If you could live forever and never change (i.e., invulnerability) would you?
Not in my current body. perhaps 25 years ago I would have.If you could live forever and never change (i.e., invulnerability) would you?
Actually, I've been thinking about that for a while.If you could live forever and never change (i.e., invulnerability) would you?
That's exactly what I was thinking :)Not in my current body. perhaps 25 years ago I would have.
I am now suspicious that some omnipotent being made you this offer and you asked us idiots for advice..If you could live forever and never change (i.e., invulnerability) would you?
Is this one of those “A man is not dead while his name is still spoken.” things? See GNU Terry PratchettAlas with the amount of info I have pushed into the web, there is a vague possibility I, we, all of us may find some kind of immortality in simulated Artificial Intelligence based on what we talk about every day on here. Train a current algorithm on my TEST posts and you'd probably get it to respond with stuff that sounds like me with the occasional "For the GLORY of TEST" and "Thank you, Glorious Leader!"
Immortality Inc. just informed me that you can keep your cover model charm and they'll even throw in a deluxe caboose for good measure. All this and more for the low low price of your immortal soul. Sign up now and we'll also give you a pine scented air freshener for your train engine 100% free of charge.Depends. Do I get to keep my dashing good looks and chiseled jawline?
You get to keep your depends.Depends. Do I get to keep my dashing good looks and chiseled jawline?
While it might be fun for a while especially if it was in a young healthy body. But like all things I imagine it would get old and tiresome. And it's not like living for 100s of years will increase your intelligence the things you will have seen done and forgotten would give you the chance to relive moments again. But even then I cannot imagine what the loss of fear of death would do to one's psychic and how twisted one would become. Think of the the fate that most trust fund kids and child celebrities experience magnified by the realization that you'll easily outlive what ever opinions youve created.If you could live forever and never change (i.e., invulnerability) would you?
I wonder how someone who has and have lived a full life to that point with a condition like short term memory loss would approach that challenge?And it's not like living for 100s of years will increase your intelligence the things you will have seen done and forgotten would give you the chance to relive moments again. But even then I cannot imagine what the loss of fear of death would do to one's psychic and how twisted one would become.
If everyday is a new day then what would be the point in living more than a day? It could be argued that we are a collection of our past experiences projecting towards future possibilities. After all the worse form of torture is to remove one's future. And a future with out a past seems as disconnected as having no future.I wonder how someone who has and have lived a full life to that point with a condition like short term memory loss would approach that challenge?
If you never had that power of recollection in the first place and every day is like a brand new unexperienced day to them anyway, would they psychologically be a better candidate for such a feat as living forever?
Reminds me of another conundrum:After all the worse form of torture is to remove one's future.
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