Episode 148: Christos Lazaridis discusses brain death
Elucidations20 Loka 2023

Episode 148: Christos Lazaridis discusses brain death

In this episode, Matt sits down with Christos Lazaridis (University of Chicago Medicine) to chat about what brain death is and whether brain death should count as, like, death death.


Modern life support technology really hits its stride in the 1960s, allowing doctors to buy themselves more time to save their patients by connecting them to machines that can assist with breathing, blood oxygenation and/or heart pumping. But the flipside to that incredible technological breakthrough was that the medical community now needed to get more precise about the moment at which a person goes from being alive to being dead. After all, what had previously been a quick window between the two was now, due to life support technology, happening in extreme slow motion. In addition, organ transplanation was becoming more and more commonplace, meaning that it was no longer as simple as saying e.g. ‘I count someone as dead just in case their heart has stopped.’


By the early 80s, the United States had settled on a standard definition for when someone counts as dead, which states that a person is dead if they have either permanently lost consciousness or permanently lost the ability to breathe and pump blood with their heart. That criterion makes certain life-saving practices possible; for example, it legally feasible for organ transplantation to begin once a patient has fallen into an irreversible coma, provided they agreed to donate their organs in advance.


But should a person really count as dead just because they fell into an irreversible coma? We call that condition ‘brain death’, or sometimes the wordier ‘death by neurological criteria’, and we legally count it as a full death. Critics of the notion of brain death say that it should not count as death, because a person in this condition is still biologically alive. Their argument is that saying a person in this condition is dead is just a story we’re telling ourselves.

In this episode, Christos Lazaridis—who is a practicing neurointensivist—argues that even if that is a story we’re telling ourselves, that’s fine, because this is a corner case in which it makes sense for the social/legal status of being dead to come apart from the biological status of being dead.


Tune in to hear why he thinks this is the case!

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jaksot(153)

Episode 137: Bryan Caplan discusses open borders

Episode 137: Bryan Caplan discusses open borders

This month, I talk to Bryan Caplan (George Mason University) about what a world without immigration restrictions could look like. The work discussed in this episode comes out of Bryan’s incredible non...

2 Tammi 20221h 13min

Episode 136: Christian Miller discusses virtue and character

Episode 136: Christian Miller discusses virtue and character

This month, Yuezhen Li and I sit down with Christian Miller (Wake Forest University) to talk about how to be virtuous. Also known as how to be good.‘Virtue’ is sort of an old-timey word. But the conce...

25 Loka 202142min

Episode 135: Sara Protasi discusses the philosophy of envy

Episode 135: Sara Protasi discusses the philosophy of envy

This month, Charlie Wiland and I sit down with Sara Protasi to talk about envy. Which she just came out with a whole book about! Awesome. Click here to download episode 135 of Elucidations.You might t...

15 Heinä 202138min

Episode 134: Claire Kirwin discusses value realism

Episode 134: Claire Kirwin discusses value realism

This month, Josh Kaufman and I talk to Claire Kirwin about whether things are objectively good or bad, or whether it’s all in the eye of the beholder. Professor Kirwin is a fan of peanut butter cup ic...

29 Touko 202140min

Episode 133: Aristotle discusses his philosophy

Episode 133: Aristotle discusses his philosophy

This month, Agnes Callard and I talk to Aristotle about his philosophy, including his work on physics, biology, and ethics. Featuring an introduction by our awesome intern, Noadia Steinmetz-Silber! Cl...

4 Huhti 202145min

Episode 132: Rebecca Valentine discusses queer hackerspaces

Episode 132: Rebecca Valentine discusses queer hackerspaces

This month, we sit down with Rebecca Valentine (co-founder of Queerious Labs) to talk about anarchism, feminism, tech culture, and creative hacking. Hack this, hack that. What is a hacker, anyway? In ...

2 Maalis 202146min

Episode 131: Greg Salmieri discusses egoism and altruism

Episode 131: Greg Salmieri discusses egoism and altruism

This month, Greg Salmieri (University of Texas at Austin) returns for his third appearance on Elucidations, this time to talk about doing right by yourself.What was the last thing you did? The last th...

3 Tammi 202149min

Episode 130: Jessica Tizzard discusses weakness of the will

Episode 130: Jessica Tizzard discusses weakness of the will

This month, Long Dang and I sit down to talk to Jessica Tizzard (University of Connecticut, Storrs) about weakness of the will.You’re at a party hosted by a close friend. It’s been three hours since y...

22 Marras 202036min

Suosittua kategoriassa Yhteiskunta

olipa-kerran-otsikko
siita-on-vaikea-puhua
kaksi-aitia
gogin-ja-janin-maailmanhistoria
i-dont-like-mondays
poks
kolme-kaannekohtaa
antin-palautepalvelu
sita
mamma-mia
yopuolen-tarinoita-2
aikalisa
rss-murhan-anatomia
lahko
loukussa
rss-palmujen-varjoissa
meidan-pitais-puhua
rss-nikotellen
terapeuttiville-qa
mystista