Is There Life After Death?
CrowdScience
BBC
4.8 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 11 February 2017
⏱️ 27 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Death is one of life’s few certainties – or is it? To answer listener Pratibha’s question from New Delhi, India, presenter Marnie Chesterton asks medical and scientific experts if there is any evidence that humans could somehow come back into existence after their demise. We start at the end, by asking just what death is – and it turns out to be perhaps surprisingly complicated, especially if cold temperatures are involved. As another listener, Camilla, from Washington DC, USA points out, there are some animals that can become totally frozen over winter and return to life in spring. How does this happen, and could it have implications for the idea of deep-freezing humans – known as cryogenic preservation? Alternatively, if entire bodies might prove difficult to save, could we download our brains’ contents for later reboot instead? It sounds like science fiction, but a global network of scientists are pursuing the goal of cybernetic immortality: uploading our minds to an artificial brain in a robot avatar. Marnie heads to a brain-computer interface lab where she gets wired up to control a computer game by thinking, and discovers just how difficult it is to export thought, and how much we still have to learn about our brains. Could the way to cheat death ever be digital?
Do you have a question we can turn into a programme? Email us at crowdscience@bbc.co.uk
Presenter: Marnie Chesterton Producer: Jen Whyntie
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hey there, this is the Crowd Science Podcast from the BBC World Service. |
| 0:08.2 | I'm Marnie Chesterton. |
| 0:09.8 | This is the show that takes your questions to researchers all over the world who are |
| 0:15.2 | hunting for the answers on life, Earth and the universe. Now this week's |
| 0:20.4 | question from listener Pratiba in India starts with life, but it gets a bit bigger than that. |
| 0:26.0 | Hi Crowd Science on BBC World Service. |
| 0:32.0 | I am Pratuba and I'm calling you from New Delhi in India. |
| 0:36.0 | My question for today's program is, is there life after death? |
| 0:45.0 | Thanks Pratiba. after death. Thanks, Preteba. This is epic. |
| 0:47.0 | An epic question. |
| 0:48.0 | I mean, major world religions have been puzzling whether there's life after death for thousands of years. |
| 0:54.7 | We have half an hour. |
| 0:57.1 | Fortunately crowd science is evidence-based and so there's a whole world of fascinating philosophy |
| 1:02.0 | and spiritual musings that we can just bypass. |
| 1:05.2 | Who is studying this? How do they study this? And what have they learned? |
| 1:09.7 | But before we even go there, we need to define our terms. What is death? |
| 1:15.0 | It's often not just an event, it's more of a process. |
| 1:18.0 | Libby Salno is a doctor who cares for people who have life-limiting illnesses. |
| 1:22.0 | They're in a hospice, a medical facility. for people who have life-limiting illnesses. |
| 1:22.8 | They're in a hospice, a medical facility |
| 1:25.1 | especially equipped to support terminally ill people |
| 1:28.1 | and their families in the final stages of dying. |
... |
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