Abstract
Author Contributions
Copyright© 2021
Lamothe Nery, et al.
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Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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Introduction
Second-hand smoking has been a battle in almost every field. Typically, a nonsmoker who is an alcohol consumer, complains of secondhand smoke, without even considering second-hand risk health tragedies and human rights violations due to ethanol consumption. We expose here the concept, mainly unexplored, of tragic adverse health effects and human rights violations to third parties due to alcohol consumption by others; as well as disability due to chemical transient prefrontal lobotomy with alcohol consumption. Alcohol has been an integrated part of the human diet for centuries, in part, due to the fact that alcoholic beverages have constituted a safe means of hydration whenever pure clear water was scarce Old patients could be part of the ethanol consumers and/or secondhand victims. However, before deciding to approach the geriatrical problems, we propose the allegorical pedagogical model, based on Scott, Ellison, and Sinclair, as published in Nature Aging, in July 2021. We divide the theoretical approach with four elemental alternatives Life extension (the Struldbrugg case). In Jonathan Swift’s 1726 novel Gulliver’s Travels, the struldbrugg are humans who are born seemingly normal. The Struldbruggs, are immortal but age normally, live in continuously worsening health. It takes us to the philosophical alternative of: “to live or to last” To Diminish morbidity (the Dorian Gray case). Accordingly The Picture of Dorian Gray is aphilosophical novel by Oscar Wilde. Dorian Gray possesses a portrait of himself and while the picture ages, Dorian Gray does not, keeping his health and appearance until death To Slow aging (the Peter Pan case), In the extreme case, where aging is not just slowed but eliminated, mortality and health become independent of age and the individual is ‘forever young’. This refers to the ‘Peter Pan’ case, after the play and novel about a boy who never grows old. This corresponds to the Hypocaloric diet claim that slows aging Reversing aging biological damage is repaired rather than slowed. This is analogous to the Theseus Boat and the regeneration of salamanders and lizards and transplants from donors. Obviously, this is the future of organoids and the engineering of pluripotent cell