This accessible yet profound debate from two leading researchers in the area, Stephen Cave and John Martin Fischer, offers:
- Engaging philosophical discourse that brings abstract concepts to life through myth, literature, and thought experiments
- Balanced perspectives with Cave arguing against immortality (citing problems of meaninglessness, overpopulation, social injustice, and boredom) and Fischer making the case for radical life extension
- Structured format with clear chapter breakdowns, summaries, and a three-part debate format that models scholarly discourse
- Contemporary relevance, connecting ancient philosophical questions to modern anti-aging research and technological developments
Instrcutors praise this book as the most accessible volume in the 'Little Debates' series, noting its ideal structure for introducing complex literature to newcomers while presenting the most current positions from both authors.
Perfect for courses in Philosophy of Death and Mortality, Ethics, Bioethics, Philosophy of Religion, Contemporary Philosophical Issues, and Introduction to Philosophy.
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"Scientists may eventually be able to extend some people's lives for many hundreds or even thousands of years. This book is a friendly argument between two eminent philosophers about whether this would be good or bad for those people. Even if none of us now will be fortunate (or unfortunate) enough to be around to experience radical life extension, we can still benefit enormously from this debate's illuminating exchanges, conducted with wit and verve, about death, the meaning and value of life, the nature of well-being, the metaphysics of personal identity, and many other fascinating and fundamentally important topics." -- Jeff McMahan, University of Oxford
"This book will reward anyone interested in the question of whether there's reason to live forever. And let's be honest, that's all of us. Cave and Fischer offer up a timely debate on a timeless issue." -- Benjamin Mitchell-Yellin, Sam Houston State University








