Staying young in old age : a moral defense of anti-aging research

This paper argues that continuing, or perhaps even increasing, our focus on anti-aging research is morally permissible. The crux of this moral defense revolves around showing that there is no decisive moral reason for why we ought not to interfere with the process of aging to bring forth an anti-agi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chan, Kei Nin
Other Authors: Preston Huw Richards Greene
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73542
Description
Summary:This paper argues that continuing, or perhaps even increasing, our focus on anti-aging research is morally permissible. The crux of this moral defense revolves around showing that there is no decisive moral reason for why we ought not to interfere with the process of aging to bring forth an anti-aging model of life. In fact, there is value to be found in an anti-aging model of life, which stems from disvalue in the process of aging. Some crucial questions discussed are: What are the possible consequences of interfering with the process of aging? Should these consequences deter us from undertaking anti-aging research? Are there moral reasons against the act of interference with the process of aging itself? Is there value in the process of aging?