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Dr David Sinclair: Can Aging Be Reversed? After 8 Weeks, Cells Appeared 75% Younger In Tests!

2h 29m 8s26,689 単語4,378 segmentsEnglish

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0:00

This is very uh

0:01

It's bad, right? It's hard, yeah.

0:03

>> That's what it's like to be old. And for

0:05

far too long, we've ignored [music] it

0:07

or accepted it as natural. And I reject

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the idea that aging, just because it's

0:11

natural, is acceptable. Dying at 80 is

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not inevitable. Absolutely, that can be

0:16

changed. So, if you're skeptical, I am a

0:18

Harvard professor who has been studying

0:20

aging, longevity, and age reversal for

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30 years. And I've seen enough from my

0:24

lab showing that we can literally now

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reverse the aging process. And it's not

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a question of if, it's [music] a

0:28

question of when this is going to And

0:30

everyone should stick around cuz I'm

0:31

going to tell you some of the major

0:32

things that people should be doing. They

0:34

can lengthen your life by a decade. Hey,

0:36

you're not taking that off, Steven.

0:38

You've got 10 minutes of that. So, you

0:40

can accelerate aging by smoking, getting

0:41

an X-ray, ultra-processed foods,

0:43

excessive drinking, flying a lot. I fly

0:45

all the time. That's probably

0:46

accelerating your aging process.

0:50

Even going to a rock concert and

0:51

blasting your eardrums because your ear

0:54

hair cells are getting [music] older

0:55

faster. And so, I look at the body like

0:57

it's a computer and we can reinstall the

0:59

software. And what's [music] interesting

1:01

is when you reverse aging, diseases like

1:03

Alzheimer's, cancer, heart disease go

1:05

away [music] or are cured. Because

1:07

what's driving a lot of those diseases

1:09

is aging. And so, my lab is like Willy

1:11

Wonka's chocolate factory. They are

1:13

making discoveries that blow me away

1:15

every week. And I think we're at a

1:16

turning point in human history [music]

1:18

where you're probably going to live into

1:19

the 22nd century if you do all the right

1:21

things. And we're going to dig into all

1:22

of those in great detail. But what are

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the unintended consequences of such a

1:26

world where we all live longer? And

1:28

also, do you think it's going to be

1:29

possible in the next 50 years for us to

1:31

live forever? And then, what's the best

1:33

uh treatment you've discovered for hair

1:34

loss?

1:35

>> This is why I love your podcast, Steven.

1:36

You ask the right questions. So, first

1:38

of

1:39

This is super interesting to me. My team

1:41

gave me this report to show me how many

1:42

of you that watch this show subscribe.

1:44

And some of you have told us, according

1:45

to this, that you have unsubscribed from

1:47

the channel randomly. So, favor to ask

1:49

all of you, please could you check right

1:51

now if you've hit the subscribe button.

1:52

If you are a regular viewer of this show

1:54

and you like what we do here. We're

1:55

approaching quite a significant landmark

1:57

on this show in terms of a subscriber

1:58

number. So, if there was one simple,

2:01

free thing that you could do to help us,

2:03

my team, everyone here, to keep this

2:04

show free, to keep it improving year

2:07

over year and week over week, it is just

2:08

to hit that subscribe button and to

2:10

double-check if you've hit it. Only

2:11

thing I'll ever ask of you.

2:12

Do we have a deal?

2:14

If you do it, I'll tell you what I'll

2:14

do. I'll make sure

2:16

every single week, every single month,

2:18

we fight harder and harder and harder

2:19

and harder to bring you the guests and

2:20

conversations that you want to hear. I

2:22

stayed true to that promise since the

2:23

very beginning of the Diary of a CEO,

2:25

and I will not let you down. Please help

2:27

us. Really appreciate it. Let's get on

2:29

with the show.

2:31

>> [music]

2:34

>> Dr. David Sinclair. I have waited many

2:37

years to speak to you. And I've been so

2:40

keen to speak to you for so many years

2:41

because

2:42

so much of the research and the

2:45

information I've consumed on the

2:46

subjects we're going to talk about today

2:48

comes from you, directly from research

2:50

you've done, and from theories and ideas

2:52

and hypotheses that you formed. I think

2:55

the place that this conversation should

2:57

start is

2:59

is probably with this picture because it

3:01

appears to be incredibly formative

3:04

in your journey.

3:06

Oh, yes.

3:07

That is an important picture, true.

3:10

This is a picture

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of my grandmother and me when I was in

3:14

my early 20s, I'm now 56, if you're

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wondering.

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And uh my grandmother has played a major

3:20

role in my life. Uh I'm going to have to

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be careful not to get too emotional

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because uh she's now passed passed away,

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but she's inspired

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me to

3:30

do the best I can to leave the world a

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better place than uh I found it.

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And there's this particular book here

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called Now We Are Six.

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It is Anyone who's read my book uh

3:40

Lifespan knows that this book is very

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important to me. And I didn't realize

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it, of course, when I was a kid that

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this was going to change my whole life.

3:51

And there's a poem at the back there

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that my grandmother, Vera, used to read

3:55

me

3:56

when I was six.

3:57

And it goes like this. When I was one, I

4:01

had just begun. When I was two, I was

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nearly new. When I was three, I was

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hardly me.

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When I was four, I was not much more.

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When I was five, I was just alive.

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But now, I am six.

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I'm as clever as clever. So, I think

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I'll be six now forever and ever.

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I'm getting chills reading this again

4:25

and hearing this poem again because

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the impact on me was the following, that

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subconsciously, my grandmother was

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saying, "You you don't want to grow up.

4:33

Adults can be evil." She grew up after

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World War II.

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There was horrendous uh

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impact on her and her family in Hungary.

4:42

And she thought that a child is innocent

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and people shouldn't grow up. But what

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actually happened was I realized

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why do people grow old?

4:52

That's a terrible thing to happen. And

4:54

so, I've spent my life

4:56

trying to figure out why do we get old?

4:57

Why do we grow up? Why do we get frail?

5:00

Because I also think that if we can

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solve that, understand it,

5:04

slow it, even reverse it now,

5:06

we we'll have the biggest impact on

5:08

human health in history.

5:10

Am I right in thinking your grandmother

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told you at that young age that she was

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going to die, that you were going to

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die, that your parents were going to

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die? Yes, uh she did tell me that. I

5:20

remember it very clearly, actually. I

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was on the floor and she was crouching

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down and I said, "Vera." I didn't call

5:26

her

5:26

grandma. She didn't want to be called

5:28

grandma. She wanted to be young like a

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kid to me. I said, "Vera, will will you

5:31

always be here to protect me? Will you

5:33

always be around?" She said, "No, I'm

5:34

going to die."

5:36

I'm like, "What do you mean?" She goes,

5:37

"Every everything dies. I'm going to be

5:39

gone.

5:40

Your parents will be gone. Your pet cat

5:42

will be dead pretty soon. And you

5:44

yourself will be dead one day."

5:46

At age, you know, four or five, that's

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that's that's heart-wrenching, right?

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We've all gone through this realization

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around that age that the world that we

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believe in and see will one day all be

5:59

gone. That moment, I remember it so

6:01

clearly because I thought, "That's not

6:03

fair. Why would any species be made or

6:07

created that knew that fact? That's

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cruel. It's better to either not know

6:13

or to not exist. But to know that that's

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what's going to happen

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is really cruel. And so, I I I vowed

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actually legitimately around the age of

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18

6:24

to get a PhD, to go to the United

6:26

States,

6:27

and develop a research lab to try and

6:30

do something about it. The preservation

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