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#11
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We ARE advancing more and more every year, but I doubt immortality will ever be accomplished. Even if they found a way for people to maintain perfect health, how will somebody like a murder victim able to live? What happens if a person is mutilated and gets their head cut off or something? I don't think there is any possible way for people to find ways to live through that.
But even if they did manage to find a way through all this, the rest of my post will be in regards to the rest of yours after the part about humanity advancing. To answer your questions, is immortality denying the next generation the right to live, and is it immoral? I'd have to say no to both. If you think about it, it might seem like it is, but I say no because say we find a way to become imortal, we are doing it to help ourselves. Not to keep the next generation from living. If that, or some other negative action was the purpose for becoming immortal, THEN I think it would be immoral and denying them the right to live. I hope you understand what I'm trying to say. And I know it's really off topic, but I miss watching Avatar too, and also haven't been able to watch it in a while.
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