If smoking a pack only cost you 30 minutes, then you’d have to smoke a pack a day for 48 years to shorten your lifespan by just 1 year, which IIRC is a lower risk than smoking actually poses.
The figure I was familiar with, and the one most frequent in the first page of Google results for each cigarette shortens your life by, is 11 minutes.
Let’s assume someone who didn’t stop smoked for 40 years—two packs a day. That’s 40 x 365 x 40 = 584,000 cigarettes. Divide that into 10 years worth of minutes, and it comes out as .9 minutes, assuming I set up the calculations properly.
This may imply that if we get decent anti-aging tech, smoking won’t be a serious risk.
Not necessarily; more likely, it just means that damage is cumulative over time. Most people don’t start smoking when they’re 45, so it’s not really a direct comparison.
Also, smoking seems to negatively affect brain health as well, which is problematic since reversing brain degradation might be harder then other types of anti-aging technology.
If someone smoked for 40 years and that reduced their life by 10 years, that 4:1 ratio translates to every 24 hours of being a smoker reducing lifespan by 6 hours (360 minutes). Assuming 40 cigarettes a day, that’s 360⁄40 or 9 minutes per cigarette, pretty close to the 11 given earlier.
The figure I was familiar with, and the one most frequent in the first page of Google results for
each cigarette shortens your life by
, is 11 minutes.That seems high.
Smoking shortens life by about ten years—but not so much if you stop by age 40. This may imply that if we get decent anti-aging tech, smoking won’t be a serious risk. How hard would the tech be to not be bothered by cigarette smoke?
Let’s assume someone who didn’t stop smoked for 40 years—two packs a day. That’s 40 x 365 x 40 = 584,000 cigarettes. Divide that into 10 years worth of minutes, and it comes out as .9 minutes, assuming I set up the calculations properly.
Not necessarily; more likely, it just means that damage is cumulative over time. Most people don’t start smoking when they’re 45, so it’s not really a direct comparison.
Also, smoking seems to negatively affect brain health as well, which is problematic since reversing brain degradation might be harder then other types of anti-aging technology.
I think there’s an error in your calculations.
If someone smoked for 40 years and that reduced their life by 10 years, that 4:1 ratio translates to every 24 hours of being a smoker reducing lifespan by 6 hours (360 minutes). Assuming 40 cigarettes a day, that’s 360⁄40 or 9 minutes per cigarette, pretty close to the 11 given earlier.