What nightmares may come, when we shuffle onto an immortal coil

Sunday, Sep. 30, 2012

"In 20 years human beings will neither die nor age."

That's Shukan Gendai magazine's headline. Is it possible? Is the age-old dream about to come true? Are homo sapiens, who have been dying for 190,000-odd years, on the cusp at last of immortality?

Myriad champions down the millennia have waged their battles against Death. The first known one is Gilgamesh, of the 4,000-year-old Mesopotamian epic that bears his name. Gilgamesh, King of Uruk, journeys to a distant land where dwells the world's only immortal man who is willing to help, on one condition: Gilgamesh must stay awake for a week. He fails, and earns a stinging rebuke: "Behold this fellow who seeks eternal life! Sleep swirls over him like a mist."

So much for that. Gilgamesh died but his quest lives on. His successors are legion. Among them is the Chinese Taoist sage Xu Fu, who in the 3rd century BC led an armada of 60 ships crewed, it was said, by 3,000 virgins across the eastern seas in search of the elixir of eternal life. What he found instead, says legend, is Japan, where, legendarily, he settled and introduced the Japanese to rice farming.

There's no end of marvelous tales. Some, to the modern sensibility, are plain crazy, like that of the 16th-century Hungarian noblewoman who pursued deathless eternal youth by bathing in her young daughter's blood. They all have the same ending, which the Biblical Book of Genesis sums up very well: "Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return."

So what is Shukan Gendai telling us that our death sentence has been revoked?

If it has, the hero of this story is not a warrior-king or a mystic or a quack but a scientist. His thesis arouses more skepticism among his peers than support, but over the years the support has been growing, if slowly. He's a 49-year-old British biogerontologist named Aubrey de Grey. He has a doctorate from Cambridge, is editor in chief of the academic journal Rejuvenation Research, has authored numerous books on aging, and is chief science officer of the SENS Foundation. SENS stands for Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence. The last two words are, to all practical purposes, synonymous with immortality.

De Grey works at the cellular level. His famous "seven causes" of aging and death all have to do with cell damage and cell deterioration, and amounts to this: We age because our cells do. Cell deterioration, he believes, can be retarded; cell damage can be repaired. The SENS Foundation has been pursuing this modern elixir of youth for 20 years. De Grey figures another 20 years should do it. We're almost there. Think of the implications: many people now living will never die.

When he started, the consensus was that de Grey was a crank. Support even now is cautious and qualified. Shukan Gendai quotes several Japanese experts who agree that cellular rejuvenation is theoretically possible, though they question whether that will necessarily lead to immortality or even to a much extended youthfulness. De Grey, undaunted, invites us to imagine a world transformed. We'll get old without it mattering. The young will look up to us for our experience and wisdom, instead of down on us for our infirmity and dementia and the drain we are on the economy. We'll need neither nursing homes nor final resting places, since there'll be no final rest. Death, shadow on our lives since our species emerged into consciousness, will shadow it no longer.

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What nightmares may come, when we shuffle onto an immortal coil

A lifelong passion to fetch more than a whip around

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Original film shows Phar Lap winning the 1930 Melbourne Cup and is part of an auction of racing memorabilia, believed to be the biggest in Australia's history. (Music added)

IT WAS Norm Cove's most treasured possession, a jockey's whip, tipped in gold and engraved to mark its moment of equine immortality - when Billy Duncan used it to ride Peter Pan to victory in the 1932 Melbourne Cup.

For more than 50 years, Cove, a groundsman at Caulfield racecourse, was a fixture at the finishing line. He died a year ago and now his widow, Lorraine, is placing the whip and much of his extensive collection of racing memorabilia up for auction with Leonard Joel, in what is believed to be Australia's biggest auction of its kind.

The auction would make her husband very proud, she says, "because so many of his cherished possessions will now go to like-minded people with a passion for racing".

Lorraine Cove holds a portrait of her late husband Norm's favourite race horse Ajax. Photo: Ken Irwin

Lorraine says that among the items she will never sell are the hundreds of photographs of Cove at Caulfield. "When the grandchildren were small they'd get out these photographs and play 'Where's Wally' but it was really 'Where's Norm', trying to find him in his suit and hat in the crowd somewhere near the finishing line."

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Lorraine admits she knew nothing about racing when they met, but she quickly grew to love the people - including jockeys and trainers - who filled their lives.

Mention Norm Cove around racing traps and you're deluged with words of praise for a gentle man. Friend and sports valuer Rick Milne describes Cove "as small in stature and large in heart, a dapper, perfectly dressed gentleman who always wore a suit and hat".

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A lifelong passion to fetch more than a whip around

'Parenthood's' Jason Katims, Monica Potter on Kristina's Life-Altering News and the Journey Ahead

NBC

"Parenthood's" Monica Potter and Peter Krause

[Warning: This story contains spoilers from the second episode of Parenthood's fourth season.]

NBC's Parenthood delivered an emotional blow unlike any other in the series' three seasons Tuesday.

While still adjusting to Haddie (Sarah Ramos) going off to college, Adam (Peter Krause) and Kristina (Monica Potter) were confronted with their own mortality during "Left Field," the second episode ofits brand-new fourth season Tuesday.

Breast cancer.

"My wife went through it a couple years ago and it's a story that I've been, in the back of my mind, wanting to tell," showrunner Jason Katims tells The Hollywood Reporter, noting he felt the same trepidation when mulling whether or not to include another personal story, Max's Asperger's, into the NBC family drama. "We ultimately decided this was a story we could tell in a unique way and that it would be something that would be a very emotional and poignant story with many positive moments, too."

STORY: 'Parenthood' EP Previews First-Year Marriage Woes, Beauty of Adoption and Matt Lauria in Season 4

While the EP was discussing the then-potential story line with his producing partners, he received a call from Potter, who had just gone in for her first-ever mammogram and wound up contacting Katims to suggest the show explore a breast cancer story line for Kristina.

"I had to go for a mammogram -- my first mammogram ever -- and It was really scary and I didnt know what to expect," Potter tells THR. "I reached out to Jason and said, 'I got a little scare. I think I'm fine but what if we talked about Kristina having breast cancer?' I e-mailed him and within the hour, he e-mailed me back and said, 'I have the chills as we just broke that story for Kristina for this season.'"

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'Parenthood's' Jason Katims, Monica Potter on Kristina's Life-Altering News and the Journey Ahead

'Picture of Dorian Gray' borrowed in 1934 is finally returned

A rare book telling the story of a young man who sells his soul in a bargain whereby he stops ageing has been returned to a library after having been taken out in 1934.

The tome in question is a valuable first edition of The Picture of Dorian Gray, the novel written by noted 19th-century writer, wit and theatrical luvvie Oscar Wilde - the Stephen Fry of his time. In it a young man embarks on a life of debauchery after having his portrait painted, and for some reason or another the picture becomes old and raddled while the chap remains yummy and does not age.

Perhaps needless to say, the eponymous protagonist eventually comes to a bad end, but not before having lots of fun.

Possibly mysteriously, the first edition of the tale held by the Chicago Public Library was checked out in 1934 ... and never given back. However the Library is currently holding a "blue moon" late-fees amnesty, and this prompted the volume's long-delayed return.

It seems that the book was found by a Ms Harlean Hoffman Vision in her late mother's effects, but Ms Vision didn't dare return it as she had calculated that fines of more then $6,000 had built up. Thus she waited until the rare amnesty was declared (the Chicago library hasn't held one since the 1990s).

In fact, according to this Reuters report on the case, there's a cap of $10 on late fees, so the book could easily have been returned earlier. There's nothing in the story about Ms Vision's mother having lived an unusually long time without apparently ageing or anything.

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'Picture of Dorian Gray' borrowed in 1934 is finally returned

Final 'Breaking Dawn' Trailer Debuts At The VMAs!

That's no swan that's a vampire!

Fans caught a brand new look at Bella Swan's blood-sucking makeover on Thursday (September 6) when the final trailer for "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2" premiered at the 2012 MTV Video Music Awards. The second half of director Bill Condon's adaptation of the Stephenie Meyer-penned vampire series' grand finale hits theaters on November 16, and based on this last trailer alone, the upcoming showdown between the Cullen clan and the Volturi looks to be nothing short of epic.

The trailer begins with a voiceover from Robert Pattinson's Edward over scenes of Bella as a freshly turned vampire stalking a mountain lion through the woods. "I have a bad habit of underestimating you," Edward tells his wife. "Every obstacle you've faced, I'd think you couldn't overcome it. But you just did."

As if Edward's words weren't enough proof of her new powers, Bella demonstrates the extent of her abilities by tackling the lion in midair. Not exactly a feat the old Ms. Swan would be capable of, to say the least, and Bella is the first person to admit it.

"My time as a human is over," she confesses, "but I've never felt more alive."

But even as Bella eases into life after death with her husband and their newborn child Renesmee, her existence has never been in greater jeopardy. The Volturi are coming to kill Renesmee based on a report that she's an immortal child, a highly volatile and dangerous form of vampire that must be stopped no matter the cost. The Cullens know that Renesmee is as far from a threat as inhumanly possible, leading them to seek out new allies in their impending struggle against the Volturi. Cue the likes of the Denali coven (chief among them Garrett, played by "Pushing Daisies" heartthrob Lee Pace) as well as Jacob Black and his werewolf companions, among others, to protect the newest member of the Cullen family from an undeserved fate.

Saving Renesmee's life won't be easy, however, as the final bits of the "Breaking Dawn -- Part 2" trailer show quite clearly. A hard battle is fought between both sides, with the promise of several casualties to come, including a sobbing Garrett holding what looks to be the wounded body of his mate Kate. Even Bella and Edward are forced to roll up their sleeves and get in on the action, as the veteran vampire boosts his wife into a trailer-closing roundhouse kick against their enemies.

"The epic finale that will live forever," are the closing words of the final "Twilight" trailer. By all accounts, it looks like they're not kidding around.

The 2012 MTV Video Music Awards were a blast! Stick with MTV for continued coverage of everything that happened onstage, backstage and behind-the-scenes.

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Final 'Breaking Dawn' Trailer Debuts At The VMAs!

Moment in South Dakota History

This historical marker about Glass that is located near Shadehill Reservoir in northwest South Dakota.(South Dakota Historical Society Foundation photo)

It is difficult to imagine a man dragging himself a mile through brush, across gullies and along the river breaks to safety. Hugh Glass not only dragged himself a mile, but hundreds. With each yard he put behind him, he came closer to civilization and immortality.

An historic marker that overlooks Shadehill Reservoir in northwestern South Dakota tells the saga of Glass.

Glass was a mountain man who was part of a fur trapping expedition led by Andrew Henry in 1823. The expedition was bound for the mouth of the Yellowstone River when it passed south of what is now Lemmon that fall. While hunting alone one morning, Glass was attacked by a female grizzly bear. He survived and made his way to Fort Kiowa, about 200 miles away.

Glass bout with a bear became well-known, and many fictional accounts are based on Glass story. According to Lord Grizzly by Frederick Manfred, Glass regained consciousness after the grizzly bears attack to the grim reality of being alone and unarmed in hostile Indian territory. His leg was broken; his scalp was almost torn off; his ribs were exposed where the flesh on his back had been ripped away; and his wounds were festering.

Glass set his broken leg and began crawling toward the Cheyenne River, about 100 miles away. His anger at being abandoned by his comrades and his desire to stay alive drove Glass as he crawled by night and rested by day.

Once he reached the Cheyenne River, Glass fashioned a dugout boat out of a cottonwood and used it to float down the Missouri River until he reached Fort Kiowa, about four miles north of present-day Chamberlain. The desire for revenge drove him on, to a new fur trading post on the Yellowstone and Big Horn rivers. There he found Jim Bridger, one of the men he believed had left him for dead. He confronted Bridger and forgave him. Bridger lived to become one of the foremost mountain men, trappers, scouts and guides in the Western United States.

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Moment in South Dakota History

Initiative Aims at Immortality by 2045

Aug 27, 2012 3:21pm

Twentieth Century Fox/AP Photo

AlthoughJames Camerons Avatar took place more than 140 years into the future, a Russian billionairehas teamed with dozens of scientists to lay out a plan thatwould use avatars to transfer human consciousness into an artificial form. The goal:human immortality by 2045.

The 2045 Initiative, a life-extension project founded by 31-year-old Russian billionaireDmitry Itskov in February 2011, offers a timeline for immortality over the next 33 years. Beginning with remotely controlled robotic avatars and re-creating the human brain through computer models, the end result would be human immortality in the form of holographic avatars.

The 2045 Initiative, which has had a major social media blitz, brought together 30 top Russian scientists to develop the imortal technology, laying out the plan for human immortality on its website.

The first phase is to create a humanoid robot dubbed avatar, and a state-of-the-art brain-computer interface system. The next phase consists of creating a life-support system for the human brain and connect it to the avatar. The final phase is to create an artificial brain in which to transfer the original individual consciousness into, reads the plan.

Got that?

Heres the 2045 Initiatives timeline for this feat:

2015 2020: A robotic copy of a human body remotely controlled by a brain-computer interface

2020 2025: An avatar is created in which a human brain can be transplanted at the end of life

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Initiative Aims at Immortality by 2045

Gold for all-conquering Cowdrey

Gold medallist Matt Cowdrey of Australia poses on the podium during the medal ceremony for the Men's 100m Backstroke Source: Getty Images

TEENAGE swimmer Maddi Elliott became Australia's youngest ever Paralympic medallist, while the path to immortality for Matt Cowdrey had its first golden brick laid on an eventful Day 2 of the London Games.

The pool proved a major source of success, as the only medals of the haul not from swimming were those of vision impaired cyclist Felicity Johnson, who took out the individual B time trial, and the bronzes of T34 sprinter Rosemary Little in the 100m and discus thrower Kath Proudfoot at the athletics.

The bronze had Elliott eclipse Australia's previous youngest medallist, Elizabeth Edmondson, who won three golds as a 14-years-old in the waters of the Rome Games in 1964.

"This morning I did a massive PB which was a 19 second PB and I just wanted to get into the final just to do another PB," the energetic teenager said.

"Its just amazing to get a bronze medal at the age of 13 at my first Paralympics.

"I reckoned a medal was a chance but I reckoned it was more of a chance in the relay and not in an individual event."

Cowdrey then faced his first title defence of the Games in the 100m backstroke S9 and did not disappoint, setting a new Paralympic Record of 1:02.39 to win his first London gold.

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Gold for all-conquering Cowdrey

US Philosopher Given $5M Grant To Study Immortality

August 5, 2012

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports Your Universe Online

A University of California at Riverside (UCR) philosopher will be placed in charge of a new project analyzing the concept of immortality after receiving the largest grant ever presented to a humanities professor at the school, various media outlets reported last week.

According to a July 31 UCR press release announcing the grant, the university announced that philosopher John Martin Fischer would oversee research on all aspects of immortality, including near-death experiences and the impact that believing in life-after-death has on human behavior.

The $5 million grant was presented to the school by the John Templeton Foundation, a Pennsylvania-based organization founded by the late businessman, philanthropist, and stock market pioneer that is dedicated to studying the deepest, most complex questions about the nature of life and the purpose of mankind, Los Angeles Times blogger Larry Gordon said.

We will be very careful in documenting near-death experiences and other phenomena, trying to figure out if these offer plausible glimpses of an afterlife or are biologically induced illusions, Fischer said in a statement, according to Christopher Shea of the Wall Street Journal.

Our approach will be uncompromisingly scientifically rigorous. Were not going to spend money to study alien-abduction reports. We will look at near-death experiences and try to find out whats going on there what is promising, what is nonsense, and what is scientifically debunked. We may find something important about our lives and our values, even if not glimpses into an afterlife, he added.

The research, which is being dubbed the Immortality Project, will be a collaborative study involving scientists, philosophers, and theological experts. The inclusion of that last group has led to some criticism of the project, Business Insiders Adam Taylor said.

Opponents are arguing that the religious aspects of the immortality issue have no place in serious scientific research, he said, and atheists have long been critical of the Templeton Foundations handling of the interaction between science and theology, Shea added.

Fischer, who is a member of the Templeton Foundations board, describes himself as a man who is not religious but has a great deal of respect for religion. Regardless, he told Gordon that his personal views, the inclusion of religious experts and the source of the grant doesnt mean we are trying to prove anything or the other. We will be trying to be very scientific and rigorous and be very open-minded.

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US Philosopher Given $5M Grant To Study Immortality

Usain Bolt Targets Victory That Will Bring Sprinting Immortality

By Tariq Panja and Danielle Rossingh - 2012-08-09T00:42:19Z

Usain Bolt is one win away from completing an unprecedented double that he said will bring him sprinting immortality.

Bolt jogged over the finish line last night at the Olympic Stadium in London in a time of 20.18 seconds to qualify for the 200-meter final. He said he planned it that way.

You cant work too hard, youve got the finals, Bolt told reporters. That was the aim. You cant push too hard.

The 25-year-old Jamaican said after running an Olympic record 9.63 to defend his 100-meter title that he also needed to retain the 200-meter crown to become a legend. Victory tonight would make him the first man to take gold in the 100 and 200 meters at consecutive games.

Bolt, one of the most recognized athletes in the world, is the only person to have run below 9.60 in the 100 meters and under 19.20 in the 200 meters. He broke his own world records in the 100 and 200 meters at the 2009 world championships in Berlin.

The 6-foot-5 Bolt, who only took up the 100 meters as speed work to prepare for the longer sprint, may not have things all his own way in his favorite event.

Yohan Blake, the silver medalist in the 100 meters, beat Bolt in the Jamaican 200-meter trials, raising the prospect that he could shock his training partner at the Olympics. Blake slowed to win his 200 semifinal in 20.01.

The race was a walk in the park, said the 22-year-old, whose 19.26 at a meet in Brussels on Sept. 16 is the second fastest all time, 0.07 slower than Bolts world record.

Commentators including former 100-meter Olympic champion Maurice Greene said they favored Blake over Bolt in the shorter sprint.

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Usain Bolt Targets Victory That Will Bring Sprinting Immortality

‘Lawless’ Red Band Trailer: Hardy and LaBeouf Chase Immortality

In Lawless, Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy, and Jason Clarke play a trio of brothers (the Bondurants) obsessed with the idea of immortality. While maybe not entirely stupid,the Bondurants moonshiners in prohibition-era Virigina seekto test the limits of their mortality through seedy deals and an ongoing war with the powers that be.

Of course, as with any dangerous profession, acts of violence follow the three brothers throughout their entire lives, something that is thoroughly communicated by this new red band trailer for the film.

Past trailers forLawlesshave set up the aforementioned story beats Shia LaBeouf plays the youngest of the Bondurants, always looking to step out from the shadow of his big brother Forest (Hardy) but this is the first trailer to show the brutal lengths the siblings will go to in order to protect their own.

In direct opposition to the Forest-led Bondurants is Guy Pearces Special Agent Rakes, a man willing to test the brothers proclamations of immortality. Pearce, a frequent collaborator with director John Hillcoat (The Road), has created a truly menacing vision of an authority figure obsessed with outward appearances. The trailer only hints at the type of malice Pearce is capable of, but theres no doubt that he wears the antagonist role well.

The ideas explored in Lawless, along with the beautiful cinematography (courtesy of Benoit Delhomme) and music (created, of course, by screenwriter Nick Cave), appear to set viewers up for a film experience unlike anything seen in quite some time. The film itself is based upon Matt Bondurants novel The Wettest Country in the World, and attempts to realistically portray the exploits of these three brothers as interpreted by the youngest son.

Hardy and LaBeouf have become staples of the summer blockbuster season, but this will mark a real departure for the two, especially considering their previous roles. Hardys portrayal of Forest seems like a complete 180 from his characterization of Bane(but no less appealing), while LaBeouf abandons his quick-witted demeanor that carried him through three Transformers films. We cant wait to see how these brothers defy death while making moonshine money.

Lawless hits theaters on August 29th, 2012

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Source: Vice

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‘Lawless’ Red Band Trailer: Hardy and LaBeouf Chase Immortality

Russian billionaire wants immortality by 2045

Posted on August 3, 2012, Friday

Dmitry Itskov, 31, implored other magnates to fund cybernetic immortality and the artificial body basically transferring human consciousness into a robot body, Global post quoted.

A Russian billionaire has a plan to make himself, and others, live forever.

Dmitry Itskov, a 31-year-old media mogul, implored other magnates to fund cybernetic immortality and the artificial body basically transferring human consciousness into a robot body.

In open letter to the Forbes richest list he wrote, Currently you invest in business projects that will bring you yet another billion.

You also have the ability to finance the extension of your own life up to immortality. Our civilization has come very close to the creation of such technologies: its not a science fiction fantasy. It is in your power to make sure that this goal will be achieved in your lifetime.

According to Mashable, his timetable is tight:

1. By 2025, scientists will be able to transfer the human brain into a robotic skeleton.

2. By 2035, an avatar brain will be created and your personality inserted within.

3. By 2045, humans will walk around in holographic avatars that will never die (cue evil laughter).

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Russian billionaire wants immortality by 2045

Brains in robots plan for immortality

A RUSSIAN billionaire has a plan to make himself, and others, live forever.

Dmitry Itskov, a 31-year-old media mogul, implored other magnates to fund cybernetic immortality and the artificial body - basically transferring human consciousness into a robot body.

In open letter to the Forbes richest list he wrote, "Currently you invest in business projects that will bring you yet another billion."

"You also have the ability to finance the extension of your own life up to immortality. Our civilisation has come very close to the creation of such technologies: it's not a science fiction fantasy. It is in your power to make sure that this goal will be achieved in your lifetime."

According to Mashable, his timetable is tight:

1. By 2025, scientists will be able to transfer the human brain into a robotic skeleton.

2. By 2035, an avatar brain will be created and your personality inserted within.

3. By 2045, humans will walk around in holographic avatars that will never die.

Indeed, Wired magazine reported that the Russian wants to end the need for surgery and troubleshoot our robo-bodies instead.

Itskov has said that he has already assembled a team of scientists for the job but still needs more funds to continue the project, reported the National Turk.

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Brains in robots plan for immortality

UC Riverside gets $5 million to study immortality

Listen Now [1 min 44 sec] UCR

A private foundation has awarded the University of California at Riverside $5 million to study age-old questions surrounding immortality and life-after-death.

A private foundation has awarded the University of California at Riverside $5 million to study age-old questions surrounding immortality and life-after-death. Theyre calling it the Immortality Project, and its goal is to apply rigorous scientific research to questions surrounding immortality and the afterlife.

The John Templeton Foundation in Philadelphia awarded the grant to UCR philosopher, John Martin Fischer, the projects lead investigator. Fischer, who studies free will and moral responsibility, admits that hes not so sure this whole lifeafter-death thing even exists.

Im kind of a skeptic about an afterlife, Fischer said in a Skype interview from Germany, where hes a research fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in Bioethics, University of Muenster. Im inclined not to believe there is one, but I certainly dont know.

Fischer said the research at UCR will last three years and will look into a wide range of immortality issues. Among them: the cultural differences that shape near-death experience, such as why Americans who have a near-death experience usually report a tunnel with a light at the end, while in Japan most who experience the phenomenon report tending to a garden.

Other research will delve into such issues as whether technological and medical advancements could create immortality or at the very least much longer life spans for humans. And if so, how would immortality affect the meaning and value we place on our lives? Or do we need death to give life meaning?

We can chip away at the problem by figuring out what features make life more meaningful and attractive and what features take that away, he said of the project that will solicit research topics from scientists, philosopher, theologians and others worldwide, beginning Sept. 1, 2012 and will announce grants next year.

Fischer said hes allotting $2.5 million to fund up to 10 scientific research projects into various questions of immortality. Another $1.5 million will go to 15 philosophers and theologians to support them in writing articles and books. He said the research topics will also include such questions as:

-- Whether and in what form a person could survive bodily death. -- Whether the information in our brains could be uploaded into a computer to allow one to exist there in perpetuity. -- How a persons beliefs about immortality influence their behavior, attitudes, and character.

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UC Riverside gets $5 million to study immortality

Russian Billionaire Wants Other Billionaires To Fund His Immortality

You may recall a super crazy plan from one Russian billionaire thats hoping to fund the first immortality project. Dmitry Itskov is pretty young at 31, but he hopes to live forever with the help of science and robotics. He needs help, however, from the billionaire community to complete his objective becoming immortal by 2045.

In an open letter from Itskov, he implores billionaires to start funding cybernetic immortality and the artificial body. For you see, Itskov doesnt want to make an immortal body. Its impossible to stop aging as our bodies will just wither and die sooner or later. His plan involves something far more sci-fi and its way cooler as a result.

If youre familiar with the idea of transferring consciousness to a machine, then you already have a leg up on understanding what Itskov hopes to do. His plans for 2045 involve transferring the human consciousness to a machine and preserving said consciousness. It would essentially mean transferring the consciousness in our brain to a synthetic brain. Our humanity would be supposedly intact, but none of our original body would remain.

Of course, thats still quite a ways off. For now, hes hoping to have some other exciting technology available by the year 2015. He calls them android avatars that are controlled via a brain-computer. Youre no doubt thinking of James Camerons Avatar films and thats exactly what Itskov has planned. He hopes to use these android avatars to help people work in dangerous environments, perform rescue operations, travel in extreme situations, etc. He also hopes the technology would allow people with disabilities to walk again or experience lost senses.

You might think that sounds a little bit too much like sci-fi. Surprisingly enough, the technology is almost here and will be readily available later on down the road. Its actually the least sci-fi of all the milestones that Itskov has planned.

Take for instance his plans for 2025. He hopes to create a robot that can take in the brain of an otherwise damaged beyond repair body. Its not exactly the transferring of human consciousness as the machine would still be dependent on the brain. Its still crazy sci-fi techno-magic and a lot of people would disagree with his timetable.

His goal for 2045 isnt simply immortality. That plays a large role in it, but Itskov sees it as the next step in human evolution. In his mind, death is but a genetic defect that needs to be eradicated. There are plenty of scientists who would disagree with that statement, but let Itskov have his fun. He hopes that the immortality project will advance humanity to new plateaus of energy generation, transportation, politics, medicine, psychology, sciences, and so on.

Of course, when youre immortal and in the body of a super robot, a lot of things could get done. Its an exciting thought, but one that we must temper into reality. The human consciousness and its relationship with the brain is still something thats not understood completely. Were making progress all the time, but I doubt that well able to transfer the human consciousness, independent of the brain, to a synthetic one in the next 33 years.

Itskov is a dreamer and I admire him for that. He hopes that there are other billionaires out there who want to dream with him. Thats why hes offering to coordinate your personal immortality project entirely free of charge to anybody whos willing to pony up the funds to continue the research. Im sure that there are a lot of billionaires who would want to live forever, but Itskov must take into account that people would use this technology for nothing but evil. The one assurance we have is that evil men will die. If Itskov succeeds, we may no longer have that assurance.

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Russian Billionaire Wants Other Billionaires To Fund His Immortality

Immortality studies gets a big boost at UC Riverside

Immortality studies at the University of California, Riverside got a big funding boost this week.

The John Templeton Foundation gave the university $5 million to fund research on aspects of immortality, including analyses of belief of the afterlife and near-death experiences.

The Pennsylvania-based foundation said that it will give the award over three years.

The Los Angeles Times reported that philosophy professor John Martin Fischer will receive $1 million of the money to run a website and host conferences relating to the topic.

More from GlobalPost: 3D printing - Your body parts made to order

Fischer will also be responsible for doling out the next $4 million to researchers worldwide.

We will be very careful in documenting near-death experiences and other phenomena, trying to figure out if these offer plausible glimpses of an afterlife or are biologically induced illusions, Fischer said, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Fischer insisted that the money won't be wasted on questionable "theories."

Our approach will be uncompromisingly scientifically rigorous," he added, in a statement.

"Were not going to spend money to study alien-abduction reports. We will look at near-death experiences and try to find out whats going on there what is promising, what is nonsense, and what is scientifically debunked. We may find something important about our lives and our values, even if not glimpses into an afterlife.

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Immortality studies gets a big boost at UC Riverside

$5 Million Grant Awarded by Private Foundation to Study Immortality

The John Templeton Foundation grant to UC Riverside philosopher John Fischer will fund research on aspects of immortality, including near-death experiences and the impact of belief in an afterlife on human behavior

By Bettye Miller on July 31, 2012

The John Templeton Foundation has awarded philosopher John Martin Fischer $5 million to study issues related to immortality.

RIVERSIDE, Calif. For millennia, humans have pondered their mortality and whether death is the end of existence or a gateway to an afterlife. Millions of Americans have reported near-death or out-of-body experiences. And adherents of the worlds major religions believe in an afterlife, from reincarnation to resurrection and immortality.

Anecdotal reports of glimpses of an afterlife abound, but there has been no comprehensive and rigorous, scientific study of global reports about near-death and other experiences, or of how belief in immortality influences human behavior. That will change with the award of a three-year, $5 million grant by the John Templeton Foundation to John Martin Fischer, distinguished professor of philosophy at the University of California, Riverside, to undertake a rigorous examination of a wide range of issues related to immortality. It is the largest grant ever awarded to a humanities professor at UC Riverside, and one of the largest given to an individual at the university.

People have been thinking about immortality throughout history. We have a deep human need to figure out what happens to us after death, said Fischer, the principal investigator of The Immortality Project. Much of the discussion has been in literature, especially in fantasy and science fiction, and in theology in the context of an afterlife, heaven, hell, purgatory and karma. No one has taken a comprehensive and sustained look at immortality that brings together the science, theology and philosophy.

The John Templeton Foundation, located near Philadelphia, supports research on subjects ranging from complexity, evolution and infinity to creativity, forgiveness, love, and free will.

Half of the $5 million grant will be awarded for research projects. The grant will also fund two conferences, the first of which will be held at the end of the projects second year and the second at the end of the grant period. A website will include a variety of resources, from glossaries and bibliographies to announcements of research conferences and links to published research. Some recent work in Anglo-American philosophy will be translated for German philosophers who, in the last 30 years, have been increasingly studying the work of American philosophers.

UC Riverside Chancellor Timothy P. White said Fischers research takes a universal concern and subjects it to rigorous examination to sift fact from fiction. His work will provide guidance for discussion of immortality and the human experience for generations to come. We are extremely proud that he is leading the investigation of this critical area of knowledge.

Noting Fischers renown as a scholar of free will and moral responsibility, Stephen Cullenberg, dean of the College of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences, said, There is perhaps no one better suited to lead a multidisciplinary research project on the question of immortality and its social implications. The Templeton Foundations generous support will enable scholars from across the world to come to UCR to investigate how the question of immortality affects all cultures, albeit in different ways.

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$5 Million Grant Awarded by Private Foundation to Study Immortality

Immortality studies centered at UC Riverside get $5-million gift

Even a multimillion-dollar donation does not ensure a spot in heaven. Or at least thats what most religions believe.

But a $5-million academic grant, to be centered at UC Riverside, may go a long way toward gaining insights into the possibility of an afterlife and delving into what science and culture say about immortality.

The Pennsylvania-based John Templeton Foundation -- founded by the late Wall Street mutual funds pioneer to help explore spirituality - has announced the award and said it will be paid out over three years.

UC Riverside philosophy professor John Martin Fischer will receive $1 million of that to host conferences on campus about the afterlife, to support post-doctoral students and to run a websitefor research on the topic. Then Fischer will administer competitions to dole out the remaining $4 million to researchers worldwide in the sciences, social sciences, philosophy and theology, he said.

Reports of near-death experiences with visions of an afterlife may be an important subject for psychologists and neuroscientists, Fischer said from Germany, where he has a fellowship until December.

It doesnt mean we are trying to prove anything or the other. We will be trying to be very scientific and rigorous and be very open-minded, he said. Fischer described himself as skeptical about an afterlife but said he believed that endless life without death could be a good thing.

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Immortality studies centered at UC Riverside get $5-million gift

This Is Why People Join The Church Of Scientology

Since Katie Holmes filed for a divorce against Tom Cruise, we've run a series of stories on life inside the Church of Scientology, including its real estate empire and the remote location where church leader David Miscavige's wife may be living in secret.

But we haven't examined why people join the secretive church in the first place, and why they stay (even after they've been kept in one of Scientology's informal prisons).

We spoke to Steve Hall, a former Scientologist who wrote speeches and TV scripts for Scientology leader David Miscavige for years, about why he stayed despite the grueling nature of his experience.

Basically, he told us, Scientology is a philosophy of rational self-inquiry akin to Buddhism, in that it requires an investigation and a reckoning with one's own demons and desires.

Many people find it incredibly helpful.

Here's Hall's explanation of the benefits of Scientology, which we've edited lightly for length and clarity:

Scientology is a body of know-how that is supposed to enable a person to make rational decisions in life you review that area and come to a better direction. It's rationality, but it's a bit more codified. They're really tools that help you look at a given area and come to an understanding.

Founder L. Ron Hubbard was an investigator. He wanted to know what made people tick. What was the cause of the problems they had? He found a human being has a spiritual component and the spirit has memories of prior existences, and by all the evidence he has past lives. You were somebody in 1812 or 1740. The information is there to be mined from a person's own memory. When a person dies he's not gone. They simply go and pick up a new body and start over.

It explains deja vu. It explains talent. How can such great artists have talent from such a young age? A person is more than just flesh and bones. They're actually an immortal human spirit, so that's very good news. So Hubbard developed methods, [just like] the Buddhists ask questions. Why does the tree grow?

But it's structured and it's called auditing. It's done in a safe environment and the counselor has a code of conduct. The auditor does not tell the person what to think and does not tell them what to say. He just guides them on a path of self discovery. And once you've experienced it you want more, because it helps you become a better person. You're able to open up new lines of communications with people you were afraid to talk to before. The shy kids who can't talk to girls can suddenly get up the nerve, that's the good side.

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This Is Why People Join The Church Of Scientology

Immortality for the rich by 2045?

By 3 News online staff

A Russian businessman is calling on the worlds richest people to help fund a project to develop human immortality technology by 2045.

The project aims to eventually develop the means to download the human brain to a computer chip in a robot.

Dmitry Itskov, 31, launched the project last year and last week sent out the call for funding.

Members of the Forbes richest list: human life is unique and priceless. It is only when we have to part with life do we realise just how much we have not done, that we have not had enough time to do what we really wanted Today you have a chance to change this situation.

The 2045 team of Russian scientists will research how to extend human life by means of cybernetic technology in four steps.

From 2015 to 2020 the team hopes to develop robots, reminiscent of the 2009 movie Surrogates, which can be controlled by the human mind and allow people to work in dangerous situations.

By 2020 to 2025, Mr Itskov and the scientists hope the technology to transfer an intact human brain from a worn our human body into a robot will be available.

From 2030 to 2035 he hopes the technology to transfer human consciousness onto a computer chip will exist and allow for cybernetic immortality.

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Immortality for the rich by 2045?