From hearing de Grey speak, you might get the impression that the scientific community has deftly avoided studying ageing. This is not the case; it has been studied for some time.
It’s weird that you got this impression, because in many TED Talks de Grey explicitly mentions that biogerontology has more than a century of history. It’s his approach to be new, together with the attitude of aging research as translational research instead of just basic non-translational biology research. When, for example, The Buck Institute was founded 20 years ago, it was frowned upon to think about aging research as a translational field, and the whole discipline was much smaller.
Regarding antagonistic pleiotropy: be careful not to mix theories explaining different causal levels of aging. Antagonistic pleiotropy explains some of the processes that lead to damage, but doesn’t say anything about damage itself. Aubrey de Grey’s categorization of damage is actually more accepted than ever. The scientific consensus is settled on something very close to it, described in the landmark paper “The Hallmarks of Aging”, from 2013.
I don’t know who you heard criticizing de Grey so harshly, but that’s very uncommon now. It happened in the early 2000s but not now. SENS Research Foundation, in fact, works with many universities and established institutions.
I highly suggest to read my new post about SENS Research Foundation that I just published here. I delve deep in these topics and more. I also plan to interview Dr. de Grey, and you will find some potential interview questions.
It’s weird that you got this impression, because in many TED Talks de Grey explicitly mentions that biogerontology has more than a century of history. It’s his approach to be new, together with the attitude of aging research as translational research instead of just basic non-translational biology research. When, for example, The Buck Institute was founded 20 years ago, it was frowned upon to think about aging research as a translational field, and the whole discipline was much smaller.
Regarding antagonistic pleiotropy: be careful not to mix theories explaining different causal levels of aging. Antagonistic pleiotropy explains some of the processes that lead to damage, but doesn’t say anything about damage itself. Aubrey de Grey’s categorization of damage is actually more accepted than ever. The scientific consensus is settled on something very close to it, described in the landmark paper “The Hallmarks of Aging”, from 2013.
I don’t know who you heard criticizing de Grey so harshly, but that’s very uncommon now. It happened in the early 2000s but not now. SENS Research Foundation, in fact, works with many universities and established institutions.
I highly suggest to read my new post about SENS Research Foundation that I just published here. I delve deep in these topics and more. I also plan to interview Dr. de Grey, and you will find some potential interview questions.