So...I've been a bit rubbish at updating this, as I'm a full time doctor in the UK. We're not known for our spare time. I've finally pulled together the subject matter, and I'm currently researching and drafting the first chapter. I'm going to cover all the areas I can in research on longevity. I'll be looking at the demographics of population growth, the fundamental biology of aging, and research in to longer life. I'll be using examples from the natural world, research, and human longevity. I'll keep you all updated as much as possible. Feel free to share this with your friends, and I'm happy to receive suggestions of what you'd like to see in the finished work. It'll take me a while. Thank you for your patience, and your attention. Dr Matt out.
To me, the greatest sense of wonder I experience from Star Trek comes not from the warp drive, the stars, new life and new civilizations, but from its depiction of an uncompromisingly humanist, galaxy-spanning utopian society. It is that very same sense of wonder about our potential for social and economic improvement that got me into science-fiction in the first place.
To me, the greatest sense of wonder I experience from Star Trek comes not from the warp drive, the stars, new life and new civilizations, but from its depiction of an uncompromisingly humanist, galaxy-spanning utopian society. It is that very same sense of wonder about our potential for social and economic improvement that got me into science-fiction in the first place.