At the touch
of a button
By Virginia Jasmin Pasalo
In the movie, "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”,
the main character, Benjamin Button, is born as an elderly man, ages in reverse
and dies an infant. He lives through this “aging” process, with the hope that
during the course of his life, he will meet Daisy at the “right” time, having
met her as a child, twelve years after his birth (as an old man), and who
appears in and out of his life as she grows in the normal way, like everyone
else around him.
There is no basis
for aging in reverse, but I am sure that at some point, most people want to
reverse or freeze the aging process at the most desired point in their lives.
The quest for the fountain of life had been unceasing, and there were times
scientific breakthroughs had given us hope, but these were accessible only at
great cost.
One of the more
recent technologies in regenerative medicine is the stem cell transplant.
According to its promoters, stem cell therapy
“promotes the repair response of diseased,
dysfunctional or injured tissue using stem cells or their derivatives”. The medical community
however, declared that there is a need for a more extensive scientific research
and continuing clinical study to establish the health and therapeutic claims of
stem cell therapy, and to mitigate its side effects.
Given the quantum
leap of knowledge, it is just a matter of time when these innovations become
available to us at affordable costs. This is the prediction of physicist Michio
Kaku, who believes that the technology of the future will change our lives
drastically, with all information literally available “at the touch of a button”, or “at the touch of a finger”, or at
the touch of anything. His prediction
is shared by Yuval Noah Harari, author of the book, “Homo Deus, A Brief History of Tomorrow”, where he predicts that
humans can do what used to be impossible, and reduce them into manageable
challenges. Indeed, humans can live longer, age much slower, and live a better
quality of life in the future.
Or will we? Or do we,
as a result of innovations we ourselves invented, become the useless class that Harari predicted, as
well?
Touch
the walls of
tomorrow
will know, in an
instant
if my heart is well
or sick, and heal
it,
at the touch of a
button
at the touch of a
finger
at the touch of
anything
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