maybe most of the money and psychology involved in this whole business is about buying hope,
I really think it just didn’t occur to them. It’s certainly about buying hope—but we’d like to purchase hope effectively!
Let me disclose first that I have no idea how to fix this problem… the problem of getting them to take information from the world of science and biomedicine and applying it to themselves.
Well, I do! Create a trustworthy central hub which analyses and disseminates this type of practical information. If such a hub exists, figure out why it missed this solution. There is a lot of information concerning how to stay alive for longer, and even someone trained in the biological sciences would have to put in huge time investments to separate the signal from the noise and seek out the creative, off-the-radar solutions.
There are people who are exercising their butts off, taking questionable hormones, intermittent fasting, and all kinds of extremely effort-full and sometimes paradoxically risky activities in the quest to stay alive, so if you truly know of an effective thing that people don’t know about and aren’t pursuing, it’s a flaw in information dissemination techniques...because there’s a ton of people trying.
Could it be the high barrier to entry? I’m not an expert, but I have the impression that the biomedical field is regulated up the wazoo. I’ve been thinking about what it’d take to get a basic company off the ground, and the main trouble that occurs to me is the regulation upon regulation that is required to do anything with human cells—let alone medical procedures!
If the regulations on human cells were applied consistently, you’d need a review committee, a hazmat suit, a HEPA filter, and a negative air pressure containment unit each time you went to the bathroom.
I really think it just didn’t occur to them. It’s certainly about buying hope—but we’d like to purchase hope effectively!
Well, I do! Create a trustworthy central hub which analyses and disseminates this type of practical information. If such a hub exists, figure out why it missed this solution. There is a lot of information concerning how to stay alive for longer, and even someone trained in the biological sciences would have to put in huge time investments to separate the signal from the noise and seek out the creative, off-the-radar solutions.
There are people who are exercising their butts off, taking questionable hormones, intermittent fasting, and all kinds of extremely effort-full and sometimes paradoxically risky activities in the quest to stay alive, so if you truly know of an effective thing that people don’t know about and aren’t pursuing, it’s a flaw in information dissemination techniques...because there’s a ton of people trying.
Could it be the high barrier to entry? I’m not an expert, but I have the impression that the biomedical field is regulated up the wazoo. I’ve been thinking about what it’d take to get a basic company off the ground, and the main trouble that occurs to me is the regulation upon regulation that is required to do anything with human cells—let alone medical procedures!
If the regulations on human cells were applied consistently, you’d need a review committee, a hazmat suit, a HEPA filter, and a negative air pressure containment unit each time you went to the bathroom.