A Vested Interest - Book 1 of A Vested Interest series

Book 1 is free at:

  • Amazon
  • iBooks
  • B & N
  • Kobo
  • Google Play
  • Smashwords

Get your copy here.

Dark Secrets - Book 2 of A Vested Interest series
No Secrets - Book 3 of A Vested Interest series
Stones, Stars and Solutions - Book 4 of A Vested Interest series
Leap of Faith - Book 5 of A Vested Interest series
Regret and Retribution - Book 6 of A Vested Interest series
Consequences - Book 7 of A Vested Interest series
Ashes to Ashes - Book 8 of A Vested Interest series
Dust to Dust - Book 9 of A Vested Interest series
Raging Storm - Book 1 of Blood of the Rainbow - an A Vested Interest prequel series
Roses and Regret - Book 2 of Blood of the Rainbow prequel series
Choice and Change - Book 3 of Blood of the Rainbow prequel series
A Vested Interest - Book 1 of A Vested Interest series
Get the free e-book

Are you an author?

Then you might be interested in the Author! Author! blog by John.

Check also John's book
An Illustrated Guide to Getting Published


 

Why not read A Vested Interest on a new Kindle Fire?

You don't need an e-reader if you have a smartphone though. Just download the FREE Kindle App.

Find us and other authors at:
Read Freely

Indie Author Land

Are you a subscriber to Kindle Unlimited?

If so, you won't find our books in this program. We would have to remove them from iTunes and Barnes & Noble.


You can find some short stories by John at Amazon

All three are very short.

All are about time travel.

All are a little silly.

https://smarturl.it/iwadasn

https://smarturl.it/iwadasn2

https://smarturl.it/iwadasn3

It was a dark and stormy nightIt was another dark and stormy night

It wasn't a dark and stormy night - Titanic Time

Coming soon is a collection of all these stories including a fourth story with the explanation for the Marie Celest and Leonardo da Vinci

Also by John

Amazon Prime

We've been Amazon Prime members for several years. It's worth the subscription! Apart from free next day delivery (even on Sundays) You ger free movies, tv shows and now music. You'll also find lots of your weekly shopping items are less expensive at Amazon! (Try them for pet food)

If Humans had the Immortality Gene ...

Somewhere ahead of us, science fears we will face the 'great filter', a cataclysmic event that all intelligences face and which prevents them colonising and communicating with other civilizations in the universe. Such events are common occurences in the history of life on earth. They include asteroid or planetoid impacts, radiation bursts from nearby stars, supervolcano eruptions and more. Humans have simply been very lucky to have evolved in a relatively peaceful period of time. We can't assume we will always be so lucky though. If we are to survive as a species, we must establish colonies on different planets. Ideally these will be around different stars. That's going to require us to have a much longer lifespan and to make life secure from events like this we need to transport all earths lifeforms to our new homes.

What if we did live a lot longer?

Let's suppose a medical research team did discover a way of reversing old age and the effects of illness, effectively making people immortal. What should they do with their 'fix'?

  1. Should they sell it at a huge price so that only the rich could afford it?
  2. Should they make it freely available to everyone by using a life virus to infect everyone it comes in contact with?
  3. Should they make it available for a small fee to anyone who wants it on condition they are sterilized first?
  4. Should immortality be reserved for those who have proved they deserve it?
  5. Should they hide their discovery in fear of the chaos it would cause?

I think you'll agree that option 1 is just simply wrong. The only way it would be successful would be for the discovery to remain a top secret. Once the knowledge got out - and it would get out - those who had benefited would be universally hated and would die at the hands of a mob probably.

Science is on the verge of activating a human immortality gene. Will there be objections?Option 2 takes away the right of people to choose. There would be some who would say that this was playing god and was just wrong. Expect riots from these people; some would be quoting a verse from Genesis:

    Genesis 6:3: "And the LORD said, My spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he also is flesh: yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years."

Another group would resent their lack of choice and would press for assisted suicide programs.

Can you see option 3 being popular? What if the 'fix' undid the sterilization. Would people pay to have this reversed once they were immortal?

Who chooses the 'worthy' in option 4? What if you are a worthy individual but never got a chance to prove it?

Would any doctor agree to option 5? Isn't the whole purpose of medicine to extend human life? Do people have the moral right to hide such a discovery?

The Immortality Gene story chooses option 2. If this first book in the 'A Vested Interest' series were to become reality, just what would be the effect?

If Humans Had a lifespan of 1,000+ Years

  • What is immortality? Immortality definition.

    Our book suggests a lifetime of 1729 years. That's not how immortality is defined by most people but assumes a human will stay healthy until killed by an accident, starvation, war, an 'Extinction Level Event' (ELE) or some other overwhelming event. According to insurance tables that would happen on average in 1729 years. (Hey - did you know my Twitter name is @JChapman1729 ?)

    What if you were immortal?

  • Damaged tissue would be regenerated. An amputee would re-grow a limb, hair would re-grow on the bald, lost teeth would be replaced and body parts lost through surgery would be replaced. That includes contraceptive surgery! Cosmetic surgery would be stable if it was to repair physical or age damage but would reverse if it were done to change appearance.
  • What would happen to the population of the world? The population could be expected to soar initially putting a huge strain on the food supply and the demand for resources and energy. Many millions would starve. However, gradually the desperate 'urge' driving us to reproduce and replace ourselves would be brought under control - we would, after all, have plenty of time for that 'later' when we felt more secure. Eventually the population would be brought under control at a level a great deal higher than it is now..
  • Food would be scarce initially but again this would be resolved as more areas became cultivated including sea farms, 'arid' areas and underground. It's likely that new food sources would be developed including bacterial cultures, fungal sources and direct synthesis. Cellulose from plants - wheat straw, bamboo, kelp and grasses would be converted to edible food. Real meat will be grown in laboratory factories, without killing the animals the initial cells came from, with less environmental impact and in a shorter time.
  • Water would be scarce in many areas for some time. A grid taking water from where it is plentiful to other areas would eventually be created.
  • The natural inclination would be to fight for food, land and resources. Initially that's exactly what would happen but we would eventually learn that cooperation produces better results.
  • Soldiers would think twice before fighting for any other principles - it is one thing to give up 30-40 years of life but an entirely different thing to give up 1000+ years. Those who didn't see things this way would probably not be missed!
  • A career would probably not be a lifetime decision. It would be changed many times. You would not want to stay in a hated job and would have plenty of time to learn new skills. The demand for education would be high as older generations go back to school to learn new skills. As far as normal K12 education was concerned the pressure would be off and there would be more time for 'fun' in school with lessons being devoted to leisure activities and non-vocational skills. K12 would become K20?
  • Politicians would want to remain in power for much longer, the climb up the political ladder would be much harder. Maybe we would someday elect 'reluctant politicians' who would see it as their civic duty to serve for a time rather than out of a desire for power. After all; anyone who wants to lead a country is probably the last person you should give the job to!
  • Premeditated crimes of violence would eventually decrease. Those inclined to violence would, over time, be eliminated from the gene pool by that very violence. Crimes of passion would no doubt continue!
  • The urge to move to a better place would be overwhelming - even if that meant transforming a harsh environment to make it liveable.
  • Undersea and underground communities would be set up - anywhere there is space available. The Earth's surface might eventually become a park for leisure.
  • Space would be colonized; the Moon and asteroids first, followed by Mars, the satellites of other planets and finally other solar systems.
  • Raw materials and energy would be at a premium. Both will cause problems initially but will be solved as nuclear fusion, deep robotic mining and resources from space become available. Getting space resources using rockets would be found impractical and space elevators would be constructed.
  • Waste heat would become a major problem. Much of it will be recycled though.
  • Recycling of waste would be a major industry.
  • Concerns about global warming would soar for a while, then prove unfounded as people realize that sea levels just are not rising abnormally and temperatures start to fall around 2040 as we enter the next ice age. (Try reading Michael Crichton's 'State of Fear'). Before that we can expect wild variation in weather - it happens before every ice-age. The drive to reduce carbon emissions would continue though since we wouldn't be able to burn fossil fuels needed as raw materials.
  • Technology will continue to develop at an ever faster rate. Computers and nanotechnology especially. Look forward to a personal computer you can talk to, carry with you, display within your eyes and hear through your teeth!
  • Those computers will be intelligent and will work in symbiosis with you. They will provide you with the information and guidance you need. You will be their eyes, locomotion and hands. You will provide them with curiosity to explore the environment.
  • The average 'unaided' intelligence of the population would increase slowly. A surprising number of 'Darwin Award' candidates would fail to breed initially but this will cease as their personal artificially intelligent computer gives them guidance.
  • Most medical staff apart from those dealing with accidents and research would be out of a job. An end perhaps to the ridiculous hours they work?
  • Retirement and pensions would be a thing of the past. The working week would be shorter and holidays longer.
  • There would be less 'haste' in everyday life. You now have 'plenty of time'.
  • Leisure demand would soar. A huge number of people would be employed by it.
  • Drug companies would mostly convert to biotechnology, go out of business or convert to supplying chemical resources and producing food.
  • People would have an increased awareness of natural disasters and put more energy into averting them.
  • Languages would be less of a problem, people would have the time to learn them. Your personal computer will translate and eventually we could see a common language developing from bits of all.
  • Euthanasia centres would be accepted. Who wants to live a long and unhappy life?
  • We would run out of fossil fuels and resort to biotechnology, nanotechnology and asteroid mining to replace them. Biofuels from products such as corn would prove to be a dead end since the raw materials would be needed to produce food. Algae farming would become important.

Is This Real?

Is it possible? According to Aubrey de Grey, Chief Science Officer of the SENS Research Foundation, an organisation dedicated to ending ageing, the first person to live to 1,000 is probably alive now. Watch his TED talk on this subject or his interview with 'Hardtalk' at the BBC. Will it happen soon? It's already starting to take place. In 2015 a biotech company used genetic engineering to treat a woman, Liz Parrish. As a result her telomeres increased in length by 9%. That's equivalent to reversing 20 years of aging. Find out more at Bioviva. You might also like to read this 2015 technical document published. Check where it's contributors work - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acel.12344/pdf

In March 2017 research led by scientists at Harvard Medical School (HMS) revealed a critical step had been found in a molecular chain of events that allows cells to mend their broken DNA. Read the article here - https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2017/03/harvard-scientists-pinpoint-critical-step-in-dna-repair-cellular-aging/

Do some research and find out exactly how your DNA is damaged in such a way that it does not repair itself or destroy and replace the damaged strand. You are never going to think about diseases such as the common cold in the same way again.

If this page has informed or entertained, please download a FREE copy of our book 'Immortality Gene' from http://smarturl.it/avi
Even if you never read it (but we hope you will) - it will help our rankings.
Look - a FREE e-book

Want to respond?

I've duplicated this page on a blog, so if you want to comment - check this page and add your comment there. Have I answered the question "What if humans were immortal?"



Download
Immortality Gene
FREE now