<p>"... the main thesis in Coping with Methuselah is that future developments in molecular and supramolecular biomedicine will really enable us to defy the evolutionary constraints of body design and biochemistry, and that life-spans of hundreds and thousands of years will be attainable by most, if not all.... All seven chapters of the book are excellent examples of scholarly academic writing.... Coping with Methuselah is a challenge that you may like to take up, and if you succeed, you will surely be much wiser and better informed." Suresh I.S. Rattan, University of Aarhus, Denmark, <i>Embo Reports</i>, 6/1/2004</p>|<p>"[A] careful, academic overview of a number of related issues surrounding people living significantly longer." Hugh Long, <i>Inquiry - Excellus Health Plan</i>, 1/1/2004</p>|<p>"This book is a useful collection of evidence, for those not already familiar with the issues." Marcus Longley, University of Glamorgan, <i>Social Policy</i>, 10/15/2004</p>|<p>"COPING WITH METHUSELAH is an important book about the future of the human lifespan, the possibility of a revolution in longevity... and the social and economic consequences that would result from living much longer lives than we do today." Leonid Gavrilov, Ph.D., National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago, <i>The New England Journal of Medicine</i>, 12/16/2004</p>|<p>"This book is both stimulating and reassuring by its brilliant display of scholarship and thoughtful counterpoint on a compelling subject that will shape the future for generations to come." Anthony J. Lechich, MD, Cardinal Cooke Health Care Center, New York, <i>Care Management Journals</i></p>