Skip Navigation Link

Northern Wyoming Mental Health Center Inc.

Looking for Help?
Click Here for the Office Location Nearest You

Review of "Healthy Aging"

By Andrew Weil
Random House Audio, 2005
Review by Christian Perring, Ph.D. on Mar 21st 2006
Healthy Aging

Andrew Weil is such a well-known personality these days that it is easy to take his work for granted.  It may be difficult to get excited about another book from him, giving more of the same advice that he has been given for decades.  It is certainly true that Healthy Aging overlaps in its discussion of diet, dietary supplements, and exercise with his earlier books.  However, Weil's discussion of the science of aging, the many purported "anti-aging" products that are available, and the value of aging is mostly new and interesting.  He argues that we should accept aging and let ourselves age gracefully, maintaining a high quality of life, rather than searching for the fountain of youth.  Weil argues that while there are obvious problems that come with age, there are also advantages and we should not forget the value of old people and objects. 

Healthy Aging is divided into two main parts.  The first part examines the science and philosophy of aging, while the second part examines more practical issues about what to do in order to stay healthy.  It is the first part of the book that is the more original, although it can be useful to hear Weil's practical advice about food, drugs and supplements even if one has heard it previously.  In his discussion of the science of aging, Weil sets out some of the main scientific theories of aging and explains the difficulties in assessing their plausibility.  He uses simple language to help the reader comprehend quite complex issues, and this part of the book is a triumph of popular human biology.  He moves on to a more personal and free-ranging examination of anthropological, sociological, and cultural issues to do with aging.  Weil emphasizes the ways in which age brings wisdom and merits respect, and in some rather idiosyncratic reflections, he highlights the reverence we attach to some old wines and whiskeys, violins, trees, and people.  While he is surely right that the Western obsession with youthfulness is unmerited and unfortunate, he does not make a strong case that cultures that demand high respect of the aged are have an insight that is missing in the West.  In particular, he makes no particular case that age brings wisdom.  Personally, I'm not inclined to think that people get wiser as they age, once they have reached adulthood; the words and actions of older people seem no better considered than those of younger adults.  I would have liked more discussion of the concept of wisdom.  Nevertheless, Weil's survey of aging is still more thoughtful than most of the opinions that one normally sees on the topic. 

Weil reads the audiobook himself.  He is a good reader of his own words, sounding natural and mostly spontaneous, although his voice is occasionally sleep-inducing.  At various points, Weil reads out website addresses or gives technical information, and at those points, it would generally be easier to the print version of the book to follow up on the information he gives.  There is very little extra printed information with the box of the audiobook. 

So on the whole Healthy Aging is a worthwhile book that should be interest to people concerned about the quality of their lives as they get older.

 

 

Metapsychology Reviews of Andrew Weil's books:

 

 

 

© 2006 Christian Perring. All rights reserved.

 

Christian Perring, Ph.D., is Academic Chair of the Arts & Humanities Division and Chair of the Philosophy Department at Dowling College, Long Island. He is also editor of Metapsychology Online Review.  His main research is on philosophical issues in medicine, psychiatry and psychology.

Share This

Resources