Most people do not have open-ended interests the way LWers do.
Marvin Minsky said something similar a few years ago, to the effect that most people don’t have “real goals,” unlike the scientists Minsky knows who tell him that they have personal lists of problems that they would like to solve, but the problems will take longer than their current life expectancies.
Mike Darwin also mentioned this as a problem in an essay he published in Cryonics magazine back in 1984:
Darwin thinks that the arrival of practical superlongevity will shake out a whole lot of people who can’t use it constructively—they’ll die any way, in other words—based on an analogy to how we still haven’t adapted fully to the recent wealth revolution. He references Elvis Presley as an example of maladaptation to great wealth; but since Presley died in 1977 and most of you don’t remember him, you might think of, say, Michael Jackson or those buffoonish Kardashians as more recent examples of people who have wealth that they don’t know how to use well.
Not really buying the analogy between massive wealth and superlongevity. Virtually unlimited access to super-stimulation such as fame, drugs and any other rush you could want to get your hands on doesn’t seem all that comparable to an unlimited supply of everyday normal life.
The everyday reality of living forever isn’t going to be shockingly more exciting than regular ol’ not living forever. There will be new awesome and crazy stuff, but you’ll have had lifetimes to grow used to them. People born into them will think of them like how we currently think of small handheld computers that can connect us to almost everyone we’ve ever known and effortlessly tap into a huge reservoir of collected human knowledge.
Seems more analogous to looking at the average level of wealth/lifespan in 1700 and wondering how our brains could ever handle the lavish living conditions and doubled life expectancy of 2015.
Life expectancy (at age 0) has increased mainly because infant mortality and child mortality has decreased dramatically, not because people used to collectively live to 30′s and now live to 70′s. Most adults in our ancestral past lived to be about as old as people do in western industrialized nations today.
This is true, but there was also a significantly increased risk of death in young adults from accidents and in women during childbirth; also, “nearly as old as we do now” still means a decade or so off the end.
Yep, I checked from here and there’s still 17 extra years for males and 21 extra years for females in 2011 compared to 1850 in “life expectancy at age 20”.
However, our expected healthspan (the amount of time for which a person is capable of substantial physical activity and not beset by ailments) has gone up considerably in the last few centuries. Perhaps the relatively few people who made it to old age in hunter-gatherer societies might have had similar healthspans, but they constituted a dramatically smaller fraction of the total populace. The average 35 year old today has decades longer of healthy, productive living to look forward to than the average 35 year old 300 years ago (sources available in this book) and while people occasionally remark on, say, 50 being the new 30, it doesn’t seem to leave most people dazzled or mentally unequipped for their new environment.
Huh, I have harbored that misconception for a really long time. Pretty annoyed that I never thought to examine that statistic further (it just sounds so right!). Thank you.
e: regardless of the fact that there is a decade or so of actual increased lifespan between the two periods, this still solidly harpoons my analogy.
Most adults in our ancestral past lived to be about as old as people do in western industrialized nations today.
That sounds iffy to me. Sure, straight comparison of life expectancy at birth is heavily biased by child mortality. So let’s take life expectancy at, say, 25. Are you saying that in “ancestral past” if you made it to 25 you were likely to make it to 70-80? I strongly doubt that, if only for medical reasons. Lack of effective medicine including antibiotics, lack of understanding of public health issues leading to epidemics, parasite load, etc. Plus violence for men and childbirth for women were major risk factors.
Epidemics and parasite load may have been lower than you might think if the populations were more diffuse. Things spread better through a dense population jammed into a refugee camp than through a sparse population.
According to this if you made it to 15 your average life expectancy was around 54.
OK, let’s accept that 54 years number. A US 15-year-old male has the life expectancy of 15+62=77 years and a 15-year-old female -- 15+67=82 years (source). Take the average of 80, more or less.
So basically the life expectancy of a contemporary American 15-year-old is one and a half times larger than the life expectancy of a 15-year-old from a forager tribe. That’s not “about as old”. Besides, hunter-gatherers are known to be healthier than farmers.
Marvin Minsky said something similar a few years ago, to the effect that most people don’t have “real goals,” unlike the scientists Minsky knows who tell him that they have personal lists of problems that they would like to solve, but the problems will take longer than their current life expectancies.
Mike Darwin also mentioned this as a problem in an essay he published in Cryonics magazine back in 1984:
http://www.alcor.org/cryonics/cryonics8402.txt
Darwin thinks that the arrival of practical superlongevity will shake out a whole lot of people who can’t use it constructively—they’ll die any way, in other words—based on an analogy to how we still haven’t adapted fully to the recent wealth revolution. He references Elvis Presley as an example of maladaptation to great wealth; but since Presley died in 1977 and most of you don’t remember him, you might think of, say, Michael Jackson or those buffoonish Kardashians as more recent examples of people who have wealth that they don’t know how to use well.
Not really buying the analogy between massive wealth and superlongevity. Virtually unlimited access to super-stimulation such as fame, drugs and any other rush you could want to get your hands on doesn’t seem all that comparable to an unlimited supply of everyday normal life.
The everyday reality of living forever isn’t going to be shockingly more exciting than regular ol’ not living forever. There will be new awesome and crazy stuff, but you’ll have had lifetimes to grow used to them. People born into them will think of them like how we currently think of small handheld computers that can connect us to almost everyone we’ve ever known and effortlessly tap into a huge reservoir of collected human knowledge.
Seems more analogous to looking at the average level of wealth/lifespan in 1700 and wondering how our brains could ever handle the lavish living conditions and doubled life expectancy of 2015.
Contrast the Kardashians with Elon Musk or Peter Thiel.
Life expectancy (at age 0) has increased mainly because infant mortality and child mortality has decreased dramatically, not because people used to collectively live to 30′s and now live to 70′s. Most adults in our ancestral past lived to be about as old as people do in western industrialized nations today.
This is true, but there was also a significantly increased risk of death in young adults from accidents and in women during childbirth; also, “nearly as old as we do now” still means a decade or so off the end.
Yep, I checked from here and there’s still 17 extra years for males and 21 extra years for females in 2011 compared to 1850 in “life expectancy at age 20”.
More specifically, all the cells in the “2011” row of the “White males” table are around 40% larger than the corresponding cells in the “1890” row.
However, our expected healthspan (the amount of time for which a person is capable of substantial physical activity and not beset by ailments) has gone up considerably in the last few centuries. Perhaps the relatively few people who made it to old age in hunter-gatherer societies might have had similar healthspans, but they constituted a dramatically smaller fraction of the total populace. The average 35 year old today has decades longer of healthy, productive living to look forward to than the average 35 year old 300 years ago (sources available in this book) and while people occasionally remark on, say, 50 being the new 30, it doesn’t seem to leave most people dazzled or mentally unequipped for their new environment.
Huh, I have harbored that misconception for a really long time. Pretty annoyed that I never thought to examine that statistic further (it just sounds so right!). Thank you.
e: regardless of the fact that there is a decade or so of actual increased lifespan between the two periods, this still solidly harpoons my analogy.
That sounds iffy to me. Sure, straight comparison of life expectancy at birth is heavily biased by child mortality. So let’s take life expectancy at, say, 25. Are you saying that in “ancestral past” if you made it to 25 you were likely to make it to 70-80? I strongly doubt that, if only for medical reasons. Lack of effective medicine including antibiotics, lack of understanding of public health issues leading to epidemics, parasite load, etc. Plus violence for men and childbirth for women were major risk factors.
According to this if you made it to 15 your average life expectancy was around 54.
http://www.unm.edu/~hkaplan/KaplanHillLancasterHurtado_2000_LHEvolution.pdf
Epidemics and parasite load may have been lower than you might think if the populations were more diffuse. Things spread better through a dense population jammed into a refugee camp than through a sparse population.
OK, let’s accept that 54 years number. A US 15-year-old male has the life expectancy of 15+62=77 years and a 15-year-old female -- 15+67=82 years (source). Take the average of 80, more or less.
So basically the life expectancy of a contemporary American 15-year-old is one and a half times larger than the life expectancy of a 15-year-old from a forager tribe. That’s not “about as old”. Besides, hunter-gatherers are known to be healthier than farmers.