Right. So, in the book I take the premise that we’ll be able to extend our health expectancy to 150 years. And by that I mean not just our lifespan. We won’t just be living to 150 and have this huge period at the end of our life where we’re very ill. Health expectancy will be extended too. We’ll be healthier for longer periods of time. And because of that, things will look a lot different. We’ll be working longer, we’ll be healthier longer, we’ll be energetic longer. That means we’ll be doing all sorts of things longer, things that we do now. So for instance, getting married, right? I mean, can you imagine, you get married at 30, and you have a life expectancy–health expectancy–of 150 years, that marriage is gonna be much longer than you would expect today, of course. Are you married, Sonya? I am, yes. How long have you been married? Five years. Can you imagine being married fifty years? Wouldn’t that be a bit much? Well, I have a great husband. So I’d be okay being married that long.
Great after five year, but would it be great after fifty. I’m sorry. I mean, I’m sure it’s great after five years. But after fifty, I’m sure you’ll be sick to death of him. Well, maybe so, and I think in that case, society would have to come up with various ways of dealing with that. I mean, maybe there would be sunset clauses on marriage. Maybe we come with an entirely different definition of what marriage means. How long does a marriage typically last? Maybe, those kinds of things will have to change, I think. I know you have an interesting take on whether or not one hundred fifty year old man will be marrying twenty year old women. What’s your position on that? Right. So I consider that in the Family chapter of the book, because you could imagine in a world where people live to be 150. You could have a 130-year-old man marrying a 20-year-old woman, and that would be a pretty big age gap. Not that big from the male point of view, right? Well, how I try to answer that question, the question is, will we see more of those kind of pairings in the future? And I dug through the literature, both in terms of what happened the last time we doubled our life expectancy, because life expectancy in 1850 was forty-three years. Now it’s 80. We’ve already doubled life expectancy. So I went back and said, OK, well what happened last time we roughly doubled life expectancy? And it turns out that you didn’t see more pairings with large age gaps. Then I dug into the psychological literature, and it was like, how come? Why not? Why don’t we see big age gaps? And from the sociological point of view and psychological point of view, the explanation is that we tend to want to pair up with people who are more like us. And one of the things that makes somebody more like us is that they’re in the same age cohort. So they grew up with the same kind of music, and they grew up in a certain cohort. So they share those many different things with us that somebody in another age group wouldn’t. That’s the explanation for, one of the explanations for why you wouldn’t see large age gaps. The other reason because of course, sometimes those marriages are motivated by youth and beauty. So, the other explanation is, that in the future not only we’ll be healthier and more energetic, but I think we’ll also look better. Well, how old are you, Sonia? Let me guess. Twenty-one? Oh, no! I’m one hundred and fifty! Just joking. I’m thirty-nine. And so, well you don’t look it, though we’re on Skype. So, maybe Skype makes you look better than you actually are. What will this mean though for you in this revolution? When you’re one hundred and twenty, will you still look the same? Will you still have blond hair and sexy skin? Well, the hair is easy to do, of course first anyone can have one hair. The skin, I think, that technology surrounding cosmetic issues in skin will get better and better over time. We’ve already seen DARPA develop something called re-cell which is for burn victims at the moment. Where they can take some of your own skin cells, clone them, and literally spray them back on you. And that’s in use right now. I can only imagine that’s only going to get better. So you can buy that spray? Can I go to my local Wallgreens to get that?
Not yet, but I don’t think it will be long before it’ll be in use in the cosmetic industry. I hope I haven’t been making too much light of this because it’s very entertaining. At the turn of the twentieth century all those Huxley, English writer, wrote a book called, Brave New World, in which he imagined the world that you are laying out. But I think Huxley had a much more much darker version of what this would like. You seem to be unrelentingly optimistic. Is there anything about this world that we should be worrying about? Could it turn into a brave new world, where we, where life is extended for so long that we become incredibly bored and boring? Well, I suppose that’s always a possibility, but then there’s always a way out, isn’t there? Most people, I find don’t tend to have enough time. There’s never enough time in the day. There’s never enough time to do everything you want to do, and I think that just as we’ve filled up our time when we extended our our life expectancy from forty-three to eighty years, I mean, we’re much busier now, actually, than we probably were back then, or at least we have more things to do, and there’s more entertainment and so there’s much more variety in our lives now than there was back in eighteen fifty when we had less time. So I think that it won’t only be technologies to extend our health span that continue to grow of course. It’s going to be other technologies as well, like virtual environments, and other things that you can’t even predict right now
Futurist Sonia Arrison says that we are all going to live to at least a hundred years old this century. In her provocative new book 100 Plus, Arrison argues that this technological revolution will change everything from careers and relationships to family and faith.
This is a revolution about hacking into the body, Arrison told me last week when she came into the San Francisco TechCrunchTV studio. “Biology,” she explained, “has become an engineering project”. The new code is ourselves, she told me. We are, therefore, inventing technology that will enable us to design our own body parts and tweak ourselves so that we can live to a 100 or 150 years-old.
The consequences of this revolution are profound, Arrison told me. From “sunset clauses” on marriages to working longer to engineering our own organs to perpetually youthful skin to 150 year-old men marrying 20 year-old women, it is going to change everything.
Are you reading to live to 100 +?
Sonia Arrison is a futurist and policy analyst who has studied the impact of new technologies on society for more than a decade. A Senior Fellow at the California-based Pacific Research Institute (PRI) and a columnist for TechNewsWorld, she is author of two previous books as well as numerous PRI studies on technology issues. A frequent media contributor and guest, her work has appeared in many publications including CBS MarketWatch, CNN, Los Angeles Times, New York Times, Wall Street…