all neotonous traits are physically cute
Almost all physically-cute traits are neutenous.
18 days ago [-]
derriz 18 days ago [-]
> Dogs literally evolved a muscle to make them more appealing to (and help them communicate with) humans [1].
This scene from an 1953 Tom and Jerry of Spike teaching Tyke what it means to be a dog seems prescient: https://youtu.be/jnW48TihBR0?t=50s
scotty79 18 days ago [-]
> What domesticated animals were bread for "cuteness"?
Fairly recent experiments with domestication of foxes show how it might work.
What you select for is behavior. Mainly you breed individuals that neither attack humans nor run away from them. Any other response than aggression or fear is ok. In few generations it turns out individuals selected this way retain more and more juvenile traits.
I think cats never needed to get domesticated because reacting to humans with neither aggression nor fear is within natural range of perfectly normal behaviors of most individuals of this specific niche feline species that got globalized through its relationship with humans.
blueflow 18 days ago [-]
I think requiring human assistance and inability to survive in the wild are an effect of neoteny.
trimethylpurine 18 days ago [-]
Chihuahua.
bsenftner 18 days ago [-]
How many of you glance at this website and think "fraud engine"? This is a fantastic vehicle to suck money out of people that love their pets, and love animals in general. I know nothing about these people, but my fraud alarms are screaming.
d4704 18 days ago [-]
It’s a research project I’ve seen before - healthspan and lifespan research.
Well study participants aren't charged. Maybe it's fraud against those who are funding it, but the pet owners themselves are not the current target.
bsenftner 18 days ago [-]
I'd examine this much deeper before engaging. It's far too consumer targeted, far too feel good. I would not be surprised if "becoming a partner" or "community scientist" required fees or more.
carls 18 days ago [-]
This project is a research project out of the University of Washington, led by several of the professors there. I believe the lab is the Healthy Aging and Longevity Institute.
They share a list of academic publications that have resulted from the project, and their Team page lists the full names a sizable large number of people.
Their FAQ indicates that the cost of the DNA Kit and other things are covered by the project funding. [1]
What made you think that it's engaging in fraud? I'm genuinely curious.
I'm not involved in the project but just from looking at the site for several minutes, it seems to be a fairly reasonable research project.
Or did you say "fraud" less to mean "these are people who are stealing money and e.g., hoarding it away" and more to mean "these are people engaging in a research project I disapprove of"?
Honestly, it does not appear like a research institute at all. It looks like the styling that the owners of People's Magazine or the National Enquirer would use to market their 'research nonprofit' where the actual research contribution is 3% of their revenues, while supporting fat salaries for an executive staff. It just looks too consumer and not academic, not serious. It is simply too feel good. It has the trappings of respectability, but not really. It's too slick. I also never spent the time to look deeper, the loud consumer targeted presentation drove me away.
insane_dreamer 18 days ago [-]
Probably because creating a nice-looking website is more likely to drive engagement with today's users than something that looks like it was made by some academic stuck in the 90s.
carls 18 days ago [-]
I think it's reasonable to be turned off by a slick-looking website, but I imagine it's because the intended audience of the website is the general (dog-owning) public, likely for the purposes of soliciting participants.
Several people have corrected you, and yet you keep going, claiming that this is some sort of fraud. What's your deal? Why are you spreading FUD?
bsenftner 17 days ago [-]
"several people"? I engaged with two people and moved on.
op00to 18 days ago [-]
Maybe the person just really loves it when their dog dies early. :(
zacharycohn 18 days ago [-]
You could try clicking around and reading a little bit before throwing wildly inaccurate, speculative, and slanderous accusations at an org you know nothing about.
antisthenes 18 days ago [-]
Out of curiosity, do you feel just as strongly about very prominent social justice programs for humans?
Especially those that target extremely small slices of population (some would say at the expense of other larger, mostly neglected groups)
citizenpaul 11 days ago [-]
> pet owners themselves are not the current target.
Uhh there is a donation button on the site.
infensus 18 days ago [-]
My first thought after seeing that stock image watermark looking line on the dog picture
throwaway5752 18 days ago [-]
Every single longevity project - human or otherwise - is a scam. Fear of dying is the most fundamental one to existence, and scam artists have been exploiting it for as long as there have been people.
Religion promises an eternal afterlife. Cryogenics promises a future thawing and cure in an enlightend and technically advanced future. Plastic surgery puts a veneer over the signs of the natural aging process. The more recent batch have targeted metabolism, growth inhibition (ie rapamycin), etc.
Very wealthy people that don't want to die or don't want their pets to die will never be in short supply. They will still all die, roughly around the same time they would have otherwise from different causes with different infirmities (search for "sirolimus side effects").
Enjoy and make the most of the years you are given. Happy New Year.
qgin 16 days ago [-]
There are many destructive processes happening in the post-reproductive years that we don't have names for yet and unfortunately have been referring to as "aging". But they are disease states as much as any other.
There is literally nothing about this project that will have any dog or human live forever. But it does have the possibility to improve dog and human health in some fundamental ways and increase the number of healthy years that we get before disease takes over. If this is longevity science, then all medicine is longevity science.
qgin 16 days ago [-]
Matt Kaeberlein is as legit as it gets in longevity science. It's very much not a fraud.
akdor1154 18 days ago [-]
Urgh some ungodly JavaScript is hijacking the scrolling, I wish the site wasn't so ineptly written.
0_____0 18 days ago [-]
bahaha usually when HN people are complaining about a website I think they're being dramatic but the way this was scrolljacked, it's almost like it's designed to frustrate you
qb1 18 days ago [-]
I participated in this project with my dog for two years. I stopped as the clunkiness of the web ui and lengthiness and frequency of the surveys. The experience left me dubious as to the project's methodologies.
oyashirochama 18 days ago [-]
The best part is running this on a potato PC and watching the JavaScript kill itself.
aziaziazi 18 days ago [-]
And no « reader mode » possible. Totally unusable for me!
LorenDB 18 days ago [-]
I think it's actually worse that this site breaks inertial scrolling only half the time instead of all the time. At least be consistent!
irs 18 days ago [-]
There is also https://loyal.com - Biotech Startup for researching/ developing longevity drugs for dogs.
LeifCarrotson 18 days ago [-]
I was also going to link Loyal, I think they came up on HN last year and had some good discussion:
Personally, I'm optimistic about the capacity of studies and projects like these to extend our knowledge regarding aging. Human trials are fraught with ethical issues, and have very slow feedback loops (acquiring results from a study might take decades, which can be an entire career). Laboratory trials on mice and other small mammals can be more effective, but funding is hard and the results are isolated to a small academic lab. Large-scale supplements for pets can give data in a few years, have lesser (though not negligible) ethical problems, and have built-in funding. The funding process is, of course, a source of conflicts of interest, but it has to be done somehow.
Ratelman 18 days ago [-]
FYI limited to to US only - they refer you to their sister project: https://darwinsark.org/ if you'd still like to contribute in a similar fashion but reside outside of USA.
aitchnyu 18 days ago [-]
Are there other examples of innovations flowing from veterinary medicine to human medicine?
JumpCrisscross 18 days ago [-]
> other examples of innovations flowing from veterinary medicine to human medicine
“As microbial and genetic discoveries were made, pathogenesis studies were required to integrate the new knowledge into useful clinical advances. Those advances include a creative model of enteric bacterial disease (Moon), demonstration of the transmissibility and pathogenesis of scrapie, a proposal that human kuru was a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (Hadlow), and the isolation of bovine leukemia virus (Miller) and bovine immunosuppressive retroviruses (Van Der Maaten)—5 years before AIDS and HIV appeared. Now modern molecular and genetic sciences and their applications in integrative, whole-animal biology make possible exciting advances for the benefit of both animals and people” [1].
(Counterfactual: “major methodological limitations of the animal research and evidence of widespread publication bias” limit translatability [2].)
I don't know, but if you find your dog is now immortal at the human equivalent of 25 and you're getting old and grey, everything hurts, and the babes don't look at you any more, you're probably going to want something to get done about it, pronto.
Dog cancer is considered pretty similar to human cancer and sometimes treatment trials are done in dogs after they are done in mice and before they are done in humans.
Qem 18 days ago [-]
Euthanasia.
victorbjorklund 18 days ago [-]
malaria parasite discovered when researching cattle disease.
modeless 18 days ago [-]
Unlike futurists I have little hope of our medical system producing radical improvements to human lifespan in my lifetime. Even ASI can't cure aging if it is not allowed to do experiments or if powerful lobbies prevent it from accessing medical data or "displacing" human medical staff.
If we want to get breakthroughs in lifespan extension quickly, they will have to come initially from something like this where vested interests are less strong and regulations less stifling. Not that I think this particular effort is going to do it, but something like it is the only way it could happen.
ben_w 18 days ago [-]
While I think that anti-aging is harder than e.g. a successful and sane brain upload, the very thing you say in your second paragraph is why I think we may get it anyway — my inner cynic says that there are many rich and powerful dictators who will be very happy to volunteer their population as test subjects.
nradov 18 days ago [-]
Aging is not a single thing that can be cured. No one even agrees on what aging is.
But there's nothing stopping aging related research. Ethics committees allow scientists to conduct experiments as long as those meet proper privacy and safety standards. Nothing is being blocked over concerns about displacing human medical staff so I can't imagine where you're coming up with that type of conspiracy theory.
Even if all rules and regulations were removed there will be no radical improvements to human lifespan in your lifetime. This is fine. You are expendable.
GrumpyNl 18 days ago [-]
So when i join the project, my dog becomes a guinea pig for testing Rapamycin?
JumpCrisscross 18 days ago [-]
> when i join the project, my dog becomes a guinea pig for testing Rapamycin?
They remain a canine. But yes, they become a research subject.
aziaziazi 18 days ago [-]
I didn’t know that molecule. It’s an immunosuppressant, isn’t it a bit counter productive for old people that tends to be weaker?
victorbjorklund 18 days ago [-]
The idea is to inhibit mtor which regulates a lot of processes in the body that affects aging. The immunosuppressant effects are a side-effect.
If it works? It was promising but latetly it looks more unlikely.
Engineering-MD 18 days ago [-]
Better thought of as an immune modulator than suppressant. Ultimately it’s a blunt tool when we lack more specific agents. Yes, it will have risks including infection, but the benefits may (or may not) outweigh the risks.
JumpCrisscross 18 days ago [-]
> isn’t it a bit counter productive for old people that tends to be weaker?
Not if it’s running around fighting imaginary worms and generally inflaming everything.
abc-1 18 days ago [-]
Last I heard this had tens of millions of dollars allocated to it and yielded little to no results, unfortunately. Is that not the case?
mahkeiro 18 days ago [-]
The publication page of the site seems to contain quite a few publications. What do you mean by no result?
abc-1 18 days ago [-]
Nothing useful to improving human quality of life.
542354234235 18 days ago [-]
Exploring unknown paths that turn out not to lead anywhere useful is still worthwhile, since we can't possibly know beforehand what unknown information will or won't be useful. We don't even know what research might become useful based on new information from some other field or line of research.
abc-1 18 days ago [-]
Great, so there’s no way to “fail” and they can keep asking for money indefinitely. See the problem here? You’d stop shoveling money into research that hadn’t yielded any results either, especially if it was $24 million dollars that could have gone to better avenues.
worthless-trash 18 days ago [-]
I thought I had narrow definitions of usefulness.
abc-1 18 days ago [-]
That was stated as the main goal of the project: improve quality of life in dogs and hope the results transfer to humans. It didn’t achieve that goal so far. I really don’t know what you want me to say.
scott_w 18 days ago [-]
Being a little facetious: If my dog lives an extra 5 years of high quality life then that would improve my quality of life immeasurably.
insane_dreamer 18 days ago [-]
?? It's about improving the lifespan of dogs, not humans. But if you must, well, dogs living longer (while healthy) == happier human dog owners.
18 days ago [-]
tt_dev 18 days ago [-]
Need one for cats.
costcopizza 18 days ago [-]
We can get them to 30 with the help of Jake Perry's protocol.
-A breakfast of eggs, turkey bacon, broccoli and coffee … with cream
-A splash of red wine to “circulate the arteries”
-Stimulation by way of nature documentaries screened in his garage-turned-theater
This seems like it'd make for a very happy cat, but that level of sodium and caffeine and any alcohol intake at all has to be pretty bad for them.
the-chitmonger 18 days ago [-]
I've seen his story across various sources - has he ever elaborated on specific quantities/ratios? I haven't seen anyone reproduce his regimen for his cats, and I'd love to see some more concrete evidence that the diet is effective (IMHO the extensive development of his home to act as a massive jungle gym feels like the more likely culprit in their longevity).
shepherdjerred 18 days ago [-]
Thanks for sharing that article, it was a great read
urronglol 18 days ago [-]
[dead]
bru3s 18 days ago [-]
[flagged]
trallnag 18 days ago [-]
Why is the website so difficult to scroll through on Firefox on Android?
catlikesshrimp 18 days ago [-]
I am using version
133.0.3 (Build #2016060959), hg-7ed49fe90e84+
GV: 133.0.3-20241209150345
AS: 133.0
with ublock origin.
And it is behaving as expected (correctly, I mean)
trallnag 18 days ago [-]
I'm on exactly the same version, also with ublock as the only extension. Weird. For me the scrolling stops immediately the moment I lift my finger off the screen
sadeshmukh 18 days ago [-]
It's also bad with Chrome on Android.
RadiozRadioz 18 days ago [-]
That AI dog image on the homepage is dreadful. Look at the inconsistency in the depth of field. And the inconsistency of the depth of the physical field the dog is sitting in, left vs right.
bbarnett 18 days ago [-]
I feel a good startup would be collecting old photos, vetted as pre 2010, and storing them for use by people.
jessekv 18 days ago [-]
Finally, an actual use for my decades of photos...
vouaobrasil 18 days ago [-]
Obviously most people disagree, but I don't think we should search for medical advances that make life significantly longer. We should search for ideas that make the finite life on this planet significantly better. A longer life is dangerous. If people could live 150 or 200 years that will make the problems on this planet much worse since the desire to accumulate wealth over that time would be insane.
theoreticalmal 18 days ago [-]
Is there much difference between an individual living and accumulating wealth over 200 years vs 3 generations of a family living and accumulating wealth over that time? External factors that change fortunes would mostly still stay the same. Biggest difference I can think of would be less change of an incompetent younger generation throwing the wealth away
vouaobrasil 18 days ago [-]
Well the "throwing wealth away" is a big difference. And it's not just a matter of wealth. It's what people do with that wealth, such as influence the world negatively. The top 1% of those hell-bent on doing strange things usually don't have children that are similarly obsessed. And finally, it would increase the TOTAL number of people, which would exacerbate the situation because an absolute total number of people means even more exploitation by the rich.
JumpCrisscross 18 days ago [-]
> it would increase the TOTAL number of people, which would exacerbate the situation because an absolute total number of people means even more exploitation by the rich
The hypothesis is exploitation scales with population?
vouaobrasil 18 days ago [-]
Yes, it does, if you include exploitation of natural resources in the calculation.
JumpCrisscross 17 days ago [-]
> if you include exploitation of natural resources in the calculation
Well yes, if you change definitions I am a pink elephant.
There is no evidence “exploitation by the rich” of everyone else scales with population. (There is some evidence for the opposite.)
Even if we talk environmentalism, economies of scale mean larger populations tend to be more efficient ceteris paribus. And the whole premise is foundational wrong: longer adult lifespans predict lower childbirth and population declines. Not increases.
throwuxiytayq 18 days ago [-]
> A longer life is dangerous. If people could live 150 or 200 years that will make the problems on this planet much worse since the desire to accumulate wealth over that time would be insane.
I honestly think this meme is way more dangerous and insane than the idea of having a longer and healthier life
yladiz 18 days ago [-]
Why?
JumpCrisscross 18 days ago [-]
> Why?
If 150 years is dangerous, why not 80?
vouaobrasil 18 days ago [-]
If 1000 years is dangerous, why not 80?
JumpCrisscross 17 days ago [-]
> If 1000 years is dangerous, why not 80?
Yes. This is why a thousand years probably isn’t dangerous.
JumpCrisscross 18 days ago [-]
> Obviously most people disagree
I’d argue this is the popular take. With almost any medical research. “Don’t play god” and all that. At least while the benefit is hypothetical.
> If people could live 150 or 200 years that will make the problems on this planet much worse
Climate change would become a peach. We love to talk about thinking of the children, but self interest is more powerful among most. Longer lives mean longer-term thinking.
vouaobrasil 18 days ago [-]
No, it wouldn't, because no matter how long people live, they cannot imagine many years in the future, even if it's their own future.
JumpCrisscross 17 days ago [-]
> no matter how long people live, they cannot imagine many years in the future, even if it's their own future
Care to substantiate that claim? Modern history flies straight in the face of it, from savings to childbirth rates correlating negatively with longevity.
To be clear: I’m not suggesting longer healthspans are a panacea. We are amply capable of screwing it up, e.g. by entrenching powerful people. But dynasties and aristocracies already exist. For every great builder of fortunes there are a hundred squanderers, even in the same lifetime. And despite it all, there is something to be said for age granting wisdom for most all the way up to senility, which an extended healthspan should forestall.
hasbot 18 days ago [-]
Apparently they'd agree. From their Project Details page:
> At the Dog Aging Project, we’re focused on healthy aging not just lifespan extension. We want to understand the biological and environmental factors that influence aging and intervene to prevent debilitating decline. We imagine a future in which we maximize healthspan—the period of life spent in good health and free from disease—allowing us many more years with high quality of life.
542354234235 18 days ago [-]
So instead of fixing problems with wealth inequality, just let people die. Should we ban healthcare after 55 so people won’t take up valuable resources staying alive? I personally would prefer existing and experiencing all life has to offer.
JumpCrisscross 18 days ago [-]
> I personally would prefer existing and experiencing all life has to offer
Almost as much as that, I’d prefer people having a longer time horizon on which they draw their lives.
paulcole 18 days ago [-]
> A longer life is dangerous.
Just so we know, at what point should we have stopped searching for medical advances that make life significantly longer? I’m assuming you’re anti-chemotherapy?
vouaobrasil 18 days ago [-]
Industrial civilization has brought about a massive increase in human population which is destructive. One way or another, life on this planet would be much better for a smaller number of humans.
paulcole 17 days ago [-]
Just so we know, at what point should we have stopped searching for medical advances that make life significantly longer? I’m assuming you’re anti-chemotherapy? And what specifically should the “smaller number of humans” be?
typewithrhythm 18 days ago [-]
If I consider the global society I will be living in, I would prefer to see what an extra 30-50 years of high cognitive function for the people most rewarded by our current system produces, rather than trying to define what a good finite life is from some authoritarian.
ericjmorey 18 days ago [-]
How about an extra 30-50 years under a highly cognitively functioning authoritarian?
vouaobrasil 18 days ago [-]
> for the people most rewarded by our current system
This includes people like Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg, who would make the world better off by the cognitive nonexistance.
typewithrhythm 18 days ago [-]
Tech billionaires are always a weird focus for this kind of sentiment...
Compared to the likes of the Rothschilds (just as a well known example) they are harmless, transparent, and meritocratic.
vouaobrasil 18 days ago [-]
Still a net negative.
sundarurfriend 18 days ago [-]
Worse, that wealth accumulation will also lead to cultural stagnation: just like "science advances one funeral at a time", it's a harsh reality that culture also advances one funeral at a time.
Older generations try to take in new ideas - about homosexuality, racial equality, universal human rights, whatever else you can think of - and raise their children with those ideas in place too. And most often, those children find out later that the older generation didn't really believe in what they were saying, at least not to the extent of being able to overcome their own childhood programming. But because this new generation was raised with these new ideas, they're actually able to internalize them and progress society further.
Having older people with stagnant ideas and larger and larger accumulated wealth and power, would be a disastrous headwind against social progress.
xapata 18 days ago [-]
Like elves in _Shadowrun_.
deanc 18 days ago [-]
> Obviously most people disagree, but I don't think we should search for medical advances that make life significantly longer.
I'd say we should search for medical advances that improve health span, not lifespan.
However if socially we prevent girls from getting pregnant at 10 then biology can make them go through puberty at 10 without risk, since they will not get pregnant anyway.
Edit: As for the playfulness point, for us humans we punish kids for being playful when they reach 7, so it makes sense that we will evolve to stop playing around at 7 and hence becoming adults already by then. We don't punish pets for being playful though, at least not today.
Further, we can have multi-modal distributions that undermine the biological assumption. Some groups show much lower birth ages because it's not culturally disadvantageous than other groups. In that context, even if the average age increases, it doesn't mean lower birth age is biologically disadvantageous.
>humans we punish kids for being playful when they reach 7
This needs a citation or at least a definition of what is meant by "playfulness", because I find it hard to believe. I don't know any parents who would want their child to stop playing at 7 years old.
Parents don't decide what happens to the kids at school though.
> We can socially change much faster than we can biologically evolve.
If the genes were always there but they died constantly 200 years ago it just meant that we no longer cull those people early, and after a couple of such generations we now have them around. Early puberty is still not common, it just exists, that makes it more likely to be biological than social, if the social changes did it then early puberty would be the norm today rather than a very rare exception.
Note the popularity of memes about "adulting".
That's one possibility. Another is subcultures which prioritise reproduction over personal freedom will end up demographically dominant in the long-run. Look for example at Kiryas Joel, New York, and similar ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities, whose growth shows no signs of slowing down in the foreseeable future. Of course, exponential growth can't last forever, but nobody knows what exactly the limit is and when it will be reached – it might not be reached until they've become a very substantial percentage of the population, maybe even the majority.
Do animals stop? There are plenty of examples of play in adult animals:
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S03766...
- https://medium.com/illumination/wild-animals-at-play-982e26e...
- https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1998-07899-003
The basic semantics of her language of play are all the same: she bows, she'll yawn, she barks and does that side-eye glance. Sometimes she'll dance. If she gets really hyped up she'll get the zoomies.
Dogs, from what I've observed, are incredibly intelligent and social animals as they exist today.
I think this already well known in evolutionary biology circles though not through culture. I don't recollect but it was most likely Robin Dunbar who said it, people ganging together to kill of the most annoying/bullying/maladjusted members.
I'm sure I did not misunderstand Robin Dunbar, He actually said homicides were common. If a bunch of people hated someone they ganged up and killed him/her, leading to humans being relatively more neotenistic than other primates.
(I used maladapted in a very loose way: especially being maladapted socially, we are not talking about being maladapted phicially and other ways)
But there's no such thing as an objective "evolutionary fitness". It only makes sense to speak of evolutionary fitness in a given niche.
What domesticated animals were bread for "cuteness"? Cats are mice hunters. Most popular dog breeds were selected for killing and dog fight! That "big smile" is not for laughter, but to crush bones!
And many domesticated animals can not even reproduce without human assistance. How they would survive in wild?
Dogs.
> Cats are mice hunters
Cats blur the line between domestication and taming.
> Most popular dog breeds were selected for killing and dog fight
One can breed for more than one thing. (Dog fighting as a selection pressure is very modern and very limited.)
Dogs literally evolved a muscle to make them more appealing to (and help them communicate with) humans [1].
> many domesticated animals can not even reproduce without human assistance
Not an argument against neateny.
[1] https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/dogs-have-special-...
> Dogs literally evolved a muscle to make them more appealing to (and help them communicate with) humans
Not necessarily exactly cuteness. The other explanation suggested is better communication in general - by exposing the whites of their eyes we can see what they are looking at, which is an important cue for humans (we use it between ourselves too) to indicate the direction of attention.
Sure. But most of those traits are shallow. Let the breed go stray and many characteristics go away. The neoteny does not.
> Not necessarily exactly cuteness
The neoteny—large eyes and heads, for example—is precisely cuteness. Not all breeds are equally neotenic. But they’re very much not wolves.
A lot of characteristics seem to be bred in and instinctive - breed specific behaviour occurs without training. Strays do not breed pure so of course breed specific characteristics are lost.
> The neoteny—large eyes and heads, for example—is precisely cuteness
To an extent yes. The specific trait mentioned in the comment I was replying to was not neotenous. Not all neotonous traits are physically cute.
My point is neoteny almost isn’t breed specific. Let strays breed and it’s preserved—stray dogs are cuter than wolves.
Wild dogs don’t become wolves. (They also stop being French bulldogs.)
> Not all neotonous traits are physically cute
Almost all physically-cute traits are neutenous.
This scene from an 1953 Tom and Jerry of Spike teaching Tyke what it means to be a dog seems prescient: https://youtu.be/jnW48TihBR0?t=50s
Fairly recent experiments with domestication of foxes show how it might work.
What you select for is behavior. Mainly you breed individuals that neither attack humans nor run away from them. Any other response than aggression or fear is ok. In few generations it turns out individuals selected this way retain more and more juvenile traits.
I think cats never needed to get domesticated because reacting to humans with neither aggression nor fear is within natural range of perfectly normal behaviors of most individuals of this specific niche feline species that got globalized through its relationship with humans.
If interested -
Project lead interviewed by Dr. Peter Attia: https://peterattiamd.com/mattkaeberlein/
Rapamycin: https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2024/03/15/rapamycin...
They share a list of academic publications that have resulted from the project, and their Team page lists the full names a sizable large number of people.
Their FAQ indicates that the cost of the DNA Kit and other things are covered by the project funding. [1]
What made you think that it's engaging in fraud? I'm genuinely curious.
I'm not involved in the project but just from looking at the site for several minutes, it seems to be a fairly reasonable research project.
Or did you say "fraud" less to mean "these are people who are stealing money and e.g., hoarding it away" and more to mean "these are people engaging in a research project I disapprove of"?
[1] https://dogagingproject.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/441699...
Interestingly, through engaging with you I discovered that this is a cognitive bias called the "horn effect" and is the reverse of the more common "Halo effect": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horn_effect#:~:text=The%20horn....
Here, now it's one click
https://dogagingproject.org/our-team
Especially those that target extremely small slices of population (some would say at the expense of other larger, mostly neglected groups)
Uhh there is a donation button on the site.
Religion promises an eternal afterlife. Cryogenics promises a future thawing and cure in an enlightend and technically advanced future. Plastic surgery puts a veneer over the signs of the natural aging process. The more recent batch have targeted metabolism, growth inhibition (ie rapamycin), etc.
Very wealthy people that don't want to die or don't want their pets to die will never be in short supply. They will still all die, roughly around the same time they would have otherwise from different causes with different infirmities (search for "sirolimus side effects").
Enjoy and make the most of the years you are given. Happy New Year.
There is literally nothing about this project that will have any dog or human live forever. But it does have the possibility to improve dog and human health in some fundamental ways and increase the number of healthy years that we get before disease takes over. If this is longevity science, then all medicine is longevity science.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38447491
There's also https://leapyears.com/ - another project with similar goals. That one is associated with David Sinclair of Harvard Medical School:
https://sinclair.hms.harvard.edu/people/david-sinclair
Personally, I'm optimistic about the capacity of studies and projects like these to extend our knowledge regarding aging. Human trials are fraught with ethical issues, and have very slow feedback loops (acquiring results from a study might take decades, which can be an entire career). Laboratory trials on mice and other small mammals can be more effective, but funding is hard and the results are isolated to a small academic lab. Large-scale supplements for pets can give data in a few years, have lesser (though not negligible) ethical problems, and have built-in funding. The funding process is, of course, a source of conflicts of interest, but it has to be done somehow.
“As microbial and genetic discoveries were made, pathogenesis studies were required to integrate the new knowledge into useful clinical advances. Those advances include a creative model of enteric bacterial disease (Moon), demonstration of the transmissibility and pathogenesis of scrapie, a proposal that human kuru was a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (Hadlow), and the isolation of bovine leukemia virus (Miller) and bovine immunosuppressive retroviruses (Van Der Maaten)—5 years before AIDS and HIV appeared. Now modern molecular and genetic sciences and their applications in integrative, whole-animal biology make possible exciting advances for the benefit of both animals and people” [1].
(Counterfactual: “major methodological limitations of the animal research and evidence of widespread publication bias” limit translatability [2].)
[1] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK22905/
[2] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2746847/
If we want to get breakthroughs in lifespan extension quickly, they will have to come initially from something like this where vested interests are less strong and regulations less stifling. Not that I think this particular effort is going to do it, but something like it is the only way it could happen.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-03936-8
But there's nothing stopping aging related research. Ethics committees allow scientists to conduct experiments as long as those meet proper privacy and safety standards. Nothing is being blocked over concerns about displacing human medical staff so I can't imagine where you're coming up with that type of conspiracy theory.
Even if all rules and regulations were removed there will be no radical improvements to human lifespan in your lifetime. This is fine. You are expendable.
They remain a canine. But yes, they become a research subject.
If it works? It was promising but latetly it looks more unlikely.
Not if it’s running around fighting imaginary worms and generally inflaming everything.
-A breakfast of eggs, turkey bacon, broccoli and coffee … with cream
-A splash of red wine to “circulate the arteries”
-Stimulation by way of nature documentaries screened in his garage-turned-theater
-Lots of love and attention
See: https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/how-to-raise-a-165-yea...
with ublock origin.
And it is behaving as expected (correctly, I mean)
The hypothesis is exploitation scales with population?
Well yes, if you change definitions I am a pink elephant.
There is no evidence “exploitation by the rich” of everyone else scales with population. (There is some evidence for the opposite.)
Even if we talk environmentalism, economies of scale mean larger populations tend to be more efficient ceteris paribus. And the whole premise is foundational wrong: longer adult lifespans predict lower childbirth and population declines. Not increases.
I honestly think this meme is way more dangerous and insane than the idea of having a longer and healthier life
If 150 years is dangerous, why not 80?
Yes. This is why a thousand years probably isn’t dangerous.
I’d argue this is the popular take. With almost any medical research. “Don’t play god” and all that. At least while the benefit is hypothetical.
> If people could live 150 or 200 years that will make the problems on this planet much worse
Climate change would become a peach. We love to talk about thinking of the children, but self interest is more powerful among most. Longer lives mean longer-term thinking.
Care to substantiate that claim? Modern history flies straight in the face of it, from savings to childbirth rates correlating negatively with longevity.
To be clear: I’m not suggesting longer healthspans are a panacea. We are amply capable of screwing it up, e.g. by entrenching powerful people. But dynasties and aristocracies already exist. For every great builder of fortunes there are a hundred squanderers, even in the same lifetime. And despite it all, there is something to be said for age granting wisdom for most all the way up to senility, which an extended healthspan should forestall.
> At the Dog Aging Project, we’re focused on healthy aging not just lifespan extension. We want to understand the biological and environmental factors that influence aging and intervene to prevent debilitating decline. We imagine a future in which we maximize healthspan—the period of life spent in good health and free from disease—allowing us many more years with high quality of life.
Almost as much as that, I’d prefer people having a longer time horizon on which they draw their lives.
Just so we know, at what point should we have stopped searching for medical advances that make life significantly longer? I’m assuming you’re anti-chemotherapy?
This includes people like Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg, who would make the world better off by the cognitive nonexistance.
Older generations try to take in new ideas - about homosexuality, racial equality, universal human rights, whatever else you can think of - and raise their children with those ideas in place too. And most often, those children find out later that the older generation didn't really believe in what they were saying, at least not to the extent of being able to overcome their own childhood programming. But because this new generation was raised with these new ideas, they're actually able to internalize them and progress society further.
Having older people with stagnant ideas and larger and larger accumulated wealth and power, would be a disastrous headwind against social progress.
I'd say we should search for medical advances that improve health span, not lifespan.