Cheating Death - podcast episode cover

Cheating Death

Feb 09, 202442 minEp. 565
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Episode description

In this episode, Maria Paz Gutiérrez does battle against the one absolute truth of human existence and all life… death. After getting a team of scientists to stand in for death (the grim reaper wasn’t available), we parry and thrust our way through the myriad ways that death comes for us - from falling pianos to evolution’s disinterest in longevity. In the process, we see if we can find a satisfying answer to the question “why do we have to die” and find ourselves face to face with the bitter end of everything that ever existed.

Special thanks to Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips, Steven Nadler, Beth Jarosz, Anjana Badrinarayanan, Shaon Chakrabarti, Bob Horvitz, John K. Davis, Jessica Brand, Chandan K. Sen, Cole Imperi, Carl Bergstrom, Erin Gentry -Lam, and Jared Silvia. 

This episode was made in loving memory of Dali Rodriguez.

EPISODE CREDITS - 
Reported by - Maria Paz Gutiérrez
Produced by - Maria Paz Gutiérrez
with help from - Alyssa Jeong Perry and Timmy Broderick
Original music and sound design contributed by - Maria Paz Gutiérrez and Jeremy Bloom
with mixing help from - Arianne Wack
Fact-checking by - Emily Krieger

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Transcript

Radiolab is supported by Dana Farber Cancer Institute. Thanks to Dana Farber's foundational work, protein degradation can target and destroy cancer-causing proteins right inside the cell. It's how Dana Farber is working to treat previously untreatable cancers. Learn more at DanaFarber.org slash everywhere. Radiolab is supported by Progressive. Most of you aren't just listening right now, you're driving, exercising, cleaning. What if you could also be saving money

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situations. Radiolab is supported by the John Templeton Foundation, funding research and catalyzing conversations that inspire people with awe and wonder. Learn about the researchers, making the latest discoveries in the science of well-being, complexity, forgiveness, and free will at templeton.org slash podcast. WNYC Studios is brought to you by Zbiotics. Seize the day after a night of drinks with

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Head's up. Today's show does include a couple of curse words. So anyway, here we go. Wait, wait, you're listening. Okay. Okay. Listening to radio lab. Radio from WNYC. Either hello. Hey, hey, hey. Hi, how you doing? This is Radio Lab. I'm Laptop Nasser. And today, a desperate, crazy, possibly feudal, definitely foolhardy soul-searching journey from our producer, Maria Paz Gutierrez. Okay. So Laptop, have you seen a movie called The Seven Seals?

Oh, that's the Ingmar Bergman movie from like the, I don't know, 50s. Yeah. I think I fell asleep during that movie if I'm being honest. Okay, fair. But presumably you made it through the opening. I think so. So just a jogger memory, the film begins with this scene of this night, who's just landed on a beach after spending years abroad fighting this brutal bloody war in the Middle East, the Crusades. All right.

And he looks at, he has the face of someone who's seen countless friends die, right, has himself narrowly avoided death multiple times. Right. And he's finally made it back to the shores of his homeland. He's packing up his stuff when he looks up. Beme du. And he sees this figure. Yeah, I do. Tall and pale and dressed in black from head to toe. Who is of course death and death is just like, are you ready?

And in that moment as death inches towards our night to take his life or guy or night, he stands up, he looks at death right in the eye and says, wait, that's your oblique. Buh, wait. You're just being like, fuck into something. What if, what if we play a game of chess? Chess. Yeah, a game of chess. You can end on your own to get a fake click out in your. If I win, you spare my life and if I lose, you do your thing. And death is like, you're ready. Yeah, let's do this.

So the rest of the movie is basically just this game. In between moves or night, he goes home, he sees his wife again. He's eking out the last bits of whatever life has to offer before the end. It takes it, he loses the chess game. Of course he does. And why are you telling me any of this? Because seeing this night just reminded me that I'm going to die one day. I mean, I've always, I've always thought about death.

My dad died when I was a year old and so from a young age, I always had this sense that life, it can be cut short at any moment. And my whole life, I've been trying to make sense of why it is that we're given this thing to have it just kind of like be taken away. So for me, when I saw this night, maybe it seems pointless, but I was just like, that this, it felt like this beautiful, compelling, active resistance. And it made me think, I want to do that. What? I want to challenge death.

So that is what we're going to do today here. I am challenging death to a chess match of sorts, a duel, you could say. To the death. So obviously death was not available. Too busy ending lives left and right. Okay, all right. So I called a team of people who could stand in for death or play on death's behalf. News left. Couple of ecologists. We're all going to die. An evolutionary biologist. Death is inevitable. An astrophysicist. Death is just simply part of being a human.

And an anthropologist. Everything dies. Okay, so why have we assembled all these very morbid people together? All these scientists, they know death, they know how it works. And so I just asked them. If I was to play a game of chess with death. If I could do my version of that chess match from the movie, what would death's moves be? How would death come for me? And my thought is maybe there's a move that I can make to like outwit and basically eat death. Okay, all right.

Okay, I mean, I think I know how this is going to go, but let's do it. Hell yeah. So that's first move courtesy of give me a little one two three evolutionary bio-girontologist Steven Austin. One two three six nine twelve fifteen. Acologist Roberto Salguero Gomez. Just come and rob. If you come and Roberto, I think it's my mother tell me. And anthropologist Gabriela Country days. Yeah, of course. Hi. He's basically you know when you wake up and you need your house, you might get hit by a cop.

It happens. You could be run by a bus. It goes for a bit. You could have a safe fall on your head. Or you could be killed by a cold snap by heavy storm. Any stochasticity in your life and then you're gone. And the longer you leave, the more chances there is of something awful happening to you. Because that's how life works. All these accidents, they're death's little minions. They're kind of just like waiting for us to for waiting for me to slip and fall so that I can eventually meet my maker.

I love how you slip between the us and the me. You're gonna die with me, London. So my first move in the game is like that's fine. I can be careful. I can just stay home. I can use an water purifier. Employee of food taste tester in case there's any poisons that happen to fall into your food. I can just wear a helmet. We're 10 helmets. You can wear like a styrofoam padding just like around your body at all times. Even random things like earthquakes.

Yeah. I downloaded an app that will give me two minutes to leave the building in case everything is collapsing around me. You're gonna make sure your phone never runs out of battery, I guess? Or I got a backup. Okay, you got it. Great. Of course, if my experts told me that even if I bubble wrap myself instead of my apartment, watching my earthquake app, that doesn't protect me from disease. We can get influenza. We could get diabetes. We could get asthma.

Diseases that might just kill me outright or kidney failure, cancer or heart disease. Might just set me up for death's next move, which is wear and tear. To play the long game. You deteriorate as you get older, right? Yeah. Let me give you an example. Do you own a car? I own a car. Awesome. Can I ask you how old is your car? 2015. 2015. So getting there, right? You know, with time, there'll be some things that you need to take it back to the car. Workshop for to fix because parts wear out.

For instance, the heart, it's a muscle. You know, muscles eventually wear out. One of those essential organs gives out? Your debts. But people have heart transplant. People have kidney transplant. Who cares? Yes, indeed. That's what I was saying. You are on my side. Welcome. Welcome to the dark side. Yeah, okay. Let's just do some transplants.

You could, you could in theory replace parts, but if you allow me the biological analogy, there'll be some organs within the car that once they fail, you'll be like, you know what, I'm done and that's that with this car. For instance, your brains. I mean, maybe parts of it. Okay, but if you lost your memory, would you be the same person? Uh, this all of a sudden, a lot less abstract. Right. Okay. Um, yeah, I guess. Not, I don't know. I'm not sure.

I mean, I don't want to sound too negative about this. But at some point, that starts to go even in the healthiest among us. You know, it's, I think of it like bending a tree branch. Okay, if it'll bend, it'll bend, it'll bend, then finally it breaks. And that's what happens with aging. Okay, so how are you going to buttress this tree branch? What are you going to do against aging? Well, look, today we live way longer than we have ever before.

In part, because we eat better and have modern medicine. And so I'm just going to dial in the perfect lifestyle. Like, what if I just eat an absurd amount of vegetables and fruits? Only superfoods, eat avocados and brand flakes for every meal? I'm definitely, uh, drinking plenty of water. Great, right? No smoking. You cannot smoke. So, um, not smoking is a good start, but it's still not going to stop people from dying. Yeah, no, my, my, my, my, my aging.

Everyone told me that trying to fight off aging with diet or vitamins, it's just not going to cut it. There are literally hundreds of theories about why we age. And they involve all these different things that I barely understand. But whatever, I'm going to name off. Okay. They include genomic instability, halomiric friction, epigenetic alterations, loss of proteo stasis, deregulated nutrients, sensing mitochondrial dysfunction. Okay, okay, okay. I have no idea what you're talking about.

No, no, no, there's more. Cellular senescence, stem cell, and... Okay, okay, I got it. I'm also exhausted. And it sounds like what you're saying is like, brand flakes are not going to hit any of these things. Yeah, I mean, the point is aging. It's like a house of cars, or the most intricate domino line thing. And to this day, scientists haven't been able to pin down exactly why we age. But what they do know is aging happens down at the most fundamental level of all living things.

Yes. It all boils down to what's going on inside your cells. Yeah, like literally just by existing, your cells getting damaged. In particular, I learned that the thing that's being damaged is the DNA inside your cells. Your genetic material, your essence. That little coil of molecules that tells your cells what to do. The information of you, the DNA is being damaged 10,000 or more times a day. Right now. Right now. Okay, great. So great. Like you just walk outside on any given morning.

You are exposed to sunlight, UV radiation. You know that UV starts to damage your cells. That's damaging the DNA in your skin cells. Great. Or just take a breath. Pollution. Little bits of random stuff in the air damages the DNA inside our lung cells. Exactly. Exactly. So you're under this vast assault? But that seems beatable. What? No, no, it really doesn't. It really does not sound beatable. Yes. I mean, I'll just take my helmet and my good diet and my vitamins.

And I'll move to somewhere with clean mountain air. Like some remote part of the world. I'll move to Antarctica. Okay. And then I'll find a cave to keep out of the sun. No. And then I'll just live there safe. Perfect plan. I thought so. No. Still, unfortunately, you have to keep eating to stay alive. So eating my experts tell me down at the cell level. That's really just a fire. A fire inside us? Yeah. Just like a fire. Like take a campfire.

That is just oxygen having a chemical reaction with the wood. Yeah, great. And inside each and every single one of ourselves, we're combining oxygen and carbohydrates, basically, to get energy. But just like fire has side effects, like smoke and sparks and all, our metabolism. That's damaging ourselves. And damaging the DNA, the essence of you. You know, I'm not happy about that, but it's a fact.

So the way Gabriella and Stephen laid it out for me is that the instructions for the cells over time become jankier and jankier. So our cells over time become more and more messed up, which then messes up our organs. Every part of us, it all begins to fall apart. Ultimately, that does us in. And so, well, I can't really remember where we're going with this, but yeah, you have to eat. By the way, do you have any questions?

No, no, no. I mean, just one thing that I feel like I noticed, the idea that the sun is like the source of all our energy that we need to survive, and then yet, literally damages us. And then eating is the way that we get that energy into our system. And that that actually is damaging us too while we're doing that. Like, it's like, this feels like a kind of a... Well, we're not. We're not done yet.

I mean, maybe you are, but I'm not, because as I was researching the DNA damage stuff, I discovered that there are parts of the DNA and parts of the cell that are on my team. Wait, like, how so? There are actually, like, these little enzymes that can go in and take a damaged part of your DNA and remove it and recent the size of the original part to get it back to working the way it was before all the damage. Oh, all right.

Okay. I was like, why can't the repair team just go in there and take care of all this damage from the sun and the air and whatever? Yeah, well, there's really no way that we can fix all of that damage with 100% fidelity. Like, think of a jumper, right? You've got like a knitted jumper and it's perfect. Okay. Bear with me on this one. Maybe you like, catch it on a branch, right? And like, one piece of thread becomes unraveled a little bit. But that's okay because you know how to sew.

So that's your cells repairing themselves. You've just repaired, like, an issue. Great. But then, you know, you accidentally walk through a really thorny bush and now you've got like 10 threads that have been pulled out. And actually, each of those threads is connected to more threads. And now you've got holes. And maybe they do get repaired, but just not quick enough. So by the time one hole is patched up, there's already another one.

And now you've got this kind of jumper that's a big mix of like, holes and repaired pieces. And eventually, your jumper's like not a jumper anymore. It just stops working as a jumper. So you die. And at this point, that's when I realized that our bodies, that my body is not even on my team. It's actually on desk team. Because as we get older, the body takes the energy away from the repair processes. And when you do that, of course, things don't get repaired.

Believe it or not, Steven says, in an evolutionary sense, this whole decaying, deteriorating, dying thing was the plan all along. You know, the way our bodies are built now is the consequence of human evolution in an environment that for most of that time was very, very different. Without sanitation or modern medicine, people didn't even make it into old age. No, 300,000 years ago, most people were dead by the time they were 60.

Alion would get us, there would be a drought, there would be a fire. We'd eat some food that was tainted. Good times, the glory days. Yeah, pretty much. And if that is case, then from an evolutionary standpoint, the idea is to reproduce before the inevitable accident happens to you. So Steven says, you put less energy into fixing the damage in your body, and you put it towards reproduction. And of course, if you allocate all of your resources to reproduction, you've got none left for you.

And that's why it's really important that we don't confuse like being evolutionarily successful with health. Evolution doesn't care if you are healthy. It cares if you are healthy enough to reproduce. At that point, how are you feeling, what if? Well, just like there's conflicting priorities here in the design, it's like this thing everybody and me as well, like gets pissed about like phones, it's like planned obsolescence, like they make the thing.

So that it will break so that you'll buy a new one, that's the capitalism version, but the evolution version is like, clear this thing out of the way, so we'll get the room for the new models. Yeah, so I mean, people are variable. We all have different inherits of genes. We all survive in different environments. But a hundred years is about as long as we can last, given the way our current body is built.

I mean, Maria Paz, like from the accident to the eating and the fire inside and the area breathing and the DNA damage, and like even evolution is against you here, like this feels like a checkmate to me. Fine, I mean sure, it's a checkmate for you and me, but I am here on behalf of humanity, Latif, including your children. My children? Yeah, maybe future generations don't have to put up with any of this. Maybe they don't have to die. I mean, I think my kids are fine, MPG.

Well, tell you what, we're going to take a break now. So you have some time to go talk to them and you can ask them, do you want to die? But either way, get ready. Because when we come back, we are going to play this game to the end of everything. That'll be great. Okay. Video lab is supported by Cozy Earth. When you think about summer comfort, words like breezy or soft may become to mind.

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Radio Lab at checkout. Zbiotics is backed with 100% money bag guarantee. If you're unsatisfied for any reason, they'll refund your money. No questions asked. That's zbiotics.com slash radio lab and use the code radio lab at checkout for 15% off. Lathif Radio Lab here today with Maria Paz Gutierrez on her increasingly quick exotic effort to outdo the one absolute truth of all human existence and all life, which is, of course, death. Yep, that's me.

And before the break, you were going to take the game. I don't know, into the future to see if you can win on behalf of my children and or all future generations. Right. So a quick recap might help. Remember how our death experts told us that evolution was like, I don't care if your DNA gets all damaged and you die because I just want you to have babies. Yeah, that was that was sobering. Well, those babies get their fresh start in part because the body has a kind of trump card cell.

The stem cell. A stem cell is a cell in your body that has DNA, the instructions for making and being you that has been in a sense protected from the damage of living life. It hasn't made any copies of itself. Some stem cells have the potential to become a fresh version of basically any other cell in your body. A liver cell, a skin cell, a toe cell, an eyeball cell, whatever. Love me some stem cells. How about this new at 6 a breakthrough in reversing the signs of aging,

research or same thing? So in just the last several years, scientists have started to figure out how to use stem cells. Scientists have rejuvenated the skin cells taken from a 53-year-old woman, making it into a place, cells that have been damaged or even turn regular old cells back into stem cells. Really? Yeah. To your point, I mean, it sounds like science fiction. I mean, he's taking these. Mostly in lab mice at the moment. We're restoring vision and we don't know where it's going,

but by 2050, we're going to be able to restore a lot of things that get damaged. But there are some big name labs working on this stuff for humans and they're being backed by big money. Jeff Bezos is spending billions. The Amazon found a reported made a significant investment in a company called Alto's labs. So eventually, this could be a way to beat the whole DNA cell damage thing that seems to be at the root of aging. It's going to happen. It's like asking the right brothers,

are we going to fly? Well, of course we are. It's just a question of when. But I mean, like isn't this one of those things where someone's always saying this is 20 years away and 20 years away and it's always 20 years away and then it never happens? Yeah, sure. Maybe. I mean, I don't know. But what I do know is that I'm on team maybe, maybe one day and just to make this maybe a little bit more concrete, I will say that there are animals in the natural world

already out there that do this kind of thing. Really? Yeah. You ever hear of the immortal jellyfish? No. Oh my god. I figured you would. This is a bit shocking. Okay. All right. Okay. Tell me, tell me, tell me. So the immortal jellyfish is this tiny little jellyfish. It's like the size of your pinky nail tiny. Okay. It's translucent. Has these like tiny little tentacles? Cute. It's so cute. It's originally from the Mediterranean, but it has sun spread all over. It's a bit of an invasive species.

Okay. I mean, that's whatever. Anyway, but I mean, if you're immortal, it feels like that's inevitable. Anyway, keep going. And this jellyfish can have baby jellyfish like a normal seat creature would, but also it's different because when it experiences stress, it can trigger this developmental trick. If you try to kill it, it doesn't look good. You still have all the cells in its body can

rubber back to the baby versions of themselves. And then this clump of polyps just grows back into being a new jellyfish that's genetically identical to its original self. It's funny like the image I have when you describe that is like sneaking up on like a 90-year-old and scaring them from behind and then they turn into a baby. That's pretty much a superpower. I love that. That's amazing. And it can just do that over and over as many times as it wants.

So they haven't actually studied the jellyfish for long enough to know how many times it can pull the trick. Maybe not forever. And before anyone tries to jump in and destroy my hope, I am aware that, of course, the immortal jellyfish could always just get eaten by a turtle or crushed by a rock. But still, this jellyfish does feel like a glimmer of hope. There could be some kind of genetic loophole to fight back against the DNA and the cell-wearing tear. Finger nail-sized loophole here.

Yeah. Why can't we just be the jellyfish? You want to be a more jellyfish? Cool. Awesome. I hope you get reincarnated as an immortal jellyfish. So in that way, you can live for a long time and have no recollection of that life before. This is Chris Schell. He's an Arbana college at the University of California Berkeley.

If you would like to do that, that's cool. But his point is, if you're constantly trying to revert back to the baby blavi version of yourself, it's not like you'd be able to take your memories with you. So at that point, it wouldn't even be clear in what sense you would even be you. It feels like you're just a clone or a facsimile of what you're used to be. And I don't think most human beings would opt into that life. And talking to Chris kind of flipped this whole little game I've

been playing on its head. Let's be blunt. This equation for life includes death. Including what it would even mean for me to win. Let's let's let's play this out. So starting now, everything from here on out is immortal. All of the things in your world that currently exist. Cannot die. Death is off the table, right? There are a bunch of folks cheering being like, I'm never going to die. Okay, cool. Now, think about the ways in which individual animals or people

or plants or bacteria or whatever is living dies. Take cicadas. They explode into these huge swarms and then after some singing and some sex, they die. And there on the ground are the shells they've left behind. Nutrients that can be repurposed and shifted as energy for other organisms. Which helps the forest grow. And that's just one bug. You know, there's scavengers and mushrooms and mice and people, all of them, a whole ecosystem that's either feeding off death or dying and

becoming food for something else. But in this reality, in this reality, nothing's dying anymore. That means that that energy, it's gone. So if we're not getting new energy for new things to grow, we may be at stasis, y'all. That means potentially no new babies, no new life, no change in that system. Because if everything is immortal, then why would you end up having selection for certain traits to allow for those organisms to be better suited for the environment? Why does it matter?

They're not going to die anyway. Christ doesn't know where nothing dies. Life essentially halts at a standstill. And yeah, everything is alive to exist in this new reality. But it doesn't change. It doesn't morph. It doesn't evolve. It isn't dynamic. The extravagant, extraordinary biomes that we currently have that exist on this planet, they all stop. It would be as if we were living in a photograph of the world as we know it. Just frozen in time.

Living in a world like that gets really boring really quickly to the point where why did we want to have immortality in the first place when the world that we envisioned having immortality in no longer exists? I don't think I want to win this game anymore. This sounds this sounds worse than death actually. I don't know. Really? You would you would take the frozen

photograph? Well, it's just that in the face of death, like in the face of a moment where the life of someone you love has suddenly been taken from you or even just like having to face the moment where your own life, where all the things that you've done and dreamed and skamed and built might just blink out of existence in the face of that. I might honestly consider

the comfort of being able to live in a photograph. But it's frozen. It's a plateau. You'll never everything will be so mundane and same that it'll be like we're all just going to be on cruise control forever and there won't be any highs or lows or like there won't be any like for me. I don't know that doesn't doesn't feel like life. It's the change that's really important to being alive. So this is Jan 11th. She's an astrophysicist and she happens to subscribe to your point of view.

Right now and talking to you, my thoughts are changing and I'm experiencing that and I'm watching the passage of time by a clock changing. And when I told Jenna about my game, this match that I'm playing against death, she pretty much immediately hit me with what felt like the ultimate move because according to her, eventually the entire universe probably has to die. This march towards death is a physical law of the universe. And that idea comes from the second

law of thermodynamics. So what you need to understand is that the most fundamental fact about living things is that they are orderly arrangements of stuff. We're born in some sense in an extremely ordered state. Each part of us is in its place interacting with other parts in very orderly ways. I wake up. I think things. I know who I am. That's a very ordered state. I have a lookup particular way. I don't look wildly different tomorrow. My face isn't scrambled. That's

what it means to be me to be alive. The problem, Janice, is the second law of thermodynamics. Which says that in general, over time things get more and more disorderly. On average entropy, which is a measure of disorder, will always increase. Things will always tend to get more disordered. And Janice says that this moved or disorder or decay or deterioration is just a

basic fact of the passage of time. Like you can literally see it. If you look at a flower and you watch a movie where a rotten flower lifts itself back up, becomes incredibly perfect again instead of little pieces on the ground. You know you're watching that backwards. Like the felt experience of time, that just is decay, deterioration, death. But we can make things more orderly. We can fix things that are broken like every day. New orderly little living things are born. Right. But creating

that life for that order, like it requires work. Like all living things on earth, if you trace it back, they get their energy to live and grow and make new life from the sun. Right. But if you zoom out, you'll notice that overall, this order is still increasing. Like sure, you created something orderly here on earth. But all the while, the sun is burning up as fuel. All of its light and heat and energy is spewing out across the solar system, spreading out further and further. And the

sun will eventually run out of thermonuclear fuel. And it will kind of cool and turn redder and descend and blow it out and vaporize the inner planets. Do we have a timeline for when the sun is going to die? It's a few billion years. Okay. Planning a time. But eventually, even if we found some way to travel near the speed of light to another star system and find another planet. And instead of colonies or whatever we could do, we could skip around the galaxy trying to keep going.

It doesn't matter. Those new planets, those new stars will eventually burn out too. Until there are no more galaxies, no more black holes, no more stars, no more people, no more planets, nothing ordered. Just random motions of particles, but they're also far apart that they can't even notice each other. That is a universe which cannot experience change and where there cannot be

things like thoughts and there cannot be creatures with minds that have thoughts. In some sense, the universe has gotten so cold that it's effectively, it's effectively died. Okay. That's your checkmate. That's the final checkmate. Yeah. Yeah. It feels that way. It sounds like you need a drink right now. I need so much in my life. I am empty.

Can I make a confession? Sure. I figured I'd lose. But you know how the night from the 7th seal is playing chess against death, but really he's just buying himself time so that he can go home and see his wife. Right. This whole time, I was hoping not so much that I would win, although that would have been nice. But truly, I was just hoping I'd be able to find a satisfying answer to the question of why, why do we die or like, why do we have to die?

I just lost both my grandparents. One after another. And as I was reporting out this story, I asked philosophers, musicians, friends, and even people on the street. Why do we die? That's a very common question to ask when you're in the kind of existential crisis you're having. I think we die because it's hard to exist forever because we have to. Because of our life. Yeah. I mean, what's the alternative? We get old, we get tired, and we're with our way. Everybody.

There's no way out of this. And they said all kinds of different things. I could imagine myself dying of old age like after a big family meal where everyone's gathered and I ate weight to many oysters and lobster and I drank champagne even though I'm like 98 and amidst of my sleep. My body just gave up. Time to move on to the next. No more problems, no more worries. Just peace forever. I mean, when is your time? Is your time? Yeah, everything has come to an end.

The good things, the bad things. No, you can do about that. I am surprised I'm alive today. I've never expected the bill of this one. In the middle of the death right now. But listening back, why do I think we die? That's a good question. Maybe it was a good question. They're all saying the same thing. I don't know fucking clue. Why do you ask why all the time? Just, you know, get on with it. You know, the why is the mother fucker? You wouldn't never figure it out.

Why? Because it's not meant to be figured out. You just got to come to the understanding of what life is. What is life? Life is death. Life is death. And so do you understand why? Do you kind of understand why we died? No. You know, just something that happened? Yes. I know. Really, you asked this question. No one. Full well. You weren't going to get a straight answer from anybody, right? I know you did.

And even in this conversation, it's as if we are trying to put words that help us control our own understandings and conceptions of death. And really at the end of the day, death doesn't care. That doesn't care. It doesn't care if you understand the process of death or what it is or how important it is. It's going to happen regardless. Everyone will die. Honestly, life is the anomaly.

Mm-hmm. How so? The majority of other planets in our solar system and in other solar systems across the vastness of the universe does not have life. We are the exception. We're not the rule. Death is a neutral state, right? Having things be in nothingness is the neutral state. We are surrounded by a vast ocean of blackness. So just take solace in the fact that in the very small, very, very rare percentage of life succeeding, we made it y'all.

We made the sweepstakes. Be happy that we made the sweepstakes. Might as well enjoy it while we got it. And eventually, when the universe dies, who knows? It may be reborn in a different form with different function with different rules. We just don't know. Yeah. Let's see. How can I say this?

There is another possibility for immortality. We have to remember, just like our star turned out not to be the only star, our planet turned out not to be the only planet, our galaxy turned out not to be the only galaxy. Our universe might not be the only universe. We don't understand the laws of physics well enough yet to be able to confidently state if this is a fluke. Like if a universe that includes life is a fluke. Or if it's the opposite that it's plentiful, maybe there are other universes.

They're disconnected from ours and have histories and futures that are disconnected from ours. We can't point to them in space or in time. But theoretically, if there's a multiverse, we're just one in a vast collection of other universes. And some of those universes will not be able to support life. But we can imagine that some will. So potentially, even after our universe dies. There is life out there, even if it's not us. Life is plentiful in the multiverse.

It's like life never really wins the game against death, but death never really wins either. Yeah. This episode was reported by Maria Paz Gutierez and produced by Maria Paz with help from Alyssa Junge. Maria Paz with help from Alyssa Junge Perry and Timmy Broderick. Sound and music from, once again, Maria Paz Gutierez as well as Jeremy Bloom, mixing help from Arianne Wack.

Special thanks to Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips, Steven Nadler, Beth Jarrez, Anjena Budrina Ryanan, Shawn Chacrabarty, Bob Horvitz, John K. Davis, Jessica Brand, Chundan K. Sen, Cole Impiri, Carl Bergstrom, Aaron Gentry Lamb, and Jared Sylvia. This episode was made in loving memory of Dali Rodriguez. This is Radio Lab on Lothop Nasser. Thanks for listening. Hi, I'm Hazel, and I'm from Silver Sprite. Radio Lab was created by Chad Abelmatt, and is edited by Thorne Wheeler.

Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser are co-hosts. Dylan Geese is our director of Sound and Sound. Our staff includes Simon Adler, Jeremy Bloom, Becca Brestler, and Keti Foster Geese W. Harry Fortuna, David Gable, Maria Paz Gutierez, Sindhu Nynasam Badan, Matt Kielte, Annie McEwan, Alex Niesen, Sara Kari, Sarah Sandbach, Aryan Wap, Pat Walters, and Molly Webster. Our fact-truckers are Diane Kelly and Mouli Krueger in Natalie Middleton. Thank you.

Hi, I'm Ram from India. Leadership support for Radio Lab. Science programming is provided by the Gordon and Bitty Mode Foundation. Science Sandbach is Simon Foundation Initiative and the John Templeton Foundation. Foundation support for Radio Lab was provided by the Alfred P Sloan Foundation. Radio Lab is supported by the John Templeton Foundation, funding research and catalyzing conversations that inspire people with awe and wonder.

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