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Aubrey de Grey Quotes - IQDb - Internet Quotes Database

Quotes from Aubrey de Grey


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Ageing is, simply and clearly, the accumulation of damage in the body. That's all that ageing is.


The whole point of cryopreserving only one's head is based on the idea that one can simply grow in the laboratory an entire new body, without a head, and stick it onto the cryopreserved head.


Most scientists will get serious media exposure about twice in their entire career. And they'll get that because they've actually done an experiment that was interesting.


Ever since we invented fire and the wheel, we've been demonstrating both our ability and our inherent desire to fix things that we don't like about ourselves and our environment.


Basically, the body does have a vast amount of inbuilt anti-ageing machinery; it's just not 100% comprehensive, so it allows a small number of different types of molecular and cellular damage to happen and accumulate.


I'm the chief science officer of a foundation that works on the application of regenerative medicine to the problem of aging.


I don't work on longevity, I work on keeping people healthy.


Some things tend not to work so well for science - things that rely on substantial written contributions by key experts are a case in point - but even there I tend to keep an open mind, because it may just be a case of finding the right formula.


In the eye, there is a type of junk that accumulates in the back of the retina that eventually causes us to go blind. It's called age-related macular degeneration.


What I'm after is not living to 1,000. I'm after letting people avoid death for as long as they want to.


What I actually wanted to do with my life is make a difference to the world. That led me into science very quickly.


If changing our world is playing God, it is just one more way in which God made us in His image.


As far as I'm concerned, ageing is humanity's worst problem, by some serious distance.


My approach is to start from the straightforward principle that our body is a machine. A very complicated machine, but none the less a machine, and it can be subjected to maintenance and repair in the same way as a simple machine, like a car.


There's nothing wrong with making the best of one's declining years, but what does annoy me is the fatalism. Now that we're seriously in range of finding therapies that actually work against ageing, this apathy, of course, becomes an enormous part of the problem.


Public enthusiasm for new advances is a key ingredient in influencing policy-makers to stimulate follow-up work with suitable funding, and it can be achieved far faster now that interested non-specialists can explore new research autonomously and can also be appealed to directly by scientists.


Wikipedia was a big help for science, especially science communication, and it shows no sign of diminishing in importance.


If you look at winners of the Nobel Prize in biology, you'll find a fair smattering of people who don't know how to work a pipette.


We've spent the last few millennia aware that senescence is horrible but knowing nevertheless that it's inevitable. We've had to find some mechanism to put it out of our minds so we can get on with our miserably short lives.


There is no difference between saving lives and extending lives, because in both cases we are giving people the chance of more life.