Fighting Aging as an Effective Altruism Cause: A Model of the Impact of the Clinical Trials of Simple Interventions
Abstract: The effective altruism movement aims to save lives in the most cost-effective ways. In the future, technology will allow radical life extension, and anyone who survives until that time will gain potentially indefinite life extension. Fighting aging now increases the number of people who will survive until radical life extension becomes possible. We suggest a simple model, where radical life extension is achieved in 2100, the human population is 10 billion, and life expectancy is increased by simple geroprotectors like metformin by three more years on average, so an additional 250 million people survive until “immortality”. The cost of clinical trials to prove that metformin is a real geroprotector is $60 million. In this simplified case, the price of a life saved is around 24 cents, 10 000 times cheaper than saving a life from malaria by providing bed nets. However, fighting aging should not be done in place of fighting existential risks, as they are complementary causes.
Highlights:
● Aging and death are the main causes of human suffering now.
● Simple interventions could extend human lives until aging is defeated.
● These interventions need to be clinically tested before FDA approval.
● A trial of the life extension drug metformin is delayed by lack of funds.
● Starting trials now will save 250 million people from death, at a cost of $0.24 for each life saved.
Please comment on the preprint of the article here: https://goo.gl/WaEYt5
What? Since when? This looks like something you just came up with. Whatever your reasons for believing this, it is a radical and controversial thesis which must be backed up with a serious philosophical argument. Bostrom's paper on infinite ethics does not do the trick here.
Tipler's theory is regarded as implausible by Bostrom as well as others. I can't tell what you mean by the first and third sentences. It seems like your view is that opportunity costs of future people don't matter because you don't care about them. But that was apparent from the original text anyway. What you need to do is support your position against people who disagree.
Ok, I will try without the infinite universe. If we assume that there will be no existential risks and there will be space exploration, there will be a lot of new people (trillions?), much more than actually living people now, so extending life of currently living people is not taking the opportunity from future people to be born.
Moreover, if future people will be born in the world there is no death, suffering and ageing, they could enjoy much better life, as long as they want, so there is no negative opportunity cost for such people - but there is positive opportunity to be born in the better world.