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Listening to Nature: A Friendly but Honest Response to the Information Theory of Aging: Reflections on David Sinclair's Framework from the Perspective of Integrative Physiology

This article is written as a direct response to David Sinclair 's YouTube interview in which he presents the core arguments of his Information Theory of Aging , discusses aging as a disease , and proposes cellular reprogramming as a central anti-aging strategy. The interview can be viewed at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tMYoiHSYgWw Preamble David Sinclair is one of the most creative and productive scientists working in geroscience today. His laboratory's contributions to our understanding of sirtuins , NAD+ metabolism , and epigenetic regulation have genuinely advanced the field, and his willingness to ask large, uncomfortable questions about aging has been an intellectual gift to biology. Having watched his recent YouTube interview with close attention, I found myself both stimulated and compelled to respond. In that interview, Sinclair presents three central claims: that aging can be understood through the lens of information theory, that aging is a disease, and th...

The Universe Optimizes — and So Does the Human Body

   Nature does not waste. Light bends through a prism along the fastest possible path. Planets trace ellipses rather than spirals because ellipses cost less energy to maintain. Mechanical systems, from pendulums to galaxies, follow paths of least action. This is not coincidence or aesthetic preference — it is the deepest operating principle of the physical universe. And remarkably, the same logic runs through every cell, organ, and lifetime of a human being. The principle of optimality states that any system navigating from one state to another will, given sufficient time and freedom, converge on the most efficient path available. In mathematics, this is formalized precisely: among all possible trajectories a controllable system might follow, certain ones are superior — minimizing cost, time, or resource expenditure. What makes this principle arresting is not its mathematical elegance but its universality. It does not stop at physics. It continues, unbroken, into biology. The...

The Second Mortality

  Medicine has long been measured by how well it preserves life. Yet survival alone is not enough. A body can continue breathing while the person within it is already fading. This is the deeper tragedy that modern medicine increasingly confronts: the loss of mind, identity , and narrative continuity while biology still persists. I call this the  Second Mortality . The first mortality is familiar. It is the event that generations have feared: the heart stops, breathing ceases, and the organism dies. This is the classic boundary between life and death, the one medicine has spent centuries resisting through resuscitation, surgery, ventilation, and intensive care. The second mortality is different. It occurs when the biological body remains alive, but the cognitive self has begun to disappear. Memory fails, orientation erodes, language thins, judgment collapses, and the inner continuity that makes a person recognizable to themselves and others is lost. This is not a metaphorical...

The Connective Tissue Axis of Aging

  Aging is often described as a gradual decline in function, but that view is too narrow to explain why some people remain resilient, repair well, and preserve autonomy deep into later life while others develop frailty, multimorbidity, and functional collapse. A more useful perspective is to see aging as a spectrum of trajectories. On one end is physiological adaptation, where structure and function stay coherent. On the other is pathogenetic aging , where regulation becomes unstable, repair loses precision, and local problems begin to spread across the body. At the center of this spectrum lies the connective tissue continuum , a system that does far more than provide mechanical support. It forms the body’s structural and regulatory matrix, linking organs, tissues, cells, vessels, nerves, and immune signals into one coordinated whole. This continuum is not merely a passive scaffold. It shapes how tissues respond to load, injury, inflammation, metabolism, and repair. In that sense, ...

Fat Is Not the Enemy: Why the New Obesity Diagnostic Framework Misreads Human Biology

A recent study published in the  Annals of Internal Medicine  ( National Prevalence of Clinical Obesity by BMI Class: A National Cross-Sectional Study -  doi.org/10.7326/ANNALS-25-0528 ) and reported by MedPage Today on June 1 ( Obesity With a Normal BMI? Study Suggests It's Common ), 2026 has attracted considerable attention. Using the new diagnostic framework proposed by the Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology Commission, researchers at the University of Southern California found that over 26% of U.S. adults with a normal BMI already meet criteria for clinical obesity . When two or three abnormal body measurements were applied, nearly 78% of all American adults qualified as having excess adiposity . The authors called for broader screening and earlier clinical intervention. The study has been welcomed in some quarters as a long-overdue correction to the limitations of BMI. I read it differently. A Valid Critique Carrying a Questionable Conclusion The scientific crit...

From Intelligence to Consciousness: The Embodied Path to Natural Awareness

   Intelligence and consciousness are not the same phenomenon, yet they are not separate ones either. They are two phases of a single process — the universe's progressive deepening of self-organization into self-recognition. Understanding how embodied consciousness emerges from intelligence, and what role intelligence plays within the broader field of Natural Consciousness , is one of the central challenges at the intersection of neuroscience, philosophy of mind, and artificial intelligence . Intelligence as the Foundation Intelligence, in its most universal sense, is the capacity of any system to model its environment, maintain internal coherence, and adapt through feedback. It operates wherever matter organizes itself recursively — in the chemical signaling of bacteria, the distributed processing of neural networks, the self-regulating dynamics of ecosystems, and the vast computational architectures of modern AI. Intelligence is substrate-neutral : it does not require a nerv...