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Cheating Time: Science, Sex, and Aging
 
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Cheating Time: Science, Sex, and Aging [Hardcover]

Roger G. Gosden (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

September 1996
The quest to prolong our youth has spurred numerous quack remedies and fraudulent claims. It has also inspired serious research efforts, where new technologies and crossdisciplinary investigations are starting to pry loose the secrets of the aging process. Researchers have recently announced that people may soon be able to live to be 150, or more.

In Cheating Time, acclaimed researcher Roger Gosden tells us what scientists have learned so far, particularly about the role of hormones in aging. Focusing on the link (and possible tradeoffs) between longevity and reproductive capacity, Gosden combines fascinating theories and findings with engaging anecdotes of life on the frontlines of this compelling area of scientific inquiry. He offers good reasons to be optimistic. While no one is patenting eternal youth just yet, science has made astonishing gains in understanding how we can live longer lives in better health. 12 illustrations.


Editorial Reviews

From Kirkus Reviews

The bottom line still seems to be, ``You can't fool mother nature.'' But, as this fascinating book demonstrates, there have been plenty of attempts to do just that. Indeed, Gosden's report on past and present attempts to understand and delay aging is full of delicious accounts of the benighted scientists and clever charlatans who have purveyed one rejuvenating therapy after another--from injections, monkey gland operations, and urine-drinking to today's hormone cocktails and anticipated gene therapy. There is much here for students of medical fads and fallacies. Before focusing on spurious elixirs, Gosden (Reproductive Biology/Univ. of Leeds, England) provides a feast of facts and theories that have colored (and sometimes tainted) gerontology. Here the reader will learn about the wide variation in aging across species, the association of sex and death in some, and the many theories (from high basal metabolism rates to the presence of free radicals in cells) spun to explain senescence in humans. Gosden speculates on how aging may have come about as a side effect of natural selection and evolution, possibly as a result of multipurpose (pleiotropic) genes that may confer an advantage in youth but prove detrimental in age. Interestingly, Gosden's survey of aging among a number of species seems to suggest that being relatively large, having a big brain, and possessing the ability to fly all favor longevity! While Gosden provides evidence that estrogen replacement therapy may well protect against heart disease and osteoporosis in women, and opines that testosterone may find its way into the male pharmacopeia, there are enough caveats against assuming that an easy solution to aging is at hand. The net result of this prodigious assemblage of facts and fancy is to humble the reader: There's much we still don't know about aging. It's reassuring to discover from Gosden's lively overview of research that there are some able scientists out there who are giving gerontology a good name. (12 illustrations) -- Copyright ©1996, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Review

An interesting book--a unified picture of the evolutionary, physiological, and clinical implications of aging. -- New Scientist

Gosden is an entertaining raconteur who skillfully weaves anecdotes, historical vignettes and biologic trivia into an interesting story. His conversational style balances humor and informality with accuracy and authority. -- American Scientist

Meant for the general reader, this lively and good-humored book by a well-know professor of reproductive biology at the University of Leeds contains many fascinating tidbits about aging, death, and hormones. -- New England Journal of Medicine

Professor Gosden has given us a marvelous history of the roots of biomedical gerontology that is as fun to read as it is informative....[He} also gives his own wise insights into the nature of biological aging processes. -- Caleb E. Finch, Andrus Gerontology Center, University of Southern California

[A] good, general treatment of the biology of aging. -- Choice

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 427 pages
  • Publisher: W H Freeman & Co; 1 edition (September 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0716730596
  • ISBN-13: 978-0716730590
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.4 x 1.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,264,266 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting, April 23, 2002
This book provides a non-technical overview of the role that sex hormones play in aging. The title led me to think that the book would address the entire field of aging; however, it mostly focuses on the relation of sex hormones to aging. The first five chapters actually do summarize the general subject of the science of aging, but the information contained in these chapters is covered in more detail in other books (see Steven Austads 1997 book, for instance). However, starting with chapter 6, Gosden hones his focus more specifically on the sex hormones and how they affect aging. He presents the story of the discovery of the sex hormones, starting with investigations by Brown-Séquard in 1889. In the remaining chapters, Gosden interweaves the history of sex hormones with recent discoveries about how they affect aging. The book is written for general audiences, so there are no in-text citations, although Gosden provides a chapter-by-chapter list of suggested readings at the end.
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