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Using Generative Art to Convey Past and Future Climate Transitions
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Climate geroscience: the case for 'wisdom-inquiry' science.

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Climate science and geroscience must collaborate to address human and planetary health in an aging, warming world. This interdisciplinary approach, termed

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Area of Science:

  • Interdisciplinary science
  • Climate change impacts
  • Aging biology

Background:

  • Growing global temperatures pose risks to both human and planetary health.
  • The biology of aging (geroscience) and climate science are critical fields for future well-being.
  • Current scientific approaches may inadvertently create intergenerational conflict and treat health goals as separate.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the necessity and methods for cross-disciplinary collaboration between climate science and geroscience.
  • To identify epistemic constraints hindering integrated approaches to human and planetary health.
  • To propose a framework for 'climate geroscience' that fosters collaboration.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of scientific communication and framing strategies.
  • Identification of 'epistemic constraints' in scientific practice.
  • Conceptual development of 'wisdom-oriented' science applied to climate and aging.

Main Results:

  • Identified communicative frames that create intergenerational conflict instead of solidarity.
  • Recognized the tendency to view human and planetary health as independent rather than interdependent.
  • Proposed 'climate geroscience' as a novel interdisciplinary field.

Conclusions:

  • Cross-disciplinary collaboration between climate science and geroscience is essential for a sustainable future.
  • Reframing scientific goals and practices can foster solidarity and promote interdependent health outcomes.
  • Researchers should actively integrate perspectives from both fields in all scientific endeavors.