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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,160 --> 00:00:08,680 A fatal plague that ravaged the Byzantine Empire. 2 00:00:09,240 --> 00:00:13,160 A bizarre affliction of biblical proportions. 3 00:00:14,240 --> 00:00:21,060 And a disturbing disorder where people dance themselves to death. 4 00:00:22,900 --> 00:00:23,900 Plague. 5 00:00:25,340 --> 00:00:26,340 Smallpox. 6 00:00:27,620 --> 00:00:30,000 Tuberculosis. And influenza. 7 00:00:30,260 --> 00:00:34,140 These are only a few of the contagious diseases that have killed billions of 8 00:00:34,140 --> 00:00:40,760 people. over the course of human history. Just saying their names 9 00:00:40,760 --> 00:00:42,600 misery and pain. 10 00:00:42,920 --> 00:00:47,740 And the impact of these deadly infections has changed the world more 11 00:00:47,740 --> 00:00:48,740 times. 12 00:00:49,200 --> 00:00:55,420 How do lethal maladies begin and then start to silently spread? 13 00:00:55,760 --> 00:01:00,880 What happens when a medical epidemic turns into mental hysteria? And while 14 00:01:00,880 --> 00:01:01,880 antibiotics 15 00:01:02,360 --> 00:01:06,940 And vaccines can help keep diseases like smallpox and plague under control. 16 00:01:07,680 --> 00:01:14,080 How close are we to catching the next unstoppable 17 00:01:14,080 --> 00:01:15,080 outbreak? 18 00:01:16,300 --> 00:01:18,360 Well, that is what we'll try and find out. 19 00:01:33,650 --> 00:01:34,930 January 2020. 20 00:01:35,610 --> 00:01:41,150 News reports surfaced that a new, highly contagious disease first discovered in 21 00:01:41,150 --> 00:01:44,810 Wuhan, China, is spreading like wildfire. 22 00:01:45,390 --> 00:01:51,230 In a matter of weeks, the lethal virus, known as coronavirus, or COVID -19, 23 00:01:51,290 --> 00:01:52,290 sweeps the globe. 24 00:01:52,710 --> 00:01:57,330 On March 11th, as the number of infections and deaths continue to climb, 25 00:01:59,180 --> 00:02:03,820 The World Health Organization declares that the outbreak has become a worldwide 26 00:02:03,820 --> 00:02:04,820 pandemic. 27 00:02:06,460 --> 00:02:11,740 What separates clinically coronavirus from other common viruses, such as 28 00:02:11,740 --> 00:02:15,420 influenza, is that it knows how to hide itself. 29 00:02:16,740 --> 00:02:23,400 It has what we call a period where you can be asymptomatic. That means without 30 00:02:23,400 --> 00:02:27,400 symptoms. That's a chance to pass that virus to other people. 31 00:02:28,000 --> 00:02:30,600 keeping the disease going on and spreading. 32 00:02:30,900 --> 00:02:35,240 Most of the time, when you wait for these symptoms, you've already missed 33 00:02:36,200 --> 00:02:41,700 According to experts, the origins of many viruses remain shrouded in mystery. 34 00:02:43,060 --> 00:02:48,220 It's so difficult to determine the origin of viruses because when you want 35 00:02:48,220 --> 00:02:53,640 study that virus, you have to separate what is the natural history of that 36 00:02:54,860 --> 00:03:00,560 So one of the important things that epidemiologists are looking at right now 37 00:03:00,560 --> 00:03:01,900 what did we learn from the past? 38 00:03:02,340 --> 00:03:05,720 What should we be looking at? Where should we be looking? 39 00:03:07,780 --> 00:03:14,500 Some of the earliest records of plagues are found in ancient India, 40 00:03:14,680 --> 00:03:21,200 China, the Middle East, and they talk about plagues occurring before the very 41 00:03:21,200 --> 00:03:22,200 first civilization. 42 00:03:22,920 --> 00:03:24,900 around 3200 BC. 43 00:03:25,960 --> 00:03:30,160 Throughout human history, there have been accounts of devastating afflictions 44 00:03:30,160 --> 00:03:33,400 that defied understanding at the time they happened. 45 00:03:34,460 --> 00:03:40,020 But perhaps a closer examination of these plagues will provide some lessons 46 00:03:40,020 --> 00:03:43,520 about infectious diseases and how they begin. 47 00:03:47,680 --> 00:03:51,840 The Byzantine Empire, 541 AD. 48 00:03:52,840 --> 00:03:55,860 Emperor Justinian sits atop a powerful throne. 49 00:03:56,180 --> 00:04:02,360 But lurking in the shadows is a hidden enemy about to consume his kingdom. 50 00:04:03,980 --> 00:04:05,360 A plague. 51 00:04:05,680 --> 00:04:09,600 Started by a bacteria. Comes out of the east. 52 00:04:09,960 --> 00:04:16,660 And infects. This simple bacteria ended up killing. 53 00:04:17,209 --> 00:04:22,089 almost one half the population of the entire old empire. 54 00:04:22,370 --> 00:04:28,290 With that type of death toll, the economic and social 55 00:04:28,290 --> 00:04:30,910 ramifications were catastrophic. 56 00:04:31,790 --> 00:04:37,110 Everything that Justinian had tried was now collapsing. 57 00:04:37,330 --> 00:04:42,550 His military collapsed, his economy collapsed, and everything that he tried 58 00:04:42,550 --> 00:04:44,930 do was of no avail. 59 00:04:47,150 --> 00:04:52,910 Justinian plague is caused by a bacterium, Yersinia pestis. It can 60 00:04:52,910 --> 00:04:56,510 humans directly from saliva or coffee. 61 00:04:56,790 --> 00:05:00,930 It usually manifests itself in terms of swelling of the nymph nodes. The skin 62 00:05:00,930 --> 00:05:02,550 turns black and basically dies. 63 00:05:02,810 --> 00:05:06,050 And then there's a progression of fever and chills and eventual death. 64 00:05:07,190 --> 00:05:14,150 As Justinian's empire was collapsing and breaking, and his military strength was 65 00:05:14,150 --> 00:05:15,250 waning because... 66 00:05:15,790 --> 00:05:20,650 Science of medicine in those days was far more primitive than we have today. 67 00:05:21,150 --> 00:05:23,470 People cry out, why? 68 00:05:23,770 --> 00:05:25,250 Why is this happening? 69 00:05:26,630 --> 00:05:32,290 The Plague of Justinian, as it became known, ultimately killed an estimated 50 70 00:05:32,290 --> 00:05:33,290 million people. 71 00:05:33,310 --> 00:05:39,770 The vast Byzantine Empire was crippled, not by an invading army, but by an enemy 72 00:05:39,770 --> 00:05:43,430 they could not see and did not understand. 73 00:05:45,520 --> 00:05:51,000 At the time since the existence of bacteria and viruses had not yet been 74 00:05:51,000 --> 00:05:57,220 discovered, many believed that the invisible force that caused the plague 75 00:05:57,220 --> 00:05:58,220 God himself. 76 00:05:58,480 --> 00:06:03,200 It was a belief that was widely accepted because people would read in the Bible 77 00:06:03,200 --> 00:06:08,820 about how precedents from the past had been created by the hand of God. 78 00:06:11,520 --> 00:06:13,700 Whenever humanity 79 00:06:14,650 --> 00:06:20,510 is infected by something greater and beyond human understanding. 80 00:06:21,090 --> 00:06:27,830 It has always been psychologically understood to be an 81 00:06:27,830 --> 00:06:30,930 expression of the wrath of God. 82 00:06:31,570 --> 00:06:37,510 We have in the book of Exodus the famous ten plagues of Egypt. 83 00:06:38,849 --> 00:06:44,990 Moses had come back after seeing God on the mountain to free the Hebrews from 84 00:06:44,990 --> 00:06:49,990 slavery. He went before the Pharaoh and asked to let his people go. 85 00:06:50,490 --> 00:06:52,470 Of course, the Pharaoh said no. 86 00:06:52,950 --> 00:06:57,690 Therefore, the Hebrew God sent a number of plagues through Egypt. 87 00:07:00,970 --> 00:07:02,810 The Bible stories are clear. 88 00:07:03,070 --> 00:07:08,030 The order of the plagues are well documented in the Bible. 89 00:07:08,880 --> 00:07:14,000 We know, of course, that there was the turning of the Nile into blood. There 90 00:07:14,000 --> 00:07:19,640 were the frogs, the lice, the pestilence, and, of course, the great 91 00:07:19,640 --> 00:07:23,740 the three days of darkness and, of course, the death of the firstborn. 92 00:07:25,920 --> 00:07:31,320 The biblical writer who is writing what happens and is inspired by God does say 93 00:07:31,320 --> 00:07:35,100 that the plague stopped after the Hebrews were finally free. 94 00:07:36,480 --> 00:07:39,000 Perhaps there was some divine intervention from God. 95 00:07:39,540 --> 00:07:43,020 But we'll never know because miracles are very difficult to prove. 96 00:07:44,880 --> 00:07:50,300 Can ancient plagues be attributed to a higher power at work? 97 00:07:51,120 --> 00:07:53,240 Well, it's a fascinating theory. 98 00:07:54,000 --> 00:07:59,080 And perhaps divine intervention could be the source of a strange affliction 99 00:07:59,080 --> 00:08:04,980 where a person mysteriously bleeds as if they'd been crucified. 100 00:08:10,640 --> 00:08:15,960 Every spring, billions of Christians all over the world gather to observe a 101 00:08:15,960 --> 00:08:18,740 solemn day of reverence called Good Friday. 102 00:08:19,760 --> 00:08:24,880 According to Christian tradition, Good Friday commemorates the crucifixion and 103 00:08:24,880 --> 00:08:26,820 death of Jesus Christ. 104 00:08:27,640 --> 00:08:33,720 This sacred practice has been performed for nearly 2 ,000 years and involves 105 00:08:33,720 --> 00:08:37,820 attending Mass, the veneration of the cross, 106 00:08:39,150 --> 00:08:41,070 and elaborate processions. 107 00:08:42,510 --> 00:08:49,270 While Good Friday is a somber occasion, the crucifixion is a pivotal event 108 00:08:49,270 --> 00:08:51,970 that is at the heart of Christianity. 109 00:08:55,190 --> 00:08:59,810 When you look at the spirituality of the Christian faith, the crucifixion of 110 00:08:59,810 --> 00:09:06,290 Jesus is not only a tragedy of death, it's a sign of the sufferings of Jesus. 111 00:09:08,010 --> 00:09:13,590 When we think of the crucifixion today, we think of Jesus' wounds when he was 112 00:09:13,590 --> 00:09:19,250 crucified, which includes the holes in the hands, in the feet, in the side. 113 00:09:19,910 --> 00:09:21,690 We think of the crown of thorns. 114 00:09:23,330 --> 00:09:27,350 The crucifixion is clearly a profound cornerstone of the Christian faith. 115 00:09:28,670 --> 00:09:34,270 But curiously, for centuries people have suffered from a rare and disturbing 116 00:09:34,270 --> 00:09:37,210 condition that is connected to the death of Jesus Christ. 117 00:09:38,190 --> 00:09:42,670 This bizarre affliction is known as stigmata. 118 00:09:44,530 --> 00:09:49,270 Stigmata occurs when an individual is marked in a physical way that represents 119 00:09:49,270 --> 00:09:51,470 the wounds that Christ suffered on the cross. 120 00:09:52,610 --> 00:09:58,410 Most commonly, stigmata happens in what is referred to as the five wounds of 121 00:09:58,410 --> 00:10:04,330 Christ, which is two in the hands, two in the feet, and one on the side. 122 00:10:07,790 --> 00:10:09,250 since the Middle Ages. 123 00:10:09,590 --> 00:10:12,690 There have been untold thousands of cases. 124 00:10:13,170 --> 00:10:19,850 In the strictest terms, stigmata, although they do involve physical 125 00:10:19,850 --> 00:10:26,750 suffering, are considered a blessing, a privilege. It's almost as if the 126 00:10:26,750 --> 00:10:31,950 stricken individual is bearing a holy or divine burden. 127 00:10:32,410 --> 00:10:36,230 How can wounds that mirror those of Jesus Christ 128 00:10:37,700 --> 00:10:42,380 inexplicably appear on ordinary people. It seems to defy all logic. 129 00:10:44,100 --> 00:10:50,040 But perhaps clues about this phenomenon can be found by examining the first 130 00:10:50,040 --> 00:10:52,780 documented instance of stigmata. 131 00:10:54,700 --> 00:10:59,740 The first recorded case of stigmata occurred with St. Francis of Assisi in 132 00:11:00,440 --> 00:11:05,280 St. Francis went to the mountains of La Verna to meditate and to pray. 133 00:11:07,120 --> 00:11:12,100 And then suddenly, Francis had a vision of a seraphim. A seraphim is a 134 00:11:12,100 --> 00:11:16,100 particular kind of angel, a fiery angel with six wings. 135 00:11:16,560 --> 00:11:20,600 And the seraphim held in his possession the crucifix. 136 00:11:21,020 --> 00:11:24,140 His wings were wrapped around Jesus on the cross. 137 00:11:24,400 --> 00:11:30,220 And from this crucifix, this image of Jesus, came forth these rays. 138 00:11:30,580 --> 00:11:35,820 And these rays penetrated Francis in the form of stigmata. 139 00:11:36,780 --> 00:11:40,500 Francis' stigmata was incredibly intense. Nothing like this had ever 140 00:11:40,500 --> 00:11:45,400 before. And not only did he have wounds that were openly bleeding on his hands, 141 00:11:45,620 --> 00:11:50,320 Francis was quite ill after he received the stigmata, and he died two years 142 00:11:50,320 --> 00:11:51,320 later. 143 00:11:51,460 --> 00:11:56,040 Every day of those two years, he did, in fact, suffer with stigmata. 144 00:11:57,260 --> 00:12:01,540 Accounts of stigmata are both fascinating and deeply unsettling. 145 00:12:02,000 --> 00:12:06,660 For many Christians, They are proof of divine forces at work in our world. 146 00:12:07,520 --> 00:12:14,260 But many experts are skeptical and insist that stigmata must have a 147 00:12:14,260 --> 00:12:15,260 explanation. 148 00:12:16,280 --> 00:12:20,720 In terms of stigmata -like symptoms, there are some medical conditions that 149 00:12:20,720 --> 00:12:24,800 been attributed to spontaneous bleeding, but it's still very much misunderstood. 150 00:12:25,720 --> 00:12:28,160 One of them would be hematidrosis. 151 00:12:29,130 --> 00:12:33,650 It's known as bloody sweat because when the body is under extreme stress, the 152 00:12:33,650 --> 00:12:37,510 sweat glands tend to become more fragile and can bleed spontaneously. 153 00:12:38,590 --> 00:12:43,330 It typically manifests as droplets of blood on the skin, most commonly in the 154 00:12:43,330 --> 00:12:48,150 forehead, the arms, and the legs, without any apparent physical cause. 155 00:12:49,390 --> 00:12:52,930 It can't be said that they are the exact cause of stigmata. 156 00:12:54,530 --> 00:12:57,450 When a proposed stigmata occurs, 157 00:12:58,160 --> 00:13:03,680 The Vatican typically will do everything possible to account for the healing 158 00:13:03,680 --> 00:13:07,020 within standard medical protocol. 159 00:13:07,400 --> 00:13:13,800 The Vatican disputes, ignores, or disproves vastly greater numbers 160 00:13:13,800 --> 00:13:20,360 of miraculous claims than it actually validates. And so if the Vatican 161 00:13:20,360 --> 00:13:25,400 is able to verify stigmata, they are considered miraculous. 162 00:13:27,150 --> 00:13:31,930 Is it possible that a genuine case of stigmata is an actual miracle, as the 163 00:13:31,930 --> 00:13:32,930 Vatican claims? 164 00:13:35,270 --> 00:13:40,770 Many believe that the best evidence lies in the story of the most famous case in 165 00:13:40,770 --> 00:13:44,670 modern history, the stigmata of Padre Pio. 166 00:13:46,130 --> 00:13:51,590 Padre Pio was a Capuchin friar who, in 1918, celebrated mass. 167 00:13:53,040 --> 00:13:58,500 And immediately afterwards started bleeding from the hands and feet. 168 00:13:59,400 --> 00:14:02,360 But there were certain peculiarities about it. 169 00:14:03,020 --> 00:14:04,440 It never scabbed over. 170 00:14:06,720 --> 00:14:12,540 And it gave off a very sweet perfume, which is known as the odour of sanctity. 171 00:14:13,980 --> 00:14:19,600 When Padre Pio was suffering from his stigmata, he said that the pain was so 172 00:14:19,600 --> 00:14:21,100 extreme that he thought he might die. 173 00:14:22,440 --> 00:14:28,800 He was embarrassed by the blood and embarrassed to be showing these marks on 174 00:14:28,800 --> 00:14:29,800 regular basis. 175 00:14:30,260 --> 00:14:34,680 And he was always trying to cover them with the sleeves of his robe so that 176 00:14:34,680 --> 00:14:35,920 people wouldn't see the blood. 177 00:14:38,340 --> 00:14:42,520 The Vatican's response to great mystics in the church has often been to 178 00:14:42,520 --> 00:14:45,520 persecute them, at least initially. They did that with Padre Pio. 179 00:14:46,660 --> 00:14:47,820 They were skeptical. 180 00:14:48,440 --> 00:14:51,180 At one point, they thought they were self -inflicted. 181 00:14:51,610 --> 00:14:53,630 And so they silenced him. 182 00:14:54,650 --> 00:14:57,470 They basically shut him away in the monastery. 183 00:14:58,490 --> 00:15:04,950 But thousands of people would go to attend his mass and line up for 184 00:15:04,950 --> 00:15:05,950 for days. 185 00:15:07,350 --> 00:15:14,210 It was not until long after Padre Pio's death in 1968 that the 186 00:15:14,210 --> 00:15:19,270 Vatican had relented and saw him as a genuine stigmatist. 187 00:15:20,270 --> 00:15:25,990 He was finally canonised and beautified by Pope John Paul II. 188 00:15:26,190 --> 00:15:28,970 This was at the beginning of the 21st century. 189 00:15:29,550 --> 00:15:35,950 Now thousands of pilgrims come from all over Italy and beyond to 190 00:15:35,950 --> 00:15:38,070 venerate at his tomb every month. 191 00:15:38,750 --> 00:15:45,630 And so his memory is something that is celebrated by Catholics in 192 00:15:45,630 --> 00:15:46,870 every part of the world. 193 00:15:48,330 --> 00:15:52,770 For the moment, stigmata remains a controversial and captivating affliction 194 00:15:52,770 --> 00:15:54,510 offers no easy answers. 195 00:15:55,430 --> 00:16:02,310 But in 16th century France, another condition emerged that was no less 196 00:16:02,450 --> 00:16:08,670 It was a disturbing phenomenon which led hundreds of people to dance themselves 197 00:16:08,670 --> 00:16:09,970 to death. 198 00:16:15,070 --> 00:16:16,270 Strasbourg, France. 199 00:16:17,870 --> 00:16:22,170 This historic city built along the Rhine River is known for its stunning network 200 00:16:22,170 --> 00:16:28,570 of canals, remarkable medieval architecture, and the famous 201 00:16:28,570 --> 00:16:30,270 clock of Strasbourg Cathedral. 202 00:16:32,290 --> 00:16:38,830 But over 500 years ago in July of 1518, this town was the site of one of the 203 00:16:38,830 --> 00:16:41,230 strangest maladies in human history. 204 00:16:42,050 --> 00:16:44,270 It's known as the Dancing Plague. 205 00:16:44,970 --> 00:16:50,750 And it started when a townswoman named Frau Trophia spontaneously burst into 206 00:16:50,750 --> 00:16:51,750 dance. 207 00:16:52,750 --> 00:16:57,690 Frau Trophia is said to have stepped outside of her house in the city of 208 00:16:57,690 --> 00:17:00,590 Strasbourg and then begun to dance. 209 00:17:01,390 --> 00:17:07,230 And she danced for hours and hours and hours. And apparently at first, 210 00:17:07,230 --> 00:17:13,079 eyewitnesses... thought that she may have been trying to irritate her husband 211 00:17:13,079 --> 00:17:17,740 that this was some kind of joke but then the dance stretched into the evening 212 00:17:17,740 --> 00:17:24,560 and then into the night she collapsed she got up the 213 00:17:24,560 --> 00:17:31,280 next day and began again and at that point people realized that a very 214 00:17:31,280 --> 00:17:33,840 strange phenomenon was unfolding here 215 00:17:35,280 --> 00:17:40,480 Frau Trophia went on hopping around and dancing in the heat of the summer, but 216 00:17:40,480 --> 00:17:47,240 she wasn't enjoying it. She was unfocused, glassy -eyed, dissociated, 217 00:17:47,240 --> 00:17:49,700 jerking around and dancing, and she actually couldn't stop. 218 00:17:50,280 --> 00:17:53,180 Frau Trophia reportedly danced for a week straight. 219 00:17:53,520 --> 00:17:57,900 The constant exertion took a toll on her health, and she was sent to a remote 220 00:17:57,900 --> 00:17:59,660 monastery to recuperate. 221 00:18:00,080 --> 00:18:03,880 But strangely, after Frau left Strasbourg... 222 00:18:04,490 --> 00:18:06,210 The dancing didn't stop. 223 00:18:07,690 --> 00:18:14,330 Within about two or three weeks, dozens more people had been consumed by this 224 00:18:14,330 --> 00:18:19,930 same urge to dance and dance for hours and days in an altered state of 225 00:18:19,930 --> 00:18:20,930 consciousness. 226 00:18:21,750 --> 00:18:27,890 By the end of August, perhaps 400 people were all dancing, 227 00:18:28,130 --> 00:18:31,090 in some cases on and off for weeks. 228 00:18:32,430 --> 00:18:36,450 Their toenails fell off, their feet were lacerated, their shoes were full of 229 00:18:36,450 --> 00:18:37,450 blood. 230 00:18:37,750 --> 00:18:40,050 And then some of them dropped dead. 231 00:18:41,130 --> 00:18:46,590 It was estimated 15 a day dropped dead, maybe 400 in all over the course of the 232 00:18:46,590 --> 00:18:47,269 two months. 233 00:18:47,270 --> 00:18:49,810 It was a terrifying and terrible thing. 234 00:18:51,190 --> 00:18:57,290 What's so remarkable about these events of 1518 is that we have copies of 235 00:18:57,290 --> 00:19:03,390 the memos sent among the members of the governing party. circle of the city. 236 00:19:04,170 --> 00:19:09,910 There are intense debates within the city as to what is causing this outbreak 237 00:19:09,910 --> 00:19:10,910 dancing. 238 00:19:11,090 --> 00:19:14,830 And they make quite clear these people do not want to be dancing. 239 00:19:15,550 --> 00:19:18,050 They are absolutely involuntary. 240 00:19:19,490 --> 00:19:23,310 What could have possibly triggered such a bizarre and deadly affliction? 241 00:19:23,970 --> 00:19:28,110 At the time, the people of Strasbourg began to suspect that the dancing plague 242 00:19:28,110 --> 00:19:29,550 was the work. 243 00:19:30,960 --> 00:19:31,960 Of the devil. 244 00:19:33,460 --> 00:19:36,640 This was something that was seen as a form of possession. 245 00:19:37,100 --> 00:19:41,360 So they started to look at possible supernatural explanations. 246 00:19:42,020 --> 00:19:47,680 And the first thing that they thought of was this possibly being instigated by 247 00:19:47,680 --> 00:19:48,680 the devil himself. 248 00:19:49,780 --> 00:19:53,940 And so they tried to purge every kind of sin from the city. 249 00:19:54,300 --> 00:19:55,460 It didn't work. 250 00:19:57,160 --> 00:20:01,680 When banning sin failed, the townspeople wondered if the dancing plague was not 251 00:20:01,680 --> 00:20:06,940 the work of the devil, but rather a Catholic saint by the name of Vitus. 252 00:20:07,620 --> 00:20:13,500 Saint Vitus is an important saint in the late medieval European church. 253 00:20:14,280 --> 00:20:20,440 There was a very strong belief that there were a number of saints who could 254 00:20:20,440 --> 00:20:26,810 cure you of a particular disease, and if you were a sinner, then they would 255 00:20:26,810 --> 00:20:29,090 punish you by inflicting that disease. 256 00:20:29,490 --> 00:20:35,190 Saint Vitus was believed to cause movement disorders, including compulsive 257 00:20:35,190 --> 00:20:39,830 dancing. So it made complete sense to people at the time that if anybody was 258 00:20:39,830 --> 00:20:43,690 dancing wildly, it's because they'd somehow offended Saint Vitus. 259 00:20:45,230 --> 00:20:49,750 So what they then do is that they bundle people into wagons and take them to a 260 00:20:49,750 --> 00:20:55,750 shrine dedicated to saint fighters, located about 30 miles north of 261 00:20:57,170 --> 00:21:02,130 Interestingly, they put red shoes on them. They cover the red shoes in holy 262 00:21:02,130 --> 00:21:07,710 and holy water, and they lead them round the shrine in a circle. 263 00:21:08,070 --> 00:21:13,090 And then we are told most of the people recovered their sanity. 264 00:21:13,870 --> 00:21:19,770 So it seems that they cured it by appealing to the supernatural beliefs of 265 00:21:19,770 --> 00:21:21,070 people who had been afflicted. 266 00:21:22,430 --> 00:21:26,610 Was the dancing plague both caused and cured by a higher power? 267 00:21:26,910 --> 00:21:30,050 Well, it made sense to people in medieval Europe. 268 00:21:31,230 --> 00:21:35,190 In modern times, experts have proposed a more scientific theory. 269 00:21:35,750 --> 00:21:41,950 They claim that this ghoulish dancing frenzy was the result of mass 270 00:21:41,950 --> 00:21:46,640 illness. Or as it's more commonly known, mass hysteria. 271 00:21:47,680 --> 00:21:52,280 Mass hysteria is when a group of people are experiencing the same physical 272 00:21:52,280 --> 00:21:56,940 symptoms without a definitive physical cause of those symptoms. For example, if 273 00:21:56,940 --> 00:22:01,620 you're in a social setting whereby someone is experiencing a symptom, you 274 00:22:01,620 --> 00:22:03,600 then believe that that's also happening to you. 275 00:22:04,440 --> 00:22:09,800 Today, the most popular theory for the 1518... 276 00:22:10,600 --> 00:22:16,220 dancing plague is that this is an example of mass hysteria but it's not 277 00:22:16,220 --> 00:22:22,220 the case that unusual behavior is mass psychogenic illness we're talking about 278 00:22:22,220 --> 00:22:28,180 several hundred people dancing for days or weeks some of them dying could mass 279 00:22:28,180 --> 00:22:33,200 hysteria really be what started the spread of the dancing plague or was it 280 00:22:33,200 --> 00:22:37,860 work of the devil whether it was psychological or spiritual in nature the 281 00:22:37,860 --> 00:22:43,920 dancing plague is certainly a lesson in human behavior, as is the case of a 3 282 00:22:43,920 --> 00:22:49,320 ,000 -year -old virus that spread around the world and became one of the 283 00:22:49,320 --> 00:22:51,840 deadliest diseases on Earth. 284 00:22:56,860 --> 00:23:01,160 The Valley of Mexico, November 8th, 1519. 285 00:23:03,820 --> 00:23:09,660 Spanish conquistadors led by Hernan Cortes arrive at Tenochtitlan, the 286 00:23:09,660 --> 00:23:15,740 of the Aztec Empire, bearing dreams of conquest and an insatiable desire for 287 00:23:15,740 --> 00:23:20,860 gold. But they also brought with them a lethal, infectious disease. 288 00:23:21,980 --> 00:23:27,860 Smallpox is introduced into the Americas very dramatically at a specific point 289 00:23:27,860 --> 00:23:30,360 in time and alongside the European invasion. 290 00:23:31,630 --> 00:23:36,510 So this is a tremendous sort of clash of civilizations, the likes of which the 291 00:23:36,510 --> 00:23:38,750 world had never seen before and will never see again. 292 00:23:39,290 --> 00:23:46,110 The single most deciding factor as to why Native American civilizations fell 293 00:23:46,110 --> 00:23:48,770 rapidly was the introduction of smallpox. 294 00:23:51,970 --> 00:23:54,690 So smallpox is a virus. 295 00:23:54,990 --> 00:24:00,110 It causes these sort of irregular spaced pustule -y skin lesions. 296 00:24:00,600 --> 00:24:05,780 and had a devastating effect on Native Americans in the New World. 297 00:24:07,140 --> 00:24:11,280 In Europe, most people had experienced smallpox. 298 00:24:11,480 --> 00:24:14,020 They had the scars, or they had it as children. 299 00:24:14,580 --> 00:24:19,980 But there was no immunity in the New World. There was no immunity among kids. 300 00:24:20,120 --> 00:24:25,960 There was no immunity among adults. And so when this new disease came, everybody 301 00:24:25,960 --> 00:24:26,960 was vulnerable. 302 00:24:27,820 --> 00:24:30,140 And so it spread like wildfire. 303 00:24:31,680 --> 00:24:36,780 Although the exact numbers will never be known, many experts estimate that a 304 00:24:36,780 --> 00:24:42,320 staggering 95 % of the indigenous population would eventually die from 305 00:24:43,340 --> 00:24:48,540 But what's even more chilling is the fact that smallpox ran rampant for 306 00:24:48,540 --> 00:24:49,620 thousands of years. 307 00:24:51,060 --> 00:24:56,600 I am astounded by how far back smallpox goes. 308 00:24:57,550 --> 00:25:02,530 For most of human recorded history, we believe it's the same strain that was 309 00:25:02,530 --> 00:25:06,190 infecting one person after another, this human chain of infection. 310 00:25:06,810 --> 00:25:13,770 The Egyptian pharaoh, Ramses V, had scarring on his face that's 311 00:25:13,770 --> 00:25:15,090 consistent with smallpox. 312 00:25:18,410 --> 00:25:23,930 It is estimated that smallpox has killed between 300 and 500 million people. 313 00:25:24,360 --> 00:25:26,560 In its more than 10 ,000 year existence. 314 00:25:27,640 --> 00:25:31,240 Which begs the question, how did we finally beat it? 315 00:25:34,640 --> 00:25:39,000 Well, it just so happens that the cure for smallpox was discovered in a small 316 00:25:39,000 --> 00:25:42,240 English village in the 1790s. 317 00:25:43,140 --> 00:25:48,780 In the late 1700s, doctors were noticing that milkmaids did not seem to be 318 00:25:48,780 --> 00:25:50,520 affected by smallpox. 319 00:25:51,360 --> 00:25:55,520 and their complexions remained unscarred. 320 00:25:56,480 --> 00:26:01,900 And people were starting to make that connection that there might be immunity 321 00:26:01,900 --> 00:26:06,660 from catching a different kind of pox virus, cowpox. 322 00:26:06,940 --> 00:26:13,680 So milkmaids were exposed to the cowpox virus, probably got infected, and were 323 00:26:13,680 --> 00:26:16,020 then immune to smallpox. 324 00:26:18,060 --> 00:26:23,680 Edward Jenner was an English physician and decided to test this observation and 325 00:26:23,680 --> 00:26:30,460 took a piece of an ulcer from a cow that was infected by cowpox and gave it 326 00:26:30,460 --> 00:26:37,180 to an eight -year -old boy and then, a little bit later, gave this little boy 327 00:26:37,180 --> 00:26:39,360 a dose of smallpox. 328 00:26:40,360 --> 00:26:45,700 Fortunately, the eight -year -old boy did not develop smallpox and was 329 00:26:45,700 --> 00:26:46,700 protected. 330 00:26:47,630 --> 00:26:51,770 Because it wasn't like a direct viral intake, right, you would get a slightly 331 00:26:51,770 --> 00:26:57,130 lesser version of the disease. But because you had been exposed to it, you 332 00:26:57,130 --> 00:26:58,390 would, of course, then have immunity. 333 00:26:58,630 --> 00:27:02,410 So it was probably a first instance of a crude version of vaccination. 334 00:27:04,230 --> 00:27:09,410 As it turns out, Edward Jenner's revolutionary experiment is remembered 335 00:27:09,410 --> 00:27:13,150 for its inspiration, its sheer audacity. 336 00:27:13,720 --> 00:27:18,820 And because it provided a new defense against infectious disease, which we now 337 00:27:18,820 --> 00:27:21,300 refer to as the vaccine. 338 00:27:22,560 --> 00:27:29,460 The word vaccine comes from the virus name vaccinia, which was the virus that 339 00:27:29,460 --> 00:27:34,380 was the cowpox -derived virus that left people immune to smallpox. 340 00:27:35,720 --> 00:27:42,540 Vaccines prevent disease, and some vaccines can last for decades, and some 341 00:27:42,540 --> 00:27:44,820 vaccines need to be given every year. 342 00:27:45,020 --> 00:27:49,360 For smallpox, people had to get vaccinated every 10 years. 343 00:27:50,860 --> 00:27:55,840 Vaccines are humanity's single greatest weapon against plagues. 344 00:27:56,120 --> 00:28:01,540 Rooted in science and not superstition, they provide a powerful way to fight 345 00:28:01,540 --> 00:28:02,540 outbreaks. 346 00:28:03,080 --> 00:28:08,820 The last naturally occurring case of smallpox was identified in 1979, and in 347 00:28:08,820 --> 00:28:14,280 1980, the World Health Organization declared that smallpox was eradicated, 348 00:28:14,280 --> 00:28:16,640 longer spreading from person to person. 349 00:28:17,040 --> 00:28:23,820 Eradicating smallpox was the biggest public health victory in the history of 350 00:28:23,820 --> 00:28:24,820 human race. 351 00:28:25,280 --> 00:28:29,920 The eradication of smallpox is the most famous use of a highly effective 352 00:28:29,920 --> 00:28:30,920 vaccine. 353 00:28:31,360 --> 00:28:35,720 But there are some diseases that are harder to cure. 354 00:28:36,720 --> 00:28:41,640 There are viruses for which we have no vaccines at all because they mutate too 355 00:28:41,640 --> 00:28:42,640 rapidly. 356 00:28:43,000 --> 00:28:48,260 And so because viruses mutate, there's a certain limitation to what you can do 357 00:28:48,260 --> 00:28:49,260 with a vaccine. 358 00:28:50,860 --> 00:28:56,200 The minute you get too confident and you think that we defeated Mother Nature, 359 00:28:56,260 --> 00:28:58,920 somehow it always finds a way to come back. 360 00:29:00,270 --> 00:29:04,050 It appears that even with our technological and medical advancements, 361 00:29:04,050 --> 00:29:09,930 ability to isolate, contain, and even eradicate certain diseases will remain 362 00:29:09,930 --> 00:29:10,930 ongoing endeavor. 363 00:29:11,830 --> 00:29:17,510 And in some cases, discovering the source of the affliction can be 364 00:29:18,190 --> 00:29:25,030 Like in the case of a deadly disorder caused by a gruesome 365 00:29:25,030 --> 00:29:26,030 tribal ritual. 366 00:29:32,330 --> 00:29:33,330 Papua New Guinea. 367 00:29:34,230 --> 00:29:39,410 This group of tropical islands located in the southwest Pacific Ocean is one of 368 00:29:39,410 --> 00:29:41,070 the most remote places on earth. 369 00:29:42,410 --> 00:29:48,250 During the 1970s, it was discovered that a local tribe known as the Foray was 370 00:29:48,250 --> 00:29:52,570 afflicted by a strange and deadly illness. 371 00:29:55,830 --> 00:29:59,530 The Foray people lived up in the mountains of this island. 372 00:30:00,010 --> 00:30:04,250 There were probably about 36 ,000 of them that were spread out across the 373 00:30:04,250 --> 00:30:06,950 mountain valleys in northern New Guinea. 374 00:30:07,310 --> 00:30:13,090 They lived in 170 different hamlets with people who spoke six different 375 00:30:13,090 --> 00:30:14,090 languages. 376 00:30:14,530 --> 00:30:21,410 When the Westerners started to interact with the foray, missionaries and 377 00:30:21,410 --> 00:30:26,010 anthropologists found an alarming number of them were dying of a strange disease 378 00:30:26,010 --> 00:30:27,790 that nobody had really seen before. 379 00:30:29,390 --> 00:30:34,290 One of the symptoms of this disease is something that is known as pathological 380 00:30:34,290 --> 00:30:35,290 laughter. 381 00:30:36,670 --> 00:30:39,330 You know, inappropriate laughter, giggling. 382 00:30:40,330 --> 00:30:45,310 Major magazines and newspapers called it laughing death. 383 00:30:47,110 --> 00:30:52,830 At the time, experts estimated that the laughing death killed 200 Foray people 384 00:30:52,830 --> 00:30:53,830 every year. 385 00:30:53,970 --> 00:30:58,270 The Foray called the illness Kuru, which translates to... 386 00:30:58,720 --> 00:31:00,560 trembling in their dialect. 387 00:31:01,500 --> 00:31:06,780 The disease was puzzling to scientists who could not determine its cause. 388 00:31:07,520 --> 00:31:13,700 And in 1981, Dr. Robert Klitzman traveled to Papua New Guinea to try and 389 00:31:13,700 --> 00:31:14,700 the mystery. 390 00:31:14,820 --> 00:31:18,680 When I went there for the first time, I wasn't sure what to expect, but I 391 00:31:18,680 --> 00:31:19,680 learned many things. 392 00:31:20,300 --> 00:31:24,040 Initially, it was called the laughing death, which is sort of a misnomer. 393 00:31:24,840 --> 00:31:28,800 People did engage in what seemed like laughter, but it really was sort of 394 00:31:28,800 --> 00:31:32,740 uncontrollable expressions and movements that they had. 395 00:31:33,280 --> 00:31:35,080 Kuru causes a number of symptoms. 396 00:31:35,280 --> 00:31:40,100 It is a neurological disease somewhat similar to Parkinson's disease or 397 00:31:40,100 --> 00:31:41,100 Alzheimer's. 398 00:31:41,960 --> 00:31:48,320 The symptoms are loss of muscle control over one's body, shaking, inability to 399 00:31:48,320 --> 00:31:52,800 walk, and it has mental symptoms as well. 400 00:31:53,530 --> 00:31:57,270 So people may not be able to control their emotions or what they say. 401 00:31:57,810 --> 00:32:00,330 The disease was terrifying in many ways. 402 00:32:00,710 --> 00:32:05,210 The symptoms usually from start to the person's death take about a year. 403 00:32:06,110 --> 00:32:07,490 It's invariably fatal. 404 00:32:08,690 --> 00:32:12,830 The Foray people believe that the disease was caused by sorcery. 405 00:32:13,890 --> 00:32:18,330 So they believe that a sorcerer would take something that belonged to you and 406 00:32:18,330 --> 00:32:21,310 wrap it around a stone and bury it and cast a spell on it. 407 00:32:21,880 --> 00:32:26,560 And that may sound ridiculous to some of us, but they'd say, that's just magic. 408 00:32:27,080 --> 00:32:30,240 The world in which they live was this kind of a world. 409 00:32:30,860 --> 00:32:35,160 Was Kuru the result of supernatural forces as locals believed? 410 00:32:35,600 --> 00:32:37,340 It's an intriguing notion. 411 00:32:37,980 --> 00:32:43,020 But doctors eventually suspected that the real culprit was that the foray 412 00:32:43,020 --> 00:32:48,580 participated in the gruesome practice of consuming human flesh. 413 00:32:52,300 --> 00:32:57,520 When Western anthropologists began to study some of the communities of Papua 414 00:32:57,520 --> 00:33:03,280 Guinea in the 1930s, they discovered practice of a 415 00:33:03,280 --> 00:33:08,500 ritualistic, religious -based funerary cannibalism. 416 00:33:08,780 --> 00:33:15,700 The Papua New Guineans who engaged in cannibalism saw the consumption of the 417 00:33:15,700 --> 00:33:20,460 brain as a way of imbibing that person's life force. 418 00:33:21,000 --> 00:33:22,520 It was a devotional practice. 419 00:33:23,400 --> 00:33:28,620 When they practiced cannibalism, at one feast I calculated that there were 56 420 00:33:28,620 --> 00:33:32,380 people present, 53 of whom then died of the disease. 421 00:33:33,000 --> 00:33:34,620 So it was pretty devastating. 422 00:33:35,040 --> 00:33:39,720 Now, every time someone died, they would consume the brain. 423 00:33:40,340 --> 00:33:44,940 I met people, for instance, who would say, well, I ate a foot, or I ate a 424 00:33:45,100 --> 00:33:46,100 and they were still alive. 425 00:33:46,590 --> 00:33:53,350 And so the concentration of the Kuru was highest when they would consume the 426 00:33:53,350 --> 00:33:54,350 brain. 427 00:33:54,990 --> 00:33:58,710 Perhaps it's not surprising that eating human brains is not good for your 428 00:33:58,710 --> 00:34:05,050 health. But how did this practice lead to the bizarre laughing symptoms of 429 00:34:05,470 --> 00:34:10,270 Kuru is caused by something called the prion, an infectious protein that is in 430 00:34:10,270 --> 00:34:11,409 all of our brains. 431 00:34:12,400 --> 00:34:17,340 And in roughly one out of every million people or so, it flips the wrong way. 432 00:34:17,699 --> 00:34:24,679 And when it's flipped, it could lead to other proteins flipping in our 433 00:34:24,679 --> 00:34:29,159 brain and forming clumps that could kill brain cells. 434 00:34:30,100 --> 00:34:36,340 Cool probably happened because someone in the 4A group had such a protein flip 435 00:34:36,340 --> 00:34:41,400 the wrong way, and that person was then consumed by other people. 436 00:34:41,900 --> 00:34:44,940 And that led to proteins in their brains flipping. 437 00:34:45,659 --> 00:34:51,400 And when they died, they were eaten, and the rest is history. It continued to 438 00:34:51,400 --> 00:34:52,400 spread. 439 00:34:52,860 --> 00:34:56,320 The story of Kuru is as fascinating as it is disturbing. 440 00:34:57,320 --> 00:35:02,140 But what's even more unsettling is that this type of disease has harmed people, 441 00:35:02,260 --> 00:35:05,800 not just in Papua New Guinea, but all over the world. 442 00:35:06,300 --> 00:35:10,040 Except we call it mad cow disease. 443 00:35:11,850 --> 00:35:16,610 In the 1980s, British cattle became stricken with mad cow disease because 444 00:35:16,610 --> 00:35:19,110 farmers feed them supplements. 445 00:35:19,390 --> 00:35:25,670 And these supplements are made up of dead cows infected with prion disease. 446 00:35:25,990 --> 00:35:28,090 And then people would consume that. 447 00:35:29,350 --> 00:35:36,310 Eventually, over the course of 15, 16 years, 178 people in the UK died 448 00:35:36,310 --> 00:35:39,370 from what became known as mad cow disease. 449 00:35:40,360 --> 00:35:45,060 Mad cow disease or neurodegenerative diseases such as Kuru can manifest 450 00:35:45,060 --> 00:35:50,720 of 70 years after the ingestion of some contaminated food or livestock. 451 00:35:51,040 --> 00:35:55,960 And so it's very unclear as to whether or not it can happen in the future. 452 00:35:56,260 --> 00:36:01,660 The study of Kuru was important for many reasons. One is, of course, the fact 453 00:36:01,660 --> 00:36:05,800 that the symptoms in humans from eating an infected cow are basically the same 454 00:36:05,800 --> 00:36:08,160 symptoms that we saw with Kuru. 455 00:36:09,000 --> 00:36:14,260 So they provided this unique glimpse on what can cause a disease that's 456 00:36:14,260 --> 00:36:17,080 different than what anyone had thought before. 457 00:36:19,580 --> 00:36:23,420 Could our understanding of the laughing death disorder help us to better 458 00:36:23,420 --> 00:36:27,580 identify and avoid strange outbreaks in the modern world? 459 00:36:28,420 --> 00:36:33,260 Perhaps. And now more than ever, people are going to great lengths to dodge 460 00:36:33,260 --> 00:36:36,440 diseases and even death itself. 461 00:36:37,550 --> 00:36:41,910 Their secret is to remain frozen for centuries. 462 00:36:47,590 --> 00:36:48,890 Scottsdale, Arizona. 463 00:36:49,810 --> 00:36:54,210 In a sprawling industrial park on the north side of the city stands the 464 00:36:54,210 --> 00:36:57,050 headquarters of the Alcor Life Extension Foundation. 465 00:36:58,090 --> 00:37:02,810 Like most cutting -edge medical facilities, the doctors and scientists 466 00:37:02,810 --> 00:37:05,610 day and night to provide care for their patients. 467 00:37:06,620 --> 00:37:12,040 Except in the case of Alcor, the patients are all deceased. 468 00:37:12,820 --> 00:37:16,900 In our view, people who are declared legally dead today are potentially 469 00:37:16,900 --> 00:37:17,900 revivable. 470 00:37:18,520 --> 00:37:22,940 Alcor's mission is to take a patient who cannot be helped by today's medicine 471 00:37:22,940 --> 00:37:26,960 into the future, where hopefully more advanced technology can repair and 472 00:37:26,960 --> 00:37:27,960 them. 473 00:37:29,140 --> 00:37:31,140 We're here in Alcor's patient care bay. 474 00:37:31,760 --> 00:37:35,720 In this room, we have all 184 of our human patients in these dewers, these 475 00:37:35,720 --> 00:37:39,580 cryogenic dewers, essentially very large, expensive vacuum flasks. 476 00:37:40,180 --> 00:37:43,000 So in each one of these containers, there are four whole -body patients. 477 00:37:43,780 --> 00:37:46,660 On this side, you can see that I can put my hand on here without any problem, 478 00:37:46,780 --> 00:37:51,660 but just a few inches further in is minus 320 Fahrenheit. It's extremely 479 00:37:52,760 --> 00:37:55,660 People say that we freeze people colloquially, but that's not strictly 480 00:37:55,660 --> 00:37:56,660 if we do it right. 481 00:37:57,390 --> 00:38:01,690 Our patients are essentially in something like a long -term coma, except 482 00:38:01,690 --> 00:38:03,150 is no metabolic activity whatsoever. 483 00:38:04,410 --> 00:38:10,870 To date, 184 deceased patients lie in deep freeze within Alcor's facility in 484 00:38:10,870 --> 00:38:12,950 hope that one day they'll be resurrected. 485 00:38:14,190 --> 00:38:19,770 This bizarre form of potential immortality is known as cryonics. 486 00:38:20,610 --> 00:38:26,050 Cryonics is the process of freezing the human body, perhaps just the human head. 487 00:38:26,600 --> 00:38:29,740 in order to stop the biological process of decay. 488 00:38:30,760 --> 00:38:35,460 So the hope is, if you could freeze somebody alive, even with an incurable 489 00:38:35,460 --> 00:38:40,880 disease, perhaps you can thaw them out at some point in the future when science 490 00:38:40,880 --> 00:38:42,960 has found a cure for that disease. 491 00:38:43,580 --> 00:38:49,600 In that sense, perhaps you can defeat cancer, defeat all the ravages of old 492 00:38:49,840 --> 00:38:51,700 perhaps even become immortal. 493 00:38:52,780 --> 00:38:54,820 Professor Robert Ettinger, physicist. 494 00:38:55,580 --> 00:39:00,020 Started the cryonics movement in the 1960s, where he proposed to store people 495 00:39:00,020 --> 00:39:03,880 ultra -cold temperatures where there's potential that future technology could 496 00:39:03,880 --> 00:39:04,980 repair and revive them. 497 00:39:06,860 --> 00:39:10,720 Right now, there are many companies that do this. There are hundreds of frozen 498 00:39:10,720 --> 00:39:14,060 individuals right now across the United States. 499 00:39:15,600 --> 00:39:20,640 Worldwide, it is estimated that at least 500 people have been placed in cryonics 500 00:39:20,640 --> 00:39:21,640 suspension. 501 00:39:21,780 --> 00:39:24,660 Most notably, baseball Hall of Famer Ted Williams. 502 00:39:25,650 --> 00:39:29,730 There are even those who claim that Walt Disney's body is preserved in a 503 00:39:29,730 --> 00:39:30,750 cryonics facility. 504 00:39:31,890 --> 00:39:37,390 But is there any reason to believe that this strange process could actually 505 00:39:37,390 --> 00:39:38,390 work? 506 00:39:38,590 --> 00:39:43,150 If you live in the countryside, you know that come wintertime, the lakes freeze 507 00:39:43,150 --> 00:39:44,150 over. 508 00:39:44,730 --> 00:39:49,790 But if you ever look right on top of the lakes, you'll see frozen organisms, 509 00:39:49,950 --> 00:39:51,410 fish and frogs. 510 00:39:52,810 --> 00:39:54,630 And then come springtime, 511 00:39:55,720 --> 00:40:00,040 some of them spring back to life again, when you thought they were frozen solid. 512 00:40:00,980 --> 00:40:02,080 What's the trick? 513 00:40:02,320 --> 00:40:08,640 The trick is that Mother Nature has created an antifreeze to lower the 514 00:40:08,640 --> 00:40:13,160 point for these animals, such that even though it appears as if they're frozen 515 00:40:13,160 --> 00:40:19,220 solid, the bodily fluids inside these animals still flows, and these animals 516 00:40:19,220 --> 00:40:24,160 still alive, even though their metabolism rate is very close to zero. 517 00:40:25,290 --> 00:40:29,710 So in some sense, we're trying to copy nature. And it turns out that some forms 518 00:40:29,710 --> 00:40:32,810 of tissue can in fact be frozen almost indefinitely. 519 00:40:34,250 --> 00:40:39,770 If cryonics is able to deliver on its promise of immortality as many hope, 520 00:40:39,770 --> 00:40:44,510 it eventually mean that death itself will one day come to an end? 521 00:40:45,510 --> 00:40:48,310 Cryonics really is about giving people choice over how long they live. 522 00:40:48,930 --> 00:40:52,610 We think that in the future, we should be able to revive cryonics patients and 523 00:40:52,610 --> 00:40:54,670 rejuvenate them and let them go about their lives again. 524 00:40:55,290 --> 00:40:57,230 What we want really is indefinite lifespan. 525 00:40:58,270 --> 00:41:03,430 If in the future someone can show that you could be revived after being frozen 526 00:41:03,430 --> 00:41:07,810 solid, then the whole question of immortality is on the table. 527 00:41:08,550 --> 00:41:13,270 We're not there yet, but there's no law of science that says you can't do it. 528 00:41:15,670 --> 00:41:19,630 Perhaps the future for treating a deadly virus would be to simply put a patient 529 00:41:19,630 --> 00:41:21,390 on ice until a cure can be found. 530 00:41:22,190 --> 00:41:26,270 In the meantime, it's reassuring to know that modern medicine, along with an 531 00:41:26,270 --> 00:41:31,770 understanding of how outbreaks begin and spread, has made great strides in 532 00:41:31,770 --> 00:41:34,950 controlling the escalation of contagious diseases. 533 00:41:36,030 --> 00:41:40,870 But will killers like smallpox still be around for another 3 ,000 years? 534 00:41:41,210 --> 00:41:46,710 Or can a new plague emerge that's impervious to antibiotics? 535 00:41:47,660 --> 00:41:52,300 While we can attempt to protect ourselves from deadly pandemics, just 536 00:41:52,300 --> 00:41:57,320 next unstoppable outbreak will occur, remain 537 00:41:57,320 --> 00:42:00,220 unexplained. 48847

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