I
IWantGod
Guest
If scientists found away to permanently stop the aging process, would this be an immoral thing to do?
You might be a little annoyed if you were in your nineties. But if you could pick a year when you could start (around mid thirties for me), then I’d take the pill.If scientists found away to permanently stop the aging process, would this be an immoral thing to do?
A side effect of the pill is that your children live for ever and they never grow up. And then there is the problem of overcrowding. One Hundred billion immortal beings on the planet earth!.Most of them babies.You might be a little annoyed if you were in your nineties. But if you could pick a year when you could start (around mid thirties for me), then I’d take the pill.
You’ve never had children, have you. There isn’t a parent on the planet who would want an eternity of changing nappies. I think it could be Dante’s tenth circle of hell.A side effect of the pill is that your children live for ever and they never grow up. And then there is the problem of overcrowding. One Hundred billion immortal beings on the planet earth!.Most of them babies.
:extrahappy:You’ve never had children, have you. There isn’t a parent on the planet who would want an eternity of changing nappies. I think it could be Dante’s tenth circle of hell.
People always want to play God.If scientists found away to permanently stop the aging process, would this be an immoral thing to do?
What do you mean?People always want to play God.
It never works out well.
God created us to live for a while, then die.What do you mean?
No, in the end, there will be an end. Entropy will catch up and death will happen.If scientists found away to permanently stop the aging process, would this be an immoral thing to do?
Then how are we to understand that life expectancy is higher today than 100 years ago? In the early 1900 it was around 48 today it is 79. Yes lower infant death mortality accounts for a chuck of that, but we have been interfering in Gods creation since the beginning of time. I really doubt God cares how long we live.God created us to live for a while, then die.
Then lie for eternity with Him in heaven.
When we interfere with that (even just in theory) we are saying that God doesn’t know what he is doing. That His way for doing things is wrong.
No, our way of doing things is often very wrong. I would rather go to Heaven then spend a zillion years here on earth. On earth we have no idea what the future will bring. But Christ tells us how wonderful life will be in Heaven for eternity.
That’s the superior way.
Not wrong; just unachievable.No, in the end, there will be an end. Entropy will catch up and death will happen.
There is no way to stop quantum fluctuation. The resource is limited on Earth anyway.If scientists found away to permanently stop the aging process, would this be an immoral thing to do?
Isn’t that the traditional view of heaven, or the happy hunting grounds, etc?If scientists found away to permanently stop the aging process, would this be an immoral thing to do?
You cant live forever, the universe will one day come to an end. End of universe end of all lifeTo live forever? What would be the point? Where would be the joy? Where would be the expectations? Just wondering? Peace.
Aging isn’t the main issue. It’s dealing with the hell that is disease. Endless pain and suffering that comes with chronic disease. Who would want to live that long.If scientists found away to permanently stop the aging process, would this be an immoral thing to do?