80,000 Hours Podcast

#144 Classic episode – Athena Aktipis on why cancer is a fundamental universal phenomena

Jan 9, 2026
Athena Aktipis, an associate professor and director of the Cooperation and Conflict Lab, dives into the fascinating world of cancer as a breakdown of multicellular cooperation. She explains that the real opposite of cancer is a well-functioning body working in unison. Athena discusses how rapid evolution occurs at the cellular level, the complexities of cancer defense in long-lived species, and how adaptive therapy can transform cancer treatment. She even draws parallels between cancer and human social systems, offering insights into cooperation, resilience, and thriving amidst chaos.
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INSIGHT

Cancer As Failed Cellular Cooperation

  • Cancer is best understood as a breakdown of multicellular cooperation rather than just random mutations.
  • Tumors violate proliferation, death control, resource sharing, division of labor and environment maintenance.
INSIGHT

Rapid Evolution Inside Our Bodies

  • Cells inside our bodies evolve extremely quickly because of short generation times and huge population sizes.
  • Cancer progression can explore more evolutionary change in a lifetime than humans have experienced since Homo sapiens emerged.
INSIGHT

Layered Defenses Against Cellular Cheating

  • Multicellular organisms evolved multiple layered defenses against cheating: cell-intrinsic checks, neighborhood signalling, and systemic immune surveillance.
  • Those layers evolved partly to prevent contagious hijacking of cooperative bodies.
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