3 Reasons Why “Ending Suffering” Should Be the #1 Transhumanist Priority – Article by Hank Pellissier
Hank Pellissier
Editorâs Note: The U.S. Transhumanist Party / Transhuman Party features this proposal by our member Hank Pellissier for a new website called Paradise2040, which will focus on the abolition of involuntary suffering and incremental ways of getting there within the next 21 years. This is an endeavor supported by Article IV of the Transhumanist Bill of Rights, Version 3.0. It is also a current within transhumanist thinking that, as Mr. Pellissier points out, could bring additional support to the movement. Different transhumanists will have different views as to what the most important aims of transhumanism should be. As an organization that embraces pluralism and diversity of thought, the U.S. Transhumanist Party / Transhuman Party would encourage any of our members who agree with the direction Mr. Pellissier proposes to collaborate with him on the creation of the Paradise2040 website.
~ Gennady Stolyarov II, Chairman, United States Transhumanist Party / Transhuman Party, March 25, 2019
A survey I conducted in 2010 of 818 transhumanists identified âbrain enhancementâ as the #1 priority, with âmaximizingâ health and life extension as #2 and #3. Â The top three âvaluesâ of the U.S. Transhumanist Party (the Core Ideals) are #1) Life Extension, #2) âa cultural, societal, and political atmosphere informed and animated by reason, science, and secular valuesâ, and #3) âto reduce and eliminate existential risks.â
I believe all these ambitions are important, but over-rated and mis-placed. My opinion, after ten years as a transhumanist, is this: the #1 goal of H+ should be the Abolition of Suffering. My view is advocated by multiple transhumanists, notably David Pearce, but⌠weâre in the minority.
Hereâs three reasons why Abolition of Suffering deserves top consideration:
#1: Eternal Pain = Torture. It is shallow-thinking to not recognize super-longevity in a state of pain as undesirable; in fact, it is masochistic/sadistic. Ask yourself this: would you rather live 60 years in a state of bliss, joy, love, ecstasy, or at least moderate happiness, than exist for 120 years in pain, fear, anguish, despair, and horror? Quality of life is far more important than quantity, IMO.
I have three friends who suffer from depression. When I talk about âending deathâ, they sigh forlornly and admit that they are âready to dieâ, âsick to death of themselvesâ, and âhave been punished by life long enough.â These people donât want or need additional decades of misery, they need âhappy daysâ as soon as possible. Hundreds of millions of humans live with chronic physical, mental, and emotional pain, and even the rest of us would appreciate higher doses of joy.
#2: Marketing âEnding Painâ sells better than âEnding Death.â When I tell acquaintances Iâm a transhumanist and our #1 goal is elimination of death, they usually roll their eyes and dismiss me as a death-phobic weirdo. Sure, we can castigate these critics with the âDeathistâ slur, but it is a superior strategy, I believe, to find common ground. Informing folks that the primary ambition of transhumanists is to elevate human happiness advertises us as charity-givers of cheerfulness, humanitarians of happiness, altruists of euphoria. Instead of billing ourselves as Slayers of the horrible Grim Reaper, we can offer ecstasy, contentment, increased friendship networks, psychedelic discoveries, purpose in life, etc. Recruitment will skyrocket!
#3: âAbolition of Sufferingâ is more Inclusive. Teenagers usually arenât nervous about death, but theyâre anxious about depression, body shame, bullying, and disempowerment, and donât like their elders groaning and moaning in anguish. Religionists believe death opens a gate to heaven, but they experience the same pain from auto accidents, arthritis, and Alzheimerâs as atheists do, and theyâre on board with extinguishing this.
My activist plan to end suffering is to launch a website called Paradise2040 â to promote cessation of suffering in the next 21 years. Â The website will be âpracticalâ but fun and imaginative; it will list dozens of pains from hangnails to herpes to homelessness with links to research-supported cures and potential futurist remedies.
If anyone wants to help – contact hankpellissier@yahoo.com.