'People will be immortal for 20 years'

A leading American inventor insists that humans will become immortal for at least the next two decades thanks to the achievements in nanotechnology and our growing understanding of the body.

Ray Kurzweil, an 61-year-old inventor and inventor, said that new knowledge in the field of information and genetics is growing at an incredible rate. According to him, theoretically, if human knowledge continues to increase today, within 20 years, nanotechnology can help us create products that function exactly like agencies. viscera. Unlike internal organs, these products are not aging, so they never die.

Picture 1 of 'People will be immortal for 20 years'

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Kurzweil added that although his prediction seems vain, right now many people have been saved by pancreatic and artificial neurons.

In the article in The Sun magazine, Kurzweil said: ' I and many scientists believe that in about 20 years we will find a way to reprogram the body's biological clock so that humans can stop. then reverse the aging process. Then nanotechnology will allow us to live forever in life . "

" Nanoscale machines will replace blood cells and work thousands of times more effectively. In 25 years we can run without breathing for 15 minutes, or dive underwater for 4 hours. without oxygen, "Kurzweil said. " People with a heart attack will drive themselves to the doctor's house for surgery because the nano machines help them survive the heart attack. Thanks to nanotechnology, the human brain will work so fast that we Can write a book in minutes '.

Ray Kurzweil (born 1948) is the leading inventor and futurist in the United States today. He studied many fields, from optical character recognition technology to tomography technology. He wrote many books on health, artificial intelligence, the future and technology. Kurzweil is the first inventor of the principle of character recognition machine, machine to convert text into speech for the blind, the machine to capture tomography, synthesizers and recreate the sound of musical instruments, the machine to convert speech into writing.