Aging is not a mystery, a natural law, or a philosophical inevitability. It is a biological process governed by a genetic program. And genetic programs can be reprogrammed.
We reject the narrative of inevitability.
Aging persists not because it is unsolvable, but because a therapy against it has not yet been developed. ICER exists to end this.
Every day, aging causes more deaths than any war, pandemic, or catastrophe.
In this context, if aging is a reversible phenomenon, taking action becomes a moral obligation, as it implies improving the quality of human life.
Curing aging is not playing God. It is a minimal ethical response to prevent human suffering.
A biologically immortal elite is incompatible with the survival of social order.
A world where longevity is monopolized by a small fraction of the population is a world structurally destined to collapse. Extreme asymmetry in life expectancy would destabilize economies, social systems, and collective trust.
Longevity technologies must be scalable, accessible, and universal.
Prolonging health without prolonging life is a noble but insufficient goal.
Improving quality of life while accepting an unaltered biological outcome merely refines the decline.
ICER is not designed to turn back the biological clock. It is designed to turn it back.
The ultimate goal is for each individual to be able to decide how long to live.
Not by chance. But by choice.