The science of living longer is advancing faster than most people realize.
But the question isn’t just can we live longer—
It’s how will society handle it?
Category 6 explores the broader systems that shape the future of longevity—from laws and ethics to economics, city planning, and risk management. Because to extend life well, we must redesign the world we live in.
Radical life extension raises timeless moral questions:
We must approach longevity as more than science—it’s a moral project.
Longevity tech won’t thrive in legal limbo. It needs:
Without adaptive policy, progress can stall—or explode.
The 20th-century financial model—retire at 65, die at 85—no longer fits.
We need new systems for:
As lifespan changes, so must the definition of financial security.
Your lifespan is shaped not just by genes or drugs—but by:
Longevity cities and architecture will help turn extra years into better years.
Without foresight, the dream of longevity could backfire:
Success depends on anticipating what could go wrong—and building guardrails.
Radical life extension is not just a biological experiment—it’s a civilizational redesign.
To make a longer life truly livable, we must rethink:
The ecosystem around longevity will determine who benefits, how fairly, and for how long.
Because the future isn’t just about adding years to life—
It’s about adding life to the years we create.