Firefighter here. I was reflecting on a fatality I attended recently. My thoughts wandered to how a body looks like it is ‘just matter’ in a way that a living thing does not, even when sleeping. Previously I assumed this observation was just something to do with traumatic death, but this person seemed to have died peacefully and the same, ‘absence’ of something was obvious.

I’m not a religious person, but it made me wonder if there actually is something that ‘leaves’ when someone dies (beyond the obvious breathing, pulse etc).

I’m not looking for a ‘my holy book says’, kind of discussion here, but rather a reflection on the direct, lived experiences of people who see death regularly.

  • VicFic!@iusearchlinux.fyi
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    1 year ago

    It’s just a living body makes so many minute movements we don’t usually notice.

    Lungs Expanding and contracting, flow of blood (yeah you can notice that), texture of the skin, muscle position, etc.

    We have evolved to quickly differentiate between a living body and dead body. That’s why the uncanny valley exists.

    • 200ok@lemmy.world
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      We have evolved to quickly differentiate between a living body and dead body. That’s why the uncanny valley exists.

      Interesting. Any thoughts on what evolutionary advantage there is for being able to sense whether someone is alive or not?

      I seem to recall that animals can sense whether other animals are dead (or rotten/contaminated)?

      • Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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        Imagine coming upon a lot of delicious-looking mushrooms, a couple of which are in the hands and mouth of a dead person. Being faster to realize the person is dead, and to flee, than the time it takes to take and eat the mushrooms, is why you’ll live to reproduce. Same for the dead animals around that fresh-looking water hole.

      • visak@lemmy.world
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        I don’t think there’s any great mystery to this. We want to breed with the mate most likely to help us produce viable offspring. Therefore we’re sensitive to indications of health and good genes. Symmetry, smoothness of muscle movements, quality of skin & hair, indications of good blood flow, even things like regular breathing are all indications. When we see a simulation that appears not quite human it’s noticable for all those details. That detection of unhealthy can easily detect death of course. There may also have been an instinct to avoid the sick, but social pressures override that sometimes.

        The internet theory that we wanted to detect imposter humans is silly. Early hominids interbred a lot. It’s not “human” that we’re sensitive too. Just health.

      • NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I seem to recall that animals can sense whether other animals are dead (or rotten/contaminated)?

        They smell putrefaction.

        It starts immediately when life has ended. It doesn’t wait for days, or hours, out of decency or so…

        • 200ok@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          TIL the word “purification”. Thank you!

          Edit: putrification (damn autocorrect, and it’s still underlined in red).

          Edit: putrefaction (sigh)

      • norske@lemmynsfw.com
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        I love this question! I’ve seen it asked a few different ways. “What evolutionary benefit did the recoil reaction to the ‘uncanny valley’ provide?”. Thinking about the answer is kinda scary.

        I’d think one benefit of being able to quickly discern between the living and the dead would be increased survival chances during death events. If you can see that someone is dead, less likely to face a dangerous predator, natural disaster, or contagion, or at least stop investing precious time in those situations if they found themselves in them.

        • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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          I think it’s mostly for things like rabies or other contagious diseases that make people act differently. That’s mostly because frankly, I don’t get nearly as much of a reaction to an unanimated but lifelike robot/mannequin/sex doll/CGI screenshot as I do to a moving one, and I wouldn’t describe my reaction to a dead body as uncanny valley at all. That said, it was a loved one’s body and I watched them die peacefully, so that could reduce any unnerving aspects.

        • Sunstream@lemmy.world
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          I’ve heard the uncanny valley affect also being attributed to ancient ancestors encountering other early non-human-but similar competitors. The effect of, “Oh look, another Neanderthal- Wait, shit, not like me, abort abort!”. I don’t know how likely that is, but it’s an interesting thought.

      • triptrapper@lemmy.world
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        I’m not an expert on this at all, but my understanding is that “revolutionary advantage” is a misconception. Mutations don’t have a goal, and they don’t always provide an advantage. Hopefully someone smarter than me can explain better.

        • Eylrid@lemmy.world
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          Evolution throws spaghetti at the wall and anything that sticks it keeps. Usually stuff sticks because it’s useful in some way, but some stuff sticks just because of random chance.

          For example if a few individuals colonize a new location, then whatever genes those founders have will be prevalent in the new population. The classic example is the deaf people on Martha’s Vineyard. Some of the original settlers of the island were deaf and passed that down to their descendants.

          The smaller a population is the more it’s affected by random genetic drift. (It’s easier for a gene to randomly spread to an entire population if the population is small.) The larger it is the more it’s affected by natural selection.

  • roguetrick@kbin.social
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    I’ve hospiced plenty of folks right until they’ve passed and that feeling of missing comes sooner than clinical death, I’ll tell you. Once someone’s respiration rate drops low enough and their pulse and BP are undetectable, and the blood starts pooling, you’ll have a very hard time differentiating them from a body without a stethoscope and time. Clinically dead folks do tend to become a job to deal with and aren’t something that register as people, though you still feel the need to be respectful.

  • dnick@lemmy.world
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    There’s a tension and maybe responsiveness to skin and muscles that is uncanny when missing. Not sure many here could 100% recognize that very early on at the point of death, but at some point there is a wariness/unnatural look to the skin. Between that and our assumed ability to pick up on a complete lack of movement/breathing/pallor makes it reasonably certain that there is a “something” we recognize as missing, even if it’s hard to describe perfectly.

    • fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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      This is exactly what the uncanny valley is. A corpse is so close to resembling a living human without being a living human that it freaks our brains out.

    • Chickenstalker@lemmy.world
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      This is why I find tv corpses too “pretty”. Dead people have this slackness to the face that actors pretending to be dead can’t or won’t emulate. The closest to a dead person’s face among the living is a drunk sleeper.

  • mawkishdave@lemmy.world
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    There is a lot that is missing, your body has to do a lot just function. We get so used to seeing these things that when you don’t it looks just wrong. It’s the same issue that is showing up when companies try to make robots with human faces, they are not doing the normal things a person’s body does and this looks just wrong to us like something is missing. That is why it’s better to make robots that don’t look too close to humans so it don’t look so weird.

    • HeavyRust@lemm.ee
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      That is why it’s better to make robots that don’t look too close to humans so it doesn’t look so weird.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncanny_valley

      Yup, if the robot looks nothing like a real human or it resembles a human perfectly, then everything feels fine. But, in between is where it feels weird.

  • 😈MedicPig🐷BabySaver😈@lemmy.world
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    Medic 30+ years.

    Life “energy” is gone. Of course no one knows what happens to the electrical energy in a human upon death… but, it definitely leaves the body.

    This is where people’s belief system kicks in. I’m not religious and don’t believe in heaven/hell. I do personally believe in a spirit world.

    I kind of like the most remote possiblity of becoming a ghost.

    • Kalash@feddit.ch
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      Of course no one knows what happens to the electrical energy in a human upon death… but, it definitely leaves the body.

      Of course we know.

      Cells create electric potential by pumping different kind of ions in or out of the cell. That requires ATP which is produced during metabolism. If you’re dead your cells stop producing ATP and everything, including the ion pumps, stop working. So no more electricity.

      It doesn’t “leave” the body. The body stops generating it.

        • TheDoctorDonna@lemmy.world
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          Everyone is entitled to their belief. I also kinda like the idea of maybe being a ghost one day and while I don’t necessarily believe in ghosts I also don’t believe that they don’t exist either. I want to haunt an amusement park.

    • hddsx@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I mean, even in a big capacitor or battery the charge leaves eventually

    • medgremlin@lemmy.sdf.org
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      I’ve been in enough futile codes that I hope there isn’t any consciousness beyond the “lights out” point. Especially since most of the codes I participated in were in a pediatric hospital. It doesn’t matter that the brain shut off more than half an hour ago…you just have to keep doing compressions and pantomiming the code until the parents consent to calling it. I’ve seen it get dragged out an extra 45 minutes past where the physician would have called it because the mom didn’t want T.O.D. called until after the dad got to the hospital from work. It’s better with adults, but not by much. There’s only been a handful of times where caving in the sternum was actually worth the destruction involved.

    • dyslexicdainbroner@lemmy.world
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      You “personally believe in a spirit world” - that is exactly heaven/hell - religion is belief in a spiritual world…

      Semantics -

      • Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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        They didn’t say “spiritual,” they said “spirit” and “ghost.” Ghosts are not in any heaven or hell but unseen among us on Earth. Not necessarily something to worship or fear either. I think it’s a step apart from religion.

      • throwsbooks@lemmy.ca
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        Eh, I don’t think it’s fair to erase all nuance between spirituality and religion.

        Heaven/Hell are these ordered places where some sentient divine being is supposed to judge you at death and sort you into. Whether it’s Anubis or God or whatever. It places a sort of human sense of control over the natural world.

        Thinking there might be some sort of spiritual something or other, at least on my end, is thinking that well, we’ve got energy in our bodies that dissipates as we die. That energy ends up recycled in some way, first law of thermodynamics and all that. I don’t know if that energy can linger around as ghosts, or act as some new “soul” in some reincarnation cycle, or if it just gets dispersed or what, but you don’t need to believe in religion to consider it.

        Though there’s definitely some overlap.

      • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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        Religion is a set of organized, ritualized practices based on spiritual belief. You can be spiritual without being religious, and I know a bunch of active, practicing Catholics who don’t believe in anything supernatural, so I would say you can be religious without being spiritual.

  • iHUNTcriminals@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Slip one of those special positive ion bracelets on em and it comes back!

    Sorry… Let me know if I should delete this.

    Don’t mean to hurt anyone.