Channel: Peter H. Diamandis clear
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1Peter H. DiamandisHarvard Prof Reveals Age-Reversing Science to Look & Feel Younger w/ D...2909998580141665.0positive2:23:38No transcript
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@@alanw737I turn 55 this year. I hope this technology isn’t too late for me. I started working out and getting healthy two years ago. Let’s hope that helps me get there.neutral275
@@theatheistpaladinOne of the biggest fears of living longer is cancer. The the epigenetic reprogramming that makes you young and kills cancer, that is the holy grail of aging research.positive146
@@fl00fydragonThere are no words to describe how much I need this technology. I had more of a decade of my life wasted away by factors outside of my control, robbing me of experiences that have filled me with regret.<br>This technology has to be accellerated, by any means necessary.positive124
@@michellewaldren4777I want a revamp! I’m 67 and work hard on my health. Hope it happens in my lifetime!positive58
@@priyab7743Imagining a future where people look back and think how wild it was that we didn’t realize aging was a disease. It will be similar to how we look back at doctors not realizing hand washing limited germ transfer.positive54
@@lwalt7120David was my gateway drug to longevity education. So grateful for his dedication.positive52
@@SkyePrescottWhat an amazing conversation. My donation is on its way. Thank you Peter and David, for being bright stars shining in a dark world.positive48
@@elensayista8988The ones that watch this podcast can see the future. What a wild time to be alive.positive46
@@asteronxFunding? If for some &#39;odd&#39; reasons you are unable to acquire funding from within the USA, I&#39;d consider taking the research into other nations willing to reduce their annual medical care costs. Reducing costs is the most logical path. ?negative45
@@LalaNaiduRecently, my husband and I brought Lifespan by Sinclair with us on vacation to read again. It’s such a fascinating, insightful, and inspiring book. Thank you, Peter, for reintroducing him and for supporting his work with such grace and generosity.positive35
@@Anders01Great! One obstacle to overcome is that the healthcare industry can come to see AI as a threat, because if it can create cures, that can massively destroy much of the entire healthcare industry (and the health insurance industry) which thrives on perpetual fixing symptoms instead of focusing on cures. The key then is to get new medical research into healthcare, such as smaller companies than the current pharma giants.negative34
@@MrSotero123I don’t mind waiting another 10 years for age reversal. But I do hope we see major breakthroughs into the human blindness experiments soon! It would be incredible to give my father vision back in his right eye.positive33
@@GoncaloFerreiraI&#39;m 50, I do no sports or exercise whatsoever, and I look like 25-30 and feel like that also. Not sure why.<br><br>But I want this technology, not because of me, as I feel I have lots of time. But because of my mother and other people in my family, to see them grow young again as I remember them, and so that we stop seeing our loved ones depart one day.<br><br>If global leaders invested more on this instead of wars, it would be great for all.<br><br>Keep up the good work.positive32
@@chrism.1131I&#39;ve been following Dr. Sinclair since the early 90s. He looks like he&#39;s aged five years.neutral31
@@BillyBillionaire-b7qWhat is the age reversial pill that you claim in here NOW? ?negative27
@@PrisauriaSinclair, you&#39;ve inspired me to become a biotechnologist engineer ♡<br>Someday, I hope to work togetherpositive26
@@nadan1977Mr Diamandis I have now been following you for sometime, and I got to the point where I click the “like” button half way through your intros, while getting excited to watch the full episode! You, your work, and your guests have enriched me beyond belief… I have 3 children, all under the age of 9, and I have taken upon myself to educate myself on this fast happening future so to prepare them to their very different present, and you are helping me along the way. From an Italian living in the US, grazie mille!positive21
@@Jhony.L.1This podcast should be shown in every single school, around the world, and I mean it.positive19
@@stopdropnrollImagine the world where a birthdate in the 1960&#39;s or 70&#39;s, or anything pre 2000&#39;s is actually looked up too. Bringing wisdom from what will quickly become known as the ancient pre AI world. 80 year olds that look 40 are revered with a lived &#39;knowledge&#39; of that original humanity. Strap yourselves in folks, life and progress is now on warp speed.neutral19
@@healthychefsherellThank you! I donated through the Harvard link. Best of luck, David!!positive16
@@bonnierobb9115Delighted for this long-awaited catchup with the incredible Dr David Sinclair. Thank you!positive16
@@knownow6361Thank you both for adding value to the human experience. AND Happy Birthday Dr. Sinclair.positive15
@@goodtothinkwithLove seeing you two in conversation… in fact, it would be great to hear you both like this more regularly!positive14
@@mentalgameofrecruitingThank you David, my fellow Hungarian. You are brilliant and you appear to be a wonderful human. Please please please get that pill in my hands….I’m seventy and I don’t want to miss out on age reversal.positive14
@@toddrawlings8447Peter, I was getting nervous . . . you were absent from posting your Moonshots for more than a week, but you just smashed a grand slam Homerun with this podcast with Dr. Sinclair. Absolutely mind blowing and I want to learn so much more. Wow, you&#39;ve had five of those Therapeutic (Total) Plasma Exchange (TPE) treatments . . . please share more on that soon!positive13
@@playframe6231where are the mouse age records? Where are the immortal mice? ?negative12
@@LorinHemmilaI turned 63 Halloween and I just looked in a mirror and realized that despite a variety of health problems I am in much better shape than my dad was at my age. At age 85 my grandfather was in much better shape! It’s complicated, yet I clearly recall in August of 1984 soon after I returned from my 3 years studying as an American in South Korea, where I met a dozen ROK &amp;U.S. “Military Intelligence” (often an oxymoron) colonels, atThe Student Union Building at The University of Arizona I was in line to get a cup of coffee behind a gray-haired, short man, who ordered cafe au latte GLACÉ in a fine French accent despite his German DNA. I asked him what that was. ICE COFFEE WITH CREAM, my favorite! He was retired USAF Colonel Christopher “Chris” Desauer, whom I would talk with at The Fiddleyfig Cafe probably 5 times a week from 1984 to August of 1990 when he showed me his voluntary recall to ACTIVE DUTY at about age 70 signed by some general, whom he’d known in Iran in the 1950s… Quite a complicated story, yet Chris had been inspired in May of 1950 while on his first honeymoon in the Redwoods of Northern California to write a letter of suggestion to the forerunner of NASA… on how to travel in future to distant stars… a journey of centuries: research how to prolong Human productive, healthy lifespan… like The Coastal Redwoods ( Sequoia Semper Virens, a.k.a. The Immortal Redwoods, which can live for over a thousand years… or possibly far more…. NASA’s forerunner agency supposedly had requested suggestions on what to research in order to travel thru space for centuries… but it didn’t like his silly idea in 1950! But by1984 Chris was working with 40 Scientists, Doctors, and others around the World (he was fluent like a native in 7 languages)on Stem Cell Research and other means to prolong useful, productive Human life! Perhaps beyond 100 by the year 2060, but by then it would be a GLOBAL ECONOMIC NECESSITY as it takes a lot of economic resources to raise a baby to maturity to adulthood and be someone with lots of education and valuable experience, like Colonel Desauer…. only to allow Humanity to lose them! I’m not sure if I am currently able to understand or explain it, yet when I was disabled after a brain surgery for Tumors in my Speech Mechanics Area in 2023, I had nothing better to do, so I started catching up on almost 39 years of scientific research in what Colonel D told me about in 1984, including much of what Harvard University Professor David Sinclair is researching! 😮lol Back in the 1980s it was viewed as CRAZY FRINGE SCIENCE! Yet now it’s apparently a possibility!positive12
@@Femboy_EngineeringI hope this becomes a reality one day, I am currently 20, and I want to stay this way forever. Just the thought of looking into the mirror and seeing myself as old, is terrifying.negative12
@@trojanthedogWhen I was 15, I read Larry Niven&#39;s book Ringworld. It started with the lead character&#39;s 200 th birthday party. Even now I remember the moment when I read it and vowed,&#39; if the tech is developed, I want to do it!&#39;<br>My answer to &#39; how long do you want to live?&#39;, is always this , &#39; I&#39;ll tell you on my 200 th birthday!&#39;<br>That will be 2158. ?positive11
@@egbertrapp2503Great interview, thank you very much. 😊 It is more than exciting and motivating to see what the future holds.positive11
@@CogitoCoinSumThanks alot for this David!! And Peter❤🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽positive10
@@erniea5843Timestamps pleaseneutral10
@@markgeurts258<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1l3lGy07Fgo&amp;t=605">10:05</a> why whould you patent this? Just make it opensource so that everyone can help/benefit!! ?positive10
@@susymay7831Props on timestamping this long and information dense video ❤positive9
@@GR-ht2qpIt would have better if they could give the link to get some of the supplements mentioned in the discussion. Example - the best place to buy/get Nattokinase; given that most of these supplements in the market are not as good as they are meant to be, it would have helped ordinary folks a lot.negative9
@@dianaarmstrong8820How does our brain retain 500 years of Memories? Do we just forget old lessons that are no longer relevant? ?neutral9
@@007balzakI have been on Dr. Sinclair&#39;s regimen for over 4 years now. People are noticing that at 62 I still look 15 yrs younger because of the multiple diseases eliminated or prevented by the regimen.<br>I am about to add Metformin, being that I have just been told that I am pre-diabetic.<br>This is Dr .Sinclair&#39;s updated list : Dr. David Sinclair&#39;s 2025 regimen includes NMN (1g), resveratrol (1g), Metformin (800-1000mg), Taurine (2g), Fisetin (500mg), Spermidine (1-2mg), fish oil, alpha-lipoic acid (300mg), Vitamin D3, Vitamin K2, TMG, aspirin, and rapamycin, alongside a plant-focused diet and regular high-intensity interval trainingpositive8
@@effy1219love the attitude of peter, very positivepositive8
@@anthonyhopper7830Incredible interview!positive8
@@Barbara-s3w82. Just in last year been feeling it…….negative7
@@3pmnrgA positive comment regarding LPa....My daughter is 20 and had an LPa of 196 just 1 year ago. Took 1000mg of niacin nightly and was just retested at 112. We were in convo with Amgen for new drug, but they wouldnt give her stage 4 testing as she is very young and has not had any heart attacks or strokes.positive6
@@ABitofDivineLook at a picture of David and his dad. Never too latepositive6
@@TeresaBelcher02Congrats to these two very handsome, youthful and successful leaders. Thank you for all of your efforts!positive5
@@Martin854Thank you for this conversation ! I was wondering: beyond aging and major diseases like cancer, what is your perspective on more everyday or ‘trivial’ conditions that impact quality of life for so many people ? things like vision loss, eye floaters, hearing loss, tinnitus, scoliosis? Do you think treatments targeting aging could also, as a secondary effect, help address these issues? <br>Thx ! ?positive5
@@KnutAndreVikshålandSINCLAIR HAS MILLIONS TO USEpositive5
@@phebedunkelbunt9577I think we should all consider donating. Unfortunately, I´m not a tech millionaire, so I can only send a small donation. However, I will.positive5
@@tsvgoaliDo we know anything about ME/CFS with cell rejuvenation? Does it turn me back to being healthy again? ?negative5
@@racer1969Grok predicts we will be able to reverse aging between 2035-2040.positive5
@@tonettaloverIm 27. I hope im going to make it to lev and indefinite lifespan.positive5
@@thelionshead8920A question Iv been wanting to ask Professor Sinclair for a while, but maybe Peter can help: Professor Sinclair has often emphasized that high protein intake — especially animal protein — accelerates aging through mTOR and IGF-1 activation. Yet many in the healthspan community, like Andrew Huberman and Peter Attia, advocate higher protein to preserve muscle and function as we age. How do you reconcile these perspectives? Specifically, is high protein intake still harmful if paired with consistent resistance training, where mTOR activation drives muscle synthesis and resilience, rather than in a sedentary context? ?neutral5