By Kasandra Brabaw — 2019
It's called biohacking, and can we just not?
Read on www.health.com
CLEAR ALL
Shin Kubota fears that the lessons of the immortal jellyfish will be absorbed too soon, before man is ready to harness the science of immortality in an ethical manner.
Through the Immortality Project, researchers aim to answer the moral and biological questions surrounding extending human life spans.
Funded by elites, researchers believe they’re closer than ever to tweaking the human body so we can live forever (or quite a bit longer)
The human body is really holding us back.
A study counts blood cells and footsteps to predict a hard limit to our longevity
A handful of companies are trying vastly different approaches to spin animal studies into the next big anti-aging therapy.
9 questions about biohacking you were too embarrassed to ask.
From Santa Monica to Silicon Valley, a growing band of new age techies is leading a health revolution. Is the path to immortality really paved with ozone enemas and cryotherapy sessions?
What the longest-living people in the world eat, drink, and do before bed for restful sleep.
Somewhere in the remote Nicoyan peninsula of Costa Rica, a 101-year-old named Panchita is making you look bad. By the time you finish your morning blog rounds, she has already cleared brush, chopped wood and made tortillas from scratch.