Hamilton connects the whole series to a civilizational goal: demand for curing aging, fueled by leaving routine ruts and wanting a life worth extending, and supply of breakthroughs, blocked in his analysis by initiatory force and regulation. The talk names cure2aging.com, the billionaire longevity spend, the DuPont/FDA story, and the Prime Law as a 28th Amendment.
This page follows the WordPress migration and the embedded lesson (watch on YouTube; id vnLK2BAN3Lw). If a transcript differs, treat the video and essay as the site copy. Prior lesson: Soaring productivity. External site from the talk: cure2aging.com.
Quick answer
How does the Neothink Mentality connect to curing aging?
The Neothink Mentality creates the massive demand needed to cure aging. When people shift from stagnant routine ruts toward becoming value creators, they rediscover desire for life: like the “child of the past” who saw endless possibilities. That demand is said to pull money into research, while the Prime Law horizon addresses regulatory obstacles on the supply side.
Key takeaways
The Neothink Mentality creates massive demand for curing aging by reigniting people’s desire to live.
Self-made billionaires pour fortunes into longevity because they live as value creators in harmony with human essence.
Regulatory obstacles rooted in initiatory force block the supply of medical breakthroughs.
The Prime Law as a 28th Amendment is framed as removing those obstacles so progress can meet demand.
What is the Neothink Mentality, and how does it affect longevity?
The Neothink Mentality is the move from specialized “following mode” to integrated “self-leader” thinking. In this lesson, that shift reignites creative drive and happiness: conditions Hamilton ties to wanting more life and to funding longevity science. Most people are described as trapped in specialized ruts; the series, starting with Rise from the routine rut, is built to break that cycle.
The billionaire pattern
Self-made billionaires have spent millions to hundreds of millions of dollars toward curing aging. In the talk, they want to live because they are living the life they were meant to live: creating, in harmony with the essence of being human, happy, in love with life. Every self-made “major winner” had to leap beyond following mode; Hamilton states that all self-made billionaires live in the Neothink Mentality.
The child of the past
Remember childhood: endless possibilities, wonder, enthusiasm for what was ahead. In specialized jobs and routine ruts, that child is described as buried under “falling leaves of resignation.” The Neothink Mentality is framed as bringing that inner life back.
How do we create the massive demand needed to cure aging?
Curing aging is framed as a cause-and-effect, demand-and-supply dynamic. First there must be massive demand so money pours into R&D and scientists and companies meet it. Through integrated thinking, Hamilton says he has identified a path: spread the mentality, grow desire for life, then fund the science. He put up cure2aging.com for the billionaire club with one version of that path.
The path to curing aging
1
Spread the Neothink Mentality
→
2
Create massive demand for life
→
3
Money flows into R&D
→
4
Cure aging
Routine ruts
Why routine ruts kill demand
People stuck doing the same thing every day get bored with life and do not want to live forever in the same way. The Neothink Mentality is said to lift not only work and wealth but happiness, joy, and the desire to live, restoring the child of the past. That is why most of the talks focus on pulling you out of stagnation: breaking specialized thinking, following mode, and top-down orders, and learning to integrate your own path, so you can become a value creator (only humans create values in this framework) and feel you do not want to die.
What are the regulatory obstacles blocking longevity progress?
Even with demand, supply can stay blocked: political structures and regulations based on initiatory force suppress progress and make breakthrough research cost-prohibitive. The “power class” (politicians, bureaucrats, media, legal matrix) is described as pushing compliance: comply or face criminal penalties. That blocks everyone, billionaires included, from freely supplying what demand asks for.
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Real example
The DuPont cancer program
Hamilton’s father worked with DuPont in the 1970s on a very promising approach to cancer. FDA requirements made the project too cost-prohibitive and it was killed: not because science had nowhere to go, but because regulatory burden ended viability.
Compliance
The comply-or-criminal structure
Laws and regulations rooted in initiatory force mean: comply or become a criminal. Comply or go to prison. Until that structure changes, Hamilton argues we will not have freedom to supply demand as it grows, except perhaps by rare paths like a new sovereign country, which he mentions as difficult.
Why curing aging requires both demand and supply
Creating demand
Spread the Neothink Mentality globally
Help people escape routine ruts
Reignite the desire to live
Bring back the child of the past
Transform followers into value creators
Build unstoppable market demand
Freeing supply
Remove initiatory force from government
Pass the Prime Law (28th Amendment)
Eliminate cost-prohibitive regulations
Free scientists and biomedical companies
Enable rapid progress in research
Let supply meet growing demand
How does the Prime Law enable the cure for aging?
The Prime Law is presented as removing initiatory force, especially from government, so that “pure freedom” can unblock progress. Hamilton contrasts adding positive rights (the Bill of Rights) with removing the negative (initiatory force); he argues the founders were close but “one integration short.” With the Prime Law as a 28th Amendment, medical and scientific supply could meet demand without the same regulatory choke points. See also Prime Law on this site.
Alternative path
The billionaire option
The appeal to ultra-wealthy audiences: they have power, money, and influence to possibly establish a sovereign new country without a government using initiatory force to suppress progress.
How can I achieve the “life worth living forever”?
The lesson pairs mental evolution with aggressive longevity practices: become an integrated self-leader while staying healthy long enough for science to close the gap. Hamilton says his number-one goal is to cure aging and death; those close to him work on longevity to “hold us over” until biological solutions land. The channel will bring in health content for that reason.
Mental evolution
In one year, become an integrator rather than a follower: rise in business, wealth, and happiness through the Neothink Mentality and join the demand for more life.
Longevity health
Be conscious about health; work aggressively on longevity to bridge the gap until biological immortality becomes feasible.
Analogy
The train on a circular track
Imagine specialized thinking as a train on a circular track: same path every day until the engine wears out. The Neothink Mentality is like a switch that lets the train leave the circle toward an open horizon. Longevity practices upgrade the engine so you can keep going until the track ahead includes real cures.
What is the ultimate goal of these talks?
The stated ultimate goal is to cure aging and death. That means (1) growing demand by moving people out of stagnation into the Neothink Mentality, and (2) dismantling illusions and regulations that block supply. Mission elements from the talk include:
Pull people out of specialized thinking and routine ruts
Break into integrated thinking: the Neothink Mentality
Rise in business, success, and the life you were meant to live
Move from follower toward integrator and self-leader
Address illusions that suppress progress
Encourage the Prime Law as the 28th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
In one year, Hamilton wants you to be someone different: not a follower, but an integrator and self-leader. That is “number one”; periodic talks on illusions are “number two,” alongside building demand and freeing supply until aging is cured.
What is the core message about curing aging?
Curing aging is framed through demand and supply. The Neothink Mentality grows demand by turning stagnant followers into joyful value creators who want more life. The Prime Law story frees supply by removing obstacles from initiatory force. Together, they aim at biological immortality as the horizon: not fantasy to Hamilton, given billionaire investment and a clear political–economic path.
Create demand by spreading the Neothink Mentality, helping people want to live deeply, not only longer on paper.
Free supply by removing initiatory force through the Prime Law (and related political paths Hamilton discusses).
Bridge the gap with aggressive longevity practices until biological solutions arrive.
The goal is to end stagnation of spirit and, ultimately, to cure aging and death. Everyone deserves the life they were meant to live: the life worth living forever.
The path to biological immortality
From routine rut to the life worth living forever
1
Break free from following mode
Recognize specialized thinking: routine tasks and orders from above. That awareness begins the escape from the stagnation trap.
2
Embrace the Neothink Mentality
Integrate your own path and purpose forward. Become a value creator. That aligns you with essence as Hamilton describes it.
3
Rediscover the desire to live
As the “child of the past” returns, enthusiasm and joy return: you naturally want more life.
4
Pursue aggressive longevity
Stay conscious about health and longevity practices to bridge the gap until science delivers cures.
5
Join the movement
Share the mentality with family and friends; support removing regulatory obstacles so demand can be supplied.
Frequently asked questions
Why would I want to live forever if I’m unhappy now?
The talk’s premise is that unhappiness in a rut suppresses demand for longevity. The Neothink Mentality is framed as changing the inner life first, toward creation and joy, so wanting more life becomes natural.
How do regulations actually block longevity research?
The essay cites cost, delay, and compliance burden making promising lines of research economically unviable. The DuPont cancer example illustrates FDA friction killing a 1970s program: not science failing in isolation, but the project becoming too expensive to continue.
What is cure2aging.com?
Hamilton describes it as a site oriented toward the billionaire club, laying out paths, obstacles, and options including sovereign-territory thinking. It complements these public talks.
How does the Prime Law connect to curing aging?
In this arc, the Prime Law removes initiatory force from government, which is said to clear regulatory obstacles so supply can meet demand. That is the political side of the same demand–supply frame.
What can I do now while waiting for the cure?
Develop the Neothink Mentality and longevity habits in parallel: become a value creator who loves life, and stay healthy long enough to benefit from breakthroughs as they arrive.
Continue the journey
Subscribe on YouTube for the rest of the series: building demand for life and addressing the illusions that block progress.