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14 - Limit of Human Longevity

Historical Perspectives and a New Metric

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2024

Jean-François Lemaître
Affiliation:
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Samuel Pavard
Affiliation:
National Museum of Natural History, Paris
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Summary

As far back as the seventh century BC, the Nineveh tablets and earliest surviving Greek poems bore witness to the human preoccupation with immortality, eternal youth and the comparative longevity of species. While the origins of these discussions can be traced back to ancient thinkers like Aristotle and Plutarch, it was not until the Renaissance of the sixteenth century that these ideas experienced a notable revival in the West. The seventeenth-century founders of modern science were distinguished from alchemists not so much by their objectives, such as living for a thousand years, but by the methods they either used or proposed to achieve their desired results. Despite the Enlightenment giving rise to scientific upheavals that began to challenge the status quo, theories were tested with only few empirical data until the beginning of the twentieth century. Today, the click of a button will provide quality data on human longevity covering many years in at least 41 countries, thanks for to the Human Mortality Database (HMD). After first presenting an overview of the historical perspective, this chapter explores trends of a recently introduced longevity indicator from the early twentieth century. It highlights the benefits of this metric in comparison to traditional measures and employs a decomposition approach to quantify the role of old-age mortality changes in shaping recent trends in human longevity.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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