Theoretical Basis for
Anti-Aging Treatments
Xinyan Zhang
7 Feb 2004
Anti-aging is a very special activity that may only be found from human
beings. The activities of anti-aging may be divided into two general groups,
one of which is producing feelings of younger and another is aimed to increase life-span.
Death is an
inevitable end of every individual human life and, however, none of us has
lived up to our life’s full potential. One of the obstacles in the
way to the fullest living is that we still know nothing about the essence of aging and much still less about how
to influence its
processes.
According to the World Health Network(1), though aging
processes can be divided into three general categories -- genetic, biochemical,
and physiological, the theories of aging fall into two
categories.
The
"programmed" theories hold that aging follows a biological timetable,
perhaps a continuation of the one that regulates childhood growth and
development. The damage or error theories emphasize environmental assaults to
our systems that gradually cause things to go wrong.
Here is a brief
and very simplified rundown of the major theories.
Programmed
Theories
Error
Theories
The programmed
theories and the error theories mentioned above have one thing in common that
they all take the aging process as a one-way change, which is to say that we may
only become older and older but never younger.
However, according to my
theory of life (2) (3), living human beings are biological creatures
dominated by autumn life, and all autumn lives exist as courses composed
of both reciprocating
changes and one-way change. The reciprocating changes determine that all organisms of
autumn life repeatedly become older and younger in turn during the courses of
their existence. And the one-way change determines that all organisms of autumn
life will eventually become older and older.
Integrated with the
one-way change, the reciprocating changes are virtually dissymmetric between
its two phases of opposite changes. The changes along the direction of the
one-way change will run longer than the changes against it, which may be called
as long phase and short phase. We will be able to slow
the one-way changes down if we can make the two opposite phases of the
reciprocating changes more symmetrical, either by shortening the long phase or
lengthening the short phase. Therefore, anything that has either a positive
influence on the changes of the short phase or a negative influence on the long
phase might in all probability possess an anti-aging potentiality.
There are many
treatments that may influence the symmetry of the biological reciprocating
changes of our bodies, such as nutrition, sleeping, sport, hormone therapy,
acupunctures and so on. However, they may not only make us younger but also
older if they act on wrong phase. The key point of any successful anti-aging treatment
is only to bring a right influence on the right phase.
Reference:
1. Theories on Aging, http://www.worldhealth.net/p/90,4863.html From The World Health Network, www.worldhealth.net, official website of the American
Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine (A
2. Xinyan Zhang: The Essence of Life, http://www.geocities.com/reexz/life.html
3. Xinyan
Zhang: Philosophy of the Reex, http:// www.geocities.com/reexz/en.doc