The Language of the Ceiling: Three Concepts Without Which the Conversation Is Pointless
We have spent a century obsessed with a single number. How long did they live? Ninety-two. Eighty-seven. A hundred and one. We announce it in obituaries, track it in demographic reports, and celebrate it as proof of medical progress. But that number — lifespan — tells us almost nothing about the life it claims to measure. Two people can share the same lifespan and inhabit completely different existences. One crosses the finish line still recognizably themselves. The other stopped being present years before the body gave out. To talk honestly about aging, we need three coordinates, not one. Lifespan, healthspan , and wellspan — each asks a different question, and together they form the only framework that takes the whole person seriously. Lifespan Is Just the Clock Lifespan is time in its most stripped-down form: the interval between first breath and last. It is useful for statisticians, actuaries, and headline writers. It is far less useful for anyone trying to understand how a human...