It is an intriguing thought experiment - but I am not sure that you can just proportionately scale up a human being, irrespective of gravity or planetary size.
You would run into problems with the inverse-square law for a start. And then there would be a whole host of biomechanical problems to resolve.Scaled up humans would have to have significantly higher blood pressure to pump the increased volume of blood around a much larger circulatory system, not to mention the effort the issues of pumping blood back up the legs, which would take much greater effort, even if the gravity remained the same.
We wouid have to evolve a different form of haemoglobin, one with a greater affinity for O2, in order to ensure that sufficient O2 remained in circulation long enough to enrich the tissues at the extremities.
For similar reasons, the size of the lungs would need to be proportionately larger to allow for greater O2 exchange. The heart would have to pump harder and slower. More heat would be generated, so heat dissipation systems would need to be more efficient.
Greater stress on the bones and joints would mean that the bones would need to be disproportionately thicker, in order to support the weight and the mechanical stresses.
Virtually a whole new human,really - not just proportionately larger.
The tallest humans, ignoring the rather wild biblical claims, have been around 9 feer -those who suffer from acromegalic gigantism ; And a common complaint in those individuals is burst blood vessels and varicose ulcers through the high blood pressure, and this process, leading to an infection of the ulcer, can be fatal.....