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The Longevity Paradox: Why Ancient Texts Claim People Lived 900 Years-And Why Modern Science Says That's ImpossibleMethuselah lived 969 years. Jeanne Calment lived 122 years and 164 days.One claim is recorded in sacred scripture, preserved for millennia, and accepted by billions. The other is documented by birth certificates, medical records, photographs, and verified by independent researchers.One is unverifiable. One is proven.So what happened? Were ancient humans fundamentally different, blessed with cellular machinery we've lost? Did scribes measure time differently? Were they lying? Or is there something else entirely-something that reveals not just about human longevity, but about how we distinguish truth from belief?The Longevity Paradox bridges ancient scripture and modern science to explore one of history's most enduring mysteries. Drawing on biblical scholarship, cellular biology, historical verification methods, and the fascinating life of the world's oldest verified person, this essay investigates how we know what we know-and why the gap between Methuselah's 969 years and Jeanne Calment's 122 represents something far more significant than a simple exaggeration.From calendar confusion to genealogical compression, from scribal errors to oral tradition inflation, from the cellular mechanisms that limit human lifespan to the revolution in verification that transformed how humanity determines truth-this exploration challenges you to think differently about ancient texts, modern science, and the profound difference between what we believe and what we can prove.A meditation on longevity, legend, and the power of evidence in an age of competing claims.
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