Greetings,
Here is a new turn in hot scientific debates over the SENS Life-Extension Project, and Aubrey de Grey's "Ending Aging" book http://tinyurl.com/357jzd
Recently a new chapter came out in a book published by the Springer publisher:
Annual Review of Gerontology and Geriatrics:
Biopsychosocial Approaches to Longevity
http://tinyurl.com/2opjy6
Chapter 3 of this book entitled "The Promise of Human Life Span Extension" and written by Dr. Preston W. Estep III, contains the following section:
"SENS Brings Neo-Lysenkoism to Longevity Research"
Here are some excerpts:
"Agenda-driven pseudoscience like SENS has a clearly stated goal, but wishful thinking and extrascientific considerations, such as political or fundraising power, are placed ahead of and are often incompatible with scientific evidence.
There have been many examples of agenda-driven science, but SENS is strikingly similar to Lysenkoism, a name given to the pseudoscientific misdirection of Soviet Biology lead by Trofim Lysenko." [in Stalin period]
...
Stay tuned for the response from Aubrey de Grey !
Meanwhile watch for possible comments at:
http://tinyurl.com/26yclt
and
http://www.facebook....?gid=8126691324
Estep refuses to say die when it comes to his views on SENS despite his failure to convince a panel of judges that "SENS is so wrong that it is unworthy of learned debate".
One might think that losing the SENS Challenge hosted by the Methuselah Foundation and Technology Review would have been enough, if not to convince Estep, but at least perhaps fear for his own credibility. Apparently not however because although he accepted the terms of the challenge and panel of learned judges and submitted his essay for their criticism, when he received their verdict
in his response letter he points to his failure as being the result of judges "who know little or nothing of the existing learned debate within gerontology and life-extension research." Note that Estep adds the qualification to the criteria of debate 'within gerontology and life-extension research'. Nice to see how he feels he can narrow the interpretation unilaterally after-the-fact. I'm sure Craig Venter and the other learned judges would appreciate Estep's assessment of their ability to judge the value of technology.
Regardless, I am certainly not going to buy this book solely to read the same irrelevant diatribe from someone with an axe to grind and whose view on the value of SENS has already roundly discredited by a panel of experts with more credentials than this author.
I hope Aubrey takes exactly the amount of time to respond that this so richly deserves, which is to say, none, as to do so would be a distraction from actually getting the work done that will lead to aging interventions, rather than talking about how it can't be done, as Estep seems to continue to do.
KP
Edited by kevin, 24 February 2008 - 05:31 PM.