Mortal Coil: A Short History of Living Longer

Mortal Coil: A Short History of Living Longer

by David Boyd Haycock (Author), David Boyd Haycock (Author), David Boyd Haycock (Author)

Synopsis

An obsession with perpetual youth may seem a particularly modern phenomenon, but it is a goal that western scientists and philosophers have aspired to (and worked towards) for the last four hundred years.Mortal Coil explores the medical, scientific and philosophical theories behind the quest for the prolongation of human life. It was a conundrum that intrigued Sir Francis Bacon and underpinned the scientific revolution; ideas of ultimate perfectibility, indefinite progress, and worldly rather than heavenly immortality, fed directly into the spirit of the Enlightenment and further into the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In today's world of genetic research, cryonics and nanotechnology, we still seek the same elusive philosopher's stone.From Adam and Eve to human cloning and designer babies, seventeenth-century lifestyle guides to science fiction, Haycock's gripping story introduces an array of fascinating individuals - Rene Descartes, Benjamin Franklin, Jonathan Swift, Charles Darwin and Sigmund Freud as well as a score of unknown figures. Full of extraordinary stories and valuable insights, this is a curious, witty and captivating exploration into our unceasing desire to live forever.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Publisher: Yale University Press
Published: 09 May 2008

ISBN 10: 0300117787
ISBN 13: 9780300117783

Media Reviews
. . . a breezy and well-read survey of thinking about the possibilities of extending human life . . . a poignant history of fears and follies, of hubris and hope, of science and common sense: necessary reading . . . --Steven Shapin, London Review of Books --Steven Shapin London Review of Books
Author Bio
David Haycock is Curator of Seventeenth-Century Imperial and Maritime Studies at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich. Previously a Wellcome Research Fellow in the History of Medicine at the London School of Economics, he is an established and prolific historian of culture and medicine.