Find out more about how The Lecture List works.
Coronavirus situation updateOur lecture organisers may or may not have had time to update their events with cancellation notices. Clearly social gatherings are to be avoided and that includes lectures. STAY AT HOME FOLKS, PLEASE. |
Find out what you can do to keep The Lecture List online
|
What does it mean to be old in a society in which people appear increasingly desperate to hold on to their youth, and the elderly are seen as a drain on resources? Are we so focused on living longer that we forget to live?
'Death is a very dull dreary affair, and my advice to you is to have nothing whatsoever to do with it.ââ”W Somerset Maugham
Social and medical advances have dramatically raised not only life expectancy but also the length of time we will be fit and active. As recently as 1910, average life expectancy in the UK was only 50 years. Today, men can expect to live to their mid-to-late seventies, and women into the early eighties.
This raises a number of issues, some would say problems, for society, medicine and individuals. Experts worry about the burden an ageing population places on pensions and the NHS. But, as American bioethicist Leon Kass argues, âthe challenges of an aging society are finally not economic and institutional but ethical and existentialâ. Culturally, we seem confused in our attitudes to aging and indeed death. Modern medicine is defined by the struggle to keep the grim reaper at bay, and this constant striving to put off the inevitable â“ to ârage against the dying of the lightâ â“ is in many ways laudable, expressing a celebration of life. But some fear we are sacrificing quality of life by keeping people alive, no matter how old or frail they become. Is todayâs pursuit of immortality, and eternal youth, a desperate reaction to our loss of faith in the âeternal lifeâ promised by religion?
Is increasing the human lifespan a straightforward moral imperative, or should we accept death as something that gives meaning to life? Does our desire to live ever longer express a selfish attitude that neglects our responsibilities to those who will care for us? What does it mean to be old in a society in which people appear increasingly desperate to hold on to their youth, and the elderly are seen as a drain on resources? Are we so focused on living longer that we forget to live?
Speaker(s): |
Rabbi Baroness Julia Neuberger | talks | www |
|
|
Date and Time: |
28 October 2008 at 7:00 pm |
Duration: | 2 hours |
|
|
Venue: |
Foyles |
Organised by: |
Institute of Ideas |
|
|
Tickets: |
£7.50 (£5) |
Available from: |
www.battleofideas.org.uk |
Register to tell a friend about this lecture.
If you would like to comment about this lecture, please register here.
Any ad revenue is entirely reinvested into the Lecture List's operating fund