Science, Ceiling, and the Myth of Immortality
When people talk about “raising the ceiling” in human longevity , they often mean something very specific in scientific terms: increasing the maximum lifespan of the human species. This is not the same as helping people live better or healthier lives. The ceiling refers to the highest ages that any human beings can reach, and so far, there is no convincing evidence that this upper boundary has shifted beyond the roughly 110 to 120 -year range observed in rare exceptional individuals. That distinction matters because much of the public conversation around longevity mixes two very different goals. One is scientifically grounded: extending healthspan , the years of life spent in good health and functional independence. The other is far more dramatic: claiming that aging can be reversed , death defeated, or human lifespan pushed far beyond its known biological limits. Science supports the first goal much more strongly than the second. Most serious longevity research does not pro...