Flutterby™! : When do we die?

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When do we die?

2008-10-09 14:28:00.106121+02 by Dan Lyke 4 comments

The Economist: Oh death, when is thy sting?. In 1968 a committee at the Harvard Medical School defined death by cessation of activity in the brain. This is a quick little article about why we might want to re-think that.

[ related topics: Biology ]

comments in descending chronological order (reverse):

#Comment Re: made: 2008-10-09 20:26:20.788641+02 by: markd

maybe we can adapt the scientologist E-Meter.

#Comment Re: made: 2008-10-09 18:48:47.044388+02 by: JT

Well, in a friend's (catholic) perception of life, it begins at conception. A brain isn't formed for quite some time, so therefore in some people's eyes, a brain has nothing to do with life. Maybe ,for the catholics, we should develop a soul detector, when a soul leaves the body, that person can be considered dead. Of course, this doesn't leave much leeway for the soulless politicians and lawyers ever-present in our modern society...

#Comment Re: made: 2008-10-09 15:36:39.901952+02 by: Dan Lyke [edit history]

I think it's appropriate, medical technology is increasing to the point where death is going to have to become an economic decision rather than a biological one. If we can pump oxygenated blood to a brain indefinitely, it's just a matter of how many pumps we can afford to keep running...

(Of course, if we can pump oxygenated blood to a brain indefinitely, why aren't we helping out our politicians by doing so for those in office...)

#Comment Re: made: 2008-10-09 14:44:40.389148+02 by: Larry Burton

Interesting that this article is in The Economist seeing as how much of the financial sector seems to have been brain dead for the past ten years.

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