In a few years, this will be no longer a philosophical question. With DNA sequencing prices plummeting, the new age in medicine is approaching. Another milestone in the quest toward immortality... just as Ray predicted.
It's coming'...
Kontes Ilustrasi Bahan Ajar: Creating Openly Licensed Assets for Educators
-
(Screenshot of the landing page https://adicita.gimpscape.or.id/) From
October to November 2024, Creative Commons Indonesia and Gimpscape ID (Open
Source C...
1 day ago
4 comments:
Immortality, my friend, is very easy.
All you need to do is to attain the speed of light. When you do, time effectively stops flowing for you, thus granting you immortality.
Of course, you need an infinite amount of energy to accelerate to c, but hey, life's imperfect.
Unless you're massless, that is. If that's so, then you've already achieved c and are dualistic .
P.S.: It must be very hard to type while oscillating.
I'm curious. If your vehicle reaches c, yet your body can only handle .99999999c, then what happens to you?
Well, that's not something that's likely to happen. You can not reach c (neither can your vehicle). It is the limit, which only massless particles (f.e. photons, whose particle character is debatable) can achieve. The thing is that as you accelerate, your mass increases; slowly at first, but more rapidly as you approach c, which in turn means you need a bigger impulse to keep accelerating at the same rate. Read up here.
Ad 'handling': your body is perfectly capable of handling any velocity. There's no difference if you're striding down the street, driving a race car, strapped in a hypersonic jet or flying a spacecraft at relativistic velocities. You wouldn't notice any difference, either.
There is a practical limit, though; if you're going too fast, even the tiny atoms of interstellar hydrogen are going to start punching holes in your precious spacecraft.
Post a Comment