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Why We Get Old & How We Can Stop It - Dr Andrew Steele | Modern Wisdom Podcast 265

Andrew Steele is a scientist, writer and presenter. Ageing is a phenomenon we're all familiar with and is completely taken for granted as a fact of reality, but do we have to accept Expect to learn why curing ageing might be easier than curing cancer and all other diseases, the unfortunate truth of fasting for longevity, why the next decade will be the most exciting for lifespan research and much more... Sponsors: Get 35% discount on everything I use from The Protein Works at https://www.theproteinworks.com/modernwisdom/ (use code MODERN35) Get 20% discount on Reebok’s entire range including the amazing Nano X at https://geni.us/modernwisdom (use code MW20) Extra Stuff: Buy Ageless - https://amzn.to/38Ya1aF Follow Andrew on Twitter - https://twitter.com/statto Get my free Ultimate Life Hacks List to 10x your daily productivity → https://chriswillx.com/lifehacks/ To support me on Patreon (thank you): https://www.patreon.com/modernwisdom #ageing #longevity #biohacking - Listen to all episodes online. Search "Modern Wisdom" on any Podcast App or click here: iTunes: https://apple.co/2MNqIgw Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2LSimPn Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/modern-wisdom - Get in touch in the comments below or head to... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx Email: modernwisdompodcast@gmail.com

Dr Andrew SteeleguestChris Williamsonhost
Jan 4, 20211h 17mWatch on YouTube ↗

At a glance

WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT

Can We Cure Aging? Andrew Steele Explains Science, Trade‑offs, Future Tech

  1. Dr. Andrew Steele argues that aging is both a measurable increase in mortality risk and a biological process driven by identifiable cellular and molecular changes. He explains why evolution produced aging as an energy trade‑off with reproduction, why targeting aging itself may be more effective than treating individual diseases, and how emerging tools like senolytics, stem cell therapies, gene editing, and AI‑driven biology could radically extend healthy lifespan. Steele is cautious about current lifestyle fads and supplements, emphasizing standard health advice and, above all, more aging research as the most impactful lever. He believes substantial lifespan extension could plausibly arrive within the lifetimes of people alive today, though timelines and ultimate limits remain deeply uncertain.

IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING

5 ideas

Think of aging as rising death risk and fixable biology, not just “getting old.”

Statistically, human mortality risk doubles roughly every eight years; biologically, aging is driven by specific cellular changes (hallmarks) that can be slowed or reversed in animals, framing aging as a treatable process rather than an inevitable fate.

Target aging itself instead of chasing thousands of separate age‑related diseases.

Most cancers, heart disease, strokes, and dementias share the same underlying aging biology; treating aging could reduce the incidence of many conditions at once, likely more efficiently than tackling each of the 11,000+ classified diseases separately.

Evolution did not “design” us to age on purpose; aging is a trade‑off.

Organisms allocate limited energy between body maintenance and reproduction; in many environments, evolving to have more offspring sooner beats investing heavily in long‑term repair, making aging an accidental byproduct of fitness optimization, not an adaptation.

Senolytic drugs that clear senescent cells can make old animals biologically younger.

In mice, selectively killing senescent (aged, dysfunctional) cells delays cancer, maintains cognitive function, improves physical health, and extends healthy lifespan, demonstrating that at least some aspects of aging can be reversed in whole organisms.

Evidence for calorie restriction and intermittent fasting in humans is mixed and limited.

While eating less clearly extends lifespan in many short‑lived species, monkey and human data show health benefits but ambiguous effects on lifespan, and practical regimens can carry downsides like bone loss, anemia, and reduced immunity; Steele urges caution rather than zealotry.

WORDS WORTH SAVING

5 quotes

We can either go after thousands of individual diseases, or we can go after the root cause, and that’s aging.

Dr. Andrew Steele

Evolution is reproduction of the fittest, not survival of the fittest.

Dr. Andrew Steele

Aging is the single largest cause of suffering in the world.

Dr. Andrew Steele

It’s not going to be as simple as taking a single pill that slows or reverses your ageing.

Dr. Andrew Steele

Every year you stay alive longer is another opportunity for some medical breakthrough to happen that could benefit you.

Dr. Andrew Steele

Definitions of aging: statistical (mortality risk) and biological (hallmarks of aging)Evolutionary reasons for aging and death, and trade‑offs with reproductionAging as the root cause of major diseases vs. disease‑by‑disease medicineHallmarks of aging, senescent cells, and senolytic therapies in animalsCalorie restriction, intermittent fasting, and diet: evidence, limits, and controversiesEmerging interventions: stem cells, gene therapy, epigenetic reprogramming, metforminEthical, social, and philosophical implications of longevity and potential “cures” for aging

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