The Ceiling We Misread: What Human Lifespan Actually Tells Us About How to Live
We have a complicated relationship with limits. In everyday thinking, a limit is a wall — something that blocks, diminishes, denies. But in biology, a limit is closer to a frame. And a frame, unlike a wall, is what makes a picture possible at all. This distinction matters enormously when we talk about human lifespan — because we have been misreading the frame for a long time, in both directions. --- The longest well-documented human life on record belonged to Jeanne Calment, a French woman who died in 1997 at 122 years and 164 days. Her age was verified by official documents, witness accounts, and gerontological review. It remains the most robustly confirmed case of extreme human longevity we have. That number does something useful: it separates genuine biological potential from fantasy. It tells us what the human organism can do under exceptionally favorable conditions — not what it promises to everyone, but what it is capable of at all. It also draws a quiet but firm line between...