If we ask what might be the side-effects of immortality upon living beings as systems, then we must also ask "What will be the consequences for the systems within the environment upon which immortal life necessarily depends?.

Open any broadly focussed scientific book, or a sociological or a psychological one. You will be struck by how far our definition of 'the environment' extends and what aspects of it our existence intimately depends. The more one looks, and deduces from what one is reading about, the more sees the question "What side effects will immortality have upon the human organism?" as being fatally anthropocentric. The environment includes each one of us, and we are part of each other's environment'. We are not closed systems. We are part of a bigger system. Just because a rarely used cog or wheel in a time-piece does not betray its function does not mean it has none. You might find that out if you were to set an alarm to ring at some future time.

To consider our own immortality and its side-effects is to consider the origins and fate of the cosmos of which we are an integral part, even though we may feel alienated from it we have to accept that we are at the very least an attribute of its existence. And for us, at least, it is all that we can perceive of our own existence.

Could we be aware of our own existence floating free in a place where nothing but our own consciousness were present? Could that be immortality?

You see the concept of immortality cannot itself exist unless juxtaposed with that which is not immortal. In the same way life has no meaning, of itself, unless juxtaposed with non-life. And living with death.

Would a side effect upon our psyche of immortality be a morbid fascination with what the institutions of our immortal society would not allow us.... death? In the same way as sexually repressive cultures seem to generate a greater fascination for it in individuals denied appropriate behaviour than those that are less regimented.

The questions arising from this question could be endless. One would need to be immortal to address them all!

But, perhaps if we take a step back and look at the cosmic design, such as we can, from a macro systemic point of view, is it not itself and example of a single system able to be self-sufficient in space-time to the extent that it is that, of which we are a consumable part perhaps, which is an object lesson in what is required of a system design that is able to even approximate immortality? Or even to produce the phenomena of life and death which give the concept any meaning?

Just ask yourself... how many star-cycles of building and supernova, and of what power, were required to create the elements that give you life? And which continue to be required, almost daily, to sustain the body that you identify as 'yourself'. If you want that body to be immortal it must constantly renew its tissues, daily, weekly and monthly. But will the systems that enable the renewal continue to run for ever? Will we always have access to stocks of the elements that cycle through the internal systems of 'life and tissue death' upon which our immortal life would depend? In answering those questions sufficiently to become immortal we would also have to know how life is actually created. If we knew that we could do it, at will.

Would we then spend eternity scouring the cosmos for environments able to provide the elements and energy needed just to sustain our individual insistence upon selfishly holding on to consciousness for ever? To what purpose?

That purpose would need to be transcendent of the individuals' pre-occupation with remaining immortal, for it to have any substantive meaning. But in the context of finding purpose at the scale of time afforded by immortality that purpose must inevitably be conguent with the purpose not just of our cosmos but perhaps also with the very concept and answer to the question " Why is there not nothing?".

We do not need to be individually immortal to participate in answering that question. We just have to participate in sustaining, perpetually, what we call Humanity. And at the same time taking its present vector, the human species, into a resilient, sustainable and socially durable state of mutual help and cooperation. One in which we can promote its further evolution in adaptability such that we facilitate achieving that goal. All the time enjoying the journey of discovery it entails and of personal well-being for us all. Wherever in the cosmos we may disperse to.

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