Can We Live Forever? addresses the modern debate about 'The Life
Extension Project' that results from revolutions (actual and predicted)
in bio-medicine, transplantation, cosmetic surgery, genetic counseling,
stem cell research, cryonics, cloning and so forth that cumulatively
promise to deliver eternal life or at least prolongevity. In an engaging
and thought-provoking work, the author traces the rise of the Life
Extension Project and its claims against an intellectual background of
recent analyses of 'waste', sustainable environments and complexity
theory. Although there has been much discussion of increasing life
expectancy, this book looks at a range of additional issues: the
religious implications of life extension; the psychological
consequences, such as ennui; the negative global social and economic
factors; the problems of intergenerational justice. The possible
benefits and adverse consequences of living forever are fully explored
in this illuminating text, offering substance to social scientists
working on ageing and demographic change, philosophers interested in
questions of continuity and identity, theologians concerned with secular
changes in the life course, as well as the general reader.