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Jonathan Reisman: The Human Body - From Sex & Sperm to Hands & Heart | Lex Fridman Podcast #297


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We have two tubes that are right next to each other
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in the throat.
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One is for food, drink, saliva, mucus, snot,
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whatever you're gonna swallow.
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All of that stuff must go down the esophagus,
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the food tube and end up in the stomach.
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And right next to the esophagus, millimeters away
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is the windpipe or the trachea,
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which goes down to the lungs.
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Throat, heart, feces, genitals.
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Every organ from moment to moment keeps us alive
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and ensures our survival.
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The genitals are in a way the opposite.
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How would you improve the penis and the vagina?
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The following is a conversation with Jonathan Reisman,
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a physician and writer of The Unseen Body,
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a doctor's journey through the hidden wonders
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of human anatomy.
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He has practiced medicine in some of the world's
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most remote places, including the Alaskan
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and Russian Arctic Antarctica
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and the Himalayan mountains of Nepal.
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This is the Let's Freedmen podcast.
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To support it, please check out our sponsors
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in the description.
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And now, dear friends, here's Jonathan Reisman.
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You wrote a book called Unseen Body,
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all about the human body, the messy, the weird,
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the beautiful and the fascinating details.
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So, from an evolutionary perspective,
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are most parts of the human body a feature or a bug?
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Is it like the optimal solution
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or just a duct tape solution?
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Great question.
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I think that most of the time,
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the way the body works is the best solution.
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I haven't seen many alternatives, so it's hard to compare.
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But I think there's some parts of the body
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that make more sense than others.
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The way our hands work, for instance,
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the muscles are up in the forearm
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and then the tendons kind of come down,
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like strings on a puppet.
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And just the dexterity it gives our hands
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is just really amazing.
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And it's hard to imagine a better tool
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than the human hand to do everything
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from hold things to play piano
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and do a million other daily activities that we do.
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One thing I talk about in the book,
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there's some other body parts
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that seem to be lacking that kind of brilliant design,
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such as the throat, where the food, drink are swallowed
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and air is inhaled and those two paths
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come within millimeters of each other.
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And you slip up once, you laugh while eating,
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or you speak while trying to swallow and you die from choking.
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So it seems less than optimal,
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though I'm not sure it could be better
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from the way we're kind of formed in the womb
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as a beginning as this tiny little tube.
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I don't think it could have been done any better
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or there's any other way to do it,
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but it is an unfortunate thing
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that does lead to some problems.
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So the hand, if I could just link on that for a second.
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You talk about the wisdom of a design in the book.
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What are the important things about the hand?
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It seems like very useful for many things
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and it seems to be quite effective.
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A lot of people think the thumb is foundational
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to the human civilization.
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Is there any truth to that?
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I think that is true.
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Actually, one of the ways in which the importance
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of individual fingers comes to attention
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is when people have severe injuries to their fingers.
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For instance, I have a story in the book about a guy
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whose thumb is nearly ripped off by his dog's leash.
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And when plastic surgeons who are often the ones
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to repair that, sometimes it's orthopedic surgeons,
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they will debate how important is it to save this finger
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or how important is it to save,
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let's say the kind of tip one third of one of your fingers.
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It depends on the length that you'll lose.
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It depends on which finger.
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And so the thumb really is the most crucial
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just for your occupation in most cases
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to just daily life and your ability to get around
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and take care of yourself and others.
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So they'll be more, they're willing to go further,
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do more surgeries, more aggressive therapy
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to save a thumb, let's say,
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than the tip of your pinky finger.
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So in that way, I do think the thumb
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does seem like the most important in many ways.
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It's nice that there's backups.
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I wonder if that's part of the feature
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or is it just the symmetry that nature produces?
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You think the two hands is like,
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is it about the symmetry or is it about backup?
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We'd be much less formidable hunters,
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gatherers, survivors in any way,
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if we only had one hand.
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So I think that is important to have too.
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So we can, you know, even everything
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from kind of spearing an animal
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to firing a bow and arrow to butchering an animal.
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You really need two hands to do it very effectively.
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But can you do a better job with three?
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Great question.
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And we'll never know, perhaps.
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You tweeted, now I'm gonna analyze your tweets,
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like it's Shakespeare sometimes.
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You tweeted that quote,
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millions of years of sex and death
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designed the human body.
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It's like poetry.
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Are those two basic activities
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basically summarize everything
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that resulted in humans on earth?
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So like, is that a good summary
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of the evolutionary process
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that led to this conscious intelligent being
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is death and sex?
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In a way, yeah.
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So sex is how more of us get made, obviously.
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And death is how we get weeded out
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or the gene pool gets weeded out
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and certain genes survive and others don't.
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And, you know, the age at which we die,
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whether it's before we've, you know,
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had sex and reproduced ourselves is a big factor
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and who survives, who doesn't,
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who passes on their genes
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and what the future of the body looks like.
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You know, who lived and who died
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before they were able to be at reproductive age
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a million years ago was pretty important
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in what we look like now.
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And perhaps how we have sex and die now
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will determine what we're shaped like
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unless technology has an even bigger role
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in that, you know, a million years from now.
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So you think that's fundamental to like,
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if there's alien civilizations out there
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that have the same order of magnitude of intelligence
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or a greater, do you think that we will see something
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like sex and something like death?
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So the reproducing and this selection process
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plus the weeding out of the old to make room for the new,
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is that kind of foundational to life?
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I would think so.
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I mean, it sure seems to be on earth, you know,
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perhaps in some distant future
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when medicine is nearing, you know, perfection
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and people can live a really long time.
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Maybe we won't even need to reproduce as much
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or something like that, you know,
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it's hard to even know what life will be like
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in the distant future.
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But I would guess that any alien civilization
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will have the same dependence on who has sex and who dies.
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Well, that's the problem with immortality.
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How are we going to clear out the old
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to make room for the new, which is kind of a,
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it's like a framework of adaptability
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to changing environment.
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So as long as the environment is changing
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and it seems to always be
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because this is the entirety of the earth system
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is a complex system, it seems like you have to adapt
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and to adapt, you have to kill off the stubborn old ideas.
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And unless there's a way to like,
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not become stubborn and old,
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but it feels like the nature of wisdom is stubborn and old.
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Like that's what wisdom is.
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It's like the lessons of life, the lessons
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of experience solidified.
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And the solidification is the thing
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that actually prevents you from reinventing yourself
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to adapt to the new changing conditions.
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But then again, why not have that both of those modes?
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Like have two minds in one person, one immortal person
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that like in the morning, they act like a teenager
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in the evening, they act like an old wise man.
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That's possible.
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So you can imagine within one mind,
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both modes, but those are required.
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You have to have the ability to completely reinvent yourself
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which is what death does in an ugly way
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or a beautiful way depending on your perspective,
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depending whether you take the human perspective
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or the nature's perspective
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and then you have to have the selection.
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So competition, so sexual selection.
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It's an interesting little planet we got.
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What's the weirdest part function concept idea
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about the human body to you?
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We'll talk about fascinating details,
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but what's you, I should say for people
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that should read your book,
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they will come face to face with the fact
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that you do not shy away from the weird
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and the wonderful of the human body.
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It's like, it's fun, but it's honest.
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So given that, sorry to make you pick one of your children
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but what's the weirdest one, would you say?
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The weirdest body part or concept or function.
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So the chapters, you divide it up kind of into parts
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but there could be a thread that connects all of them.
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The weirdness, maybe, or maybe the texture of the substance
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could be the liquids, the solids, I don't know.
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Definitely everybody part and bodily fluid
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has their own kind of both gross and fascinating aspects.
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That's probably why I'm a generalist as a doctor
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and couldn't just, as you said, pick one of my children,
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become a specialist because I like them all.
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I feel like one of the strangest concepts
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about the human body is that kind of the aspects of it
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that are the most universal that we all do
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are the most taboo socially.
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I wouldn't have expected that if I had, you know,
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just looked from the outside, like what we do
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in the bathroom, what we do in the bedroom,
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what we do to our own genitals,
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what we do to our quote unquote private parts,
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they're private, even though it's sort of the thing
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that we all have in common is the most we try to hide
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from other people and don't talk about in polite company.
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I mean, it makes sense as a human living in the society
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but from the outside, it sort of might be surprising.
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How do you make sense of that if you put
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on your Sigmund Freud hat, the thing we all do,
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why do we make that a taboo thing?
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Is it because we like taboos?
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Maybe we get off or maybe our kinks as humans
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is to have taboos and it's kind of efficient
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to have taboos about the things that everybody does.
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Like you can make walking taboo or something.
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I don't know, but just maybe that's what we love.
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That's what's exciting to us is the forbidden.
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I think, yeah, society loves rules for sure.
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They loves some societies more than others.
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They love controlling how you think
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and what you do in public versus in private.
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There's a lot of societies where, for instance,
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parents have sex in front of children.
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For instance, like in a traditional Inupiat Eskimo societies,
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that was sort of normal.
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I mean, but what are you gonna do?
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Go outside in the middle of the winter in the Arctic
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and do it out there, of course not.
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So there's different taboos in different societies.
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Some taboos make perfect sense.
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Some taboos are even public health measures,
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like as I talk in the book about in India,
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where the hands are symmetric, as you said,
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but in Indian culture and the left hand is taboo
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and the right hand is what you use for shaking hands,
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for eating, for other things.
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And the left hand is the dirty hand that you use
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for wiping your own bottom.
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That's the toilet paper is your left hand.
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So while the body is anatomically symmetric,
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the taboo creates this pretty intense asymmetry.
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But for a good reason, you know,
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yet you probably shouldn't be shaking hands with other people
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with the same hand that you use to kind of clean your bottom.
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So in that sense, it makes sense.
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Yeah, maybe the roots of it makes sense,
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but the way it propagates, especially as the times change,
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might not, because you can wash your hands,
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but the taboo remains.
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Right, society is very slow to change.
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What is the most fascinating part,
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function or concept in the human body?
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So, you know, something that fills you with awe.
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I guess the most obvious one is the brain,
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partly because it's so, you know, sort of poorly understood,
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though we understand more than we ever have in the past,
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there's still so much that we don't understand
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about how the lump of matter in our skulls
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kind of creates this subjective experience
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that we all kind of understand quite this really.
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So that's an easy one.
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I would say the kidneys are an underappreciated organ.
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They, the way they tinker with the bloodstream,
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raise levels of this, lower levels of that,
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kind of our entire lives from inside the womb
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until we die is just really incredible.
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And when you look at how much energy
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different organs consume,
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the brain and the kidneys are two of the biggest ones,
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because the brain obviously in us is always active
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and controlling parts of the body,
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but the kidneys are just consuming a ton of energy
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to do what they do.
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They're kind of the unsung hero of the body
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relegated to the back of the abdomen,
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like some forgotten organ, but they're, they are great.
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I did consider being a nephrologist,
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which is a kidney specialist
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because I was so taken with the kidneys,
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but you know, decided I like all the organs,
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so couldn't pick just one.
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So your book is ordered in a particular way.
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It's throat, heart, feces, genitals, liver,
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pineal gland, brain, skin, urine, fat, lungs, eyes, mucus,
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fingers and toes and blood.
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All right, first of all, great, great chapter titles.
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Is there a reason for this ordering or is it all madness?
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There's a few different reasons that went into it.
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I did want to start with the throat for the reason
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that it kind of presents the topic of death,
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which is sort of obviously very important
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in the training of a physician, in the career of physician.
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It's a big part of what I deal with.
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You know, on the first day of medical school,
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we started the dissection of a cadaver
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in the class called Anatomy Lab.
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And so in a way, we were kind of thrown right in there
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in the beginning, like this is the end of the human story,
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you know, understand this and then we sort of backed up
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to the beginning with embryology
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and reproduction and stuff.
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So it's kind of like we got,
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and I got thrown into that right away,
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right in the beginning, kind of like here's a dead body,
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now start cutting it apart and learn the name
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and function of absolutely every bit of flesh.
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How did that change you,
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that first experience of the cold honesty of human biology?
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All right, that's exactly what it was,
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it's cold honesty about the kind of the story
link |
00:15:05.020
of each individual human body.
link |
00:15:06.780
It has an end and that's it.
link |
00:15:08.340
I think that, well, actually before the end of that first day,
link |
00:15:13.180
so what we did on that first day
link |
00:15:14.300
was study the superficial muscles of the back,
link |
00:15:16.420
like the lats or latissimus dorsi and some other muscles.
link |
00:15:19.180
You know, we cut through the skin of the back,
link |
00:15:21.380
my cadaver was laying face down on this metal gurney.
link |
00:15:23.980
We pulled back the kind of plastic sheets
link |
00:15:25.900
that would keep him moist for the next four months
link |
00:15:28.300
as we dissected him, cut through the skin on his back
link |
00:15:31.100
and then started dissecting
link |
00:15:32.140
through the superficial muscles of the back.
link |
00:15:34.140
And that was really all we saw that first day.
link |
00:15:36.460
We didn't get any deeper, didn't enter the abdominal
link |
00:15:38.660
or chest cavity to see internal organs,
link |
00:15:41.420
but I was so fascinated with this sort of
link |
00:15:44.540
behind the scenes look at how things work in the body,
link |
00:15:48.020
how you move your arms, how you arch your back.
link |
00:15:50.420
You know, these are the muscles that do it
link |
00:15:52.500
that I decided I wanted to donate my own body
link |
00:15:54.740
for the same purpose.
link |
00:15:56.260
So I made that decision literally
link |
00:15:57.940
before the end of that first day of class
link |
00:16:00.140
and I'm still sticking to it.
link |
00:16:02.980
So someday there'll be a medical student
link |
00:16:05.420
that can watch and listen to this podcast
link |
00:16:09.300
while dissecting your body.
link |
00:16:11.420
It could happen.
link |
00:16:12.260
They might not know that that person they're listening to
link |
00:16:14.460
on the podcast will be the carcass in front of them,
link |
00:16:17.180
but like we don't, we never learned it.
link |
00:16:18.940
The universe will know.
link |
00:16:20.140
The universe will know.
link |
00:16:20.980
And they will acknowledge the irony
link |
00:16:23.700
or the humor, the absurdity of that.
link |
00:16:26.460
The universe will chuckle,
link |
00:16:27.740
but the medical student won't know
link |
00:16:29.860
because they never, as I did not learn any, you know,
link |
00:16:33.340
personal information about the person,
link |
00:16:35.700
only what I could glean from looking inside him,
link |
00:16:37.740
which actually tells you quite a bit.
link |
00:16:38.980
I knew he was a smoker.
link |
00:16:40.140
I knew he had coronary artery disease.
link |
00:16:41.860
You know, you get a window into,
link |
00:16:43.980
I knew he was overweight.
link |
00:16:44.980
You get a window into people's lives
link |
00:16:46.620
just by looking in their bodies after death.
link |
00:16:49.580
Other cadavers in the lab, not my own,
link |
00:16:53.860
or I shared one with three other students,
link |
00:16:55.820
but other cadavers.
link |
00:16:56.740
Some had, you know, metal joints,
link |
00:16:58.940
like a knee replacement.
link |
00:17:00.060
Some had a kidney missing.
link |
00:17:01.460
So they probably, and we could tell it was surgically removed,
link |
00:17:04.460
not that he was born with one.
link |
00:17:07.020
And we could tell that he probably had a kidney tumor
link |
00:17:08.980
or cancer that was removed.
link |
00:17:10.100
So you do get an insight into people's lives
link |
00:17:12.580
from, you know, picking them apart after they're dead,
link |
00:17:16.060
but you don't know their name
link |
00:17:17.260
or what podcast they've been on.
link |
00:17:19.580
So the, as the book title says, unseen body.
link |
00:17:23.780
So it tells some kind of story of your life.
link |
00:17:27.860
So it does capture the decisions you've made in your life,
link |
00:17:30.900
the things you've done.
link |
00:17:32.460
That might be kind of secret to that person
link |
00:17:37.500
and maybe to a few others that knew him or her well.
link |
00:17:41.700
It's so fascinating.
link |
00:17:42.860
So what kind of things can it reveal?
link |
00:17:46.020
Like what kind of choices in terms of the injuries,
link |
00:17:49.860
the catastrophic events,
link |
00:17:53.420
the lifestyle choices of smoking and diet
link |
00:17:56.900
and all those kinds of things, what can you see?
link |
00:17:59.820
What kind of history can you see about the human before you?
link |
00:18:03.460
So all those things you mentioned are things you can see.
link |
00:18:05.900
You can, you know, take the skin, for example, right?
link |
00:18:08.220
Most things that happen to us leave a mark, you know,
link |
00:18:11.900
as I say, a kind of a story written in the language of scar
link |
00:18:15.340
where it tells you injuries you've had.
link |
00:18:16.980
And same thing with animals.
link |
00:18:18.020
You know, I've seen deer hides that have marks
link |
00:18:21.340
that look like they're made by maybe a barbed wire fence,
link |
00:18:23.740
something like that.
link |
00:18:24.580
You can tell, you know, sometimes it's conjecture,
link |
00:18:27.900
but you can sort of imagine what might have happened
link |
00:18:30.100
to cause that perhaps, you know, two bucks were fighting
link |
00:18:32.660
and one got injured with an antler.
link |
00:18:34.820
And the same with humans.
link |
00:18:36.300
You know, I have scars on my body
link |
00:18:37.700
and when I notice them, I remember what happened.
link |
00:18:40.820
You know, I got a big cut on my hand when I was 13
link |
00:18:44.220
and it's still there.
link |
00:18:45.140
And I remember what happened, you know,
link |
00:18:47.980
every time I look at it.
link |
00:18:48.940
And so in that way, only I might know that story,
link |
00:18:52.900
but other people, you know, when they dissect me
link |
00:18:54.860
and notice the same scars,
link |
00:18:56.060
they can kind of, it can fire their imagination
link |
00:18:58.100
as my cadaver, you know, did for me.
link |
00:19:00.140
They know that there is a story there.
link |
00:19:02.780
That's such an interesting way
link |
00:19:03.980
that the skin does tell a story.
link |
00:19:07.060
Both tattoos and scars.
link |
00:19:09.740
Right.
link |
00:19:10.580
And even the fun you've had
link |
00:19:12.100
and some of the damage you've done.
link |
00:19:14.140
Right.
link |
00:19:14.980
And even when I evaluate a patient,
link |
00:19:16.940
I can use scars to help me make medical decisions.
link |
00:19:20.540
So for instance, someone that comes in
link |
00:19:21.900
with abdominal pain into the emergency room,
link |
00:19:24.280
you can see scars on their abdomen
link |
00:19:26.060
that tell you about, you know,
link |
00:19:27.420
the past kind of activities of a surgeon, perhaps.
link |
00:19:30.620
I know, I recognize the scars that are left
link |
00:19:33.420
when someone has their gallbladder removed,
link |
00:19:35.220
the scars when someone has their appendix removed,
link |
00:19:37.180
when maybe when someone's had a hysterectomy.
link |
00:19:38.940
And that can tell you what it might be
link |
00:19:41.300
or what it isn't, you know,
link |
00:19:42.660
if someone doesn't have an appendix,
link |
00:19:43.980
their abdominal pain is not appendicitis, end of story.
link |
00:19:46.660
So in that way, I'm sort of looking at these,
link |
00:19:49.740
the tracks of the footprints of past surgeries
link |
00:19:52.740
to tell me what might and might not be the cause
link |
00:19:55.300
of this patient's abdominal pain,
link |
00:19:56.500
which is kind of my main job in the ER,
link |
00:19:58.180
is figuring out what's causing it and to help them.
link |
00:20:01.660
Is there ways to get more data about the human body
link |
00:20:05.540
as we look into the future of medicine biology,
link |
00:20:08.780
that will be helpful to fill in some of the gaps
link |
00:20:11.260
of the story?
link |
00:20:12.680
So, you know, you have companies,
link |
00:20:17.140
you have research that looks at, you know,
link |
00:20:20.580
collection of blood over long periods of time
link |
00:20:23.540
to see sort of, you know,
link |
00:20:26.140
paint the picture of what's happening in your body,
link |
00:20:28.140
mostly to help with lifestyle decisions,
link |
00:20:29.980
but also to, you know, to anticipate things
link |
00:20:33.500
that can go wrong and all that kind of stuff.
link |
00:20:35.420
Is there, can you just speak to a greater digital world
link |
00:20:40.020
that we're stepping in,
link |
00:20:40.860
how that can help tell a richer story?
link |
00:20:45.120
I certainly think that we have more data
link |
00:20:48.740
than we know what to do with right now,
link |
00:20:50.380
especially with kind of direct to consumer medical devices,
link |
00:20:54.300
you know, smartwatches, et cetera,
link |
00:20:55.900
that are just collecting these reams of data.
link |
00:20:58.780
I have not seen them put to,
link |
00:21:01.220
I think the eventual use that they will.
link |
00:21:04.220
I think that the potential is sort of just, you know,
link |
00:21:08.420
unimaginable and I hope we're heading into a new age
link |
00:21:11.700
where, you know, you can determine, for instance,
link |
00:21:14.180
is a person gonna have more of the dangerous side effects
link |
00:21:17.100
to a drug based on their genetics,
link |
00:21:19.140
or are they gonna tolerate one drug better
link |
00:21:21.780
than the other, you know, based on their genetics?
link |
00:21:24.620
And we are slowly moving into that age,
link |
00:21:27.740
and especially the age of kind of completely synthesizing
link |
00:21:30.740
drugs in a lab, you know, much like, for instance,
link |
00:21:36.260
some of the COVID vaccines actually,
link |
00:21:38.020
like Moderna never had the virus in their lab.
link |
00:21:41.140
They made that vaccine completely
link |
00:21:42.580
without ever having the virus themselves,
link |
00:21:44.160
just by having the genome, which is sort of astounding.
link |
00:21:46.580
And there's a lot of potential going forward, you know,
link |
00:21:49.260
based on that technology and some others.
link |
00:21:51.220
Well, I didn't know that.
link |
00:21:52.060
So they basically, it's all in the computer,
link |
00:21:53.980
it's computational.
link |
00:21:54.980
Right, you have the genetic code,
link |
00:21:56.300
you have tremendous power,
link |
00:21:57.580
even if you don't have the organism itself.
link |
00:21:59.900
What do you make of Elizabeth Holmes and efforts like that?
link |
00:22:04.660
First of all, I'm a curious,
link |
00:22:11.820
I'm drawn to the darkness in human nature
link |
00:22:16.300
because that somehow reveals
link |
00:22:20.380
the full spectrum of what humans could be.
link |
00:22:23.100
So there's a lot of sort of controversial thoughts
link |
00:22:25.540
about who she is and her efforts and so on.
link |
00:22:28.580
I think you may have even tweeted about it,
link |
00:22:30.940
but I've read a lot of your tweets, so I'm now forgetting.
link |
00:22:33.940
But what do you make of her and both those efforts
link |
00:22:37.460
and the charlatans that sort of snake oil salesman
link |
00:22:42.460
that promise those efforts to do more than they currently can?
link |
00:22:49.980
I think that her, you know, that goal that she had,
link |
00:22:54.260
that she created there and I was to try to achieve
link |
00:22:57.100
to use less blood in tests is a very worthy goal
link |
00:23:00.740
and a huge frontier that we have not achieved
link |
00:23:03.980
and that I hope we will achieve.
link |
00:23:05.540
So I understand why, you know,
link |
00:23:08.340
someone describes what a huge step forward that would be
link |
00:23:11.580
and it would be indeed,
link |
00:23:13.220
I understand why people put a ton of money behind it.
link |
00:23:15.700
Can you describe what was the promise?
link |
00:23:17.900
What do we even talk about with Theranos?
link |
00:23:20.340
What just for people who don't know?
link |
00:23:22.380
So Theranos is a company that was basically started
link |
00:23:25.620
to revolutionize the way medical blood tests are done,
link |
00:23:29.740
both to use a whole lot less blood in doing it.
link |
00:23:33.060
You know, if anyone's ever been to the doctor
link |
00:23:34.860
and had five to 10 tubes of blood removed from them,
link |
00:23:37.620
it can be quite surprising how much they take out
link |
00:23:41.500
and that's the limitation of our technology
link |
00:23:45.060
that we need those volumes of blood
link |
00:23:46.420
to run all the tests that we want to.
link |
00:23:47.820
And so the promise of Theranos was that
link |
00:23:50.100
perhaps with a single drop of blood,
link |
00:23:51.860
we would be able to know as much about the person's,
link |
00:23:55.020
the condition of their body without drawing all that blood
link |
00:23:58.500
and thereby, you know, there would be these devices
link |
00:24:01.620
she was gonna create that would sort of do it.
link |
00:24:03.740
You put a drop of blood in it and spits out everything
link |
00:24:05.660
you ever wanted to know about what's in your bloodstream
link |
00:24:07.500
and in a way that would make it so much easier,
link |
00:24:09.900
you know, it could be, you could have one in your home
link |
00:24:11.820
theoretically and you, I don't know why you'd wonder
link |
00:24:14.260
what your potassium level is on any given day,
link |
00:24:16.220
but you could check if you wanted to.
link |
00:24:18.980
And so that goal is very worthy.
link |
00:24:21.300
You know, I put that goal up there with the frontier
link |
00:24:25.460
of making painkillers that are as good as opioids
link |
00:24:27.580
without the addictive quality.
link |
00:24:28.900
You know, that would be such a huge revolution
link |
00:24:30.660
if we did have that in medicine,
link |
00:24:32.100
but particularly for me,
link |
00:24:34.420
because I trained in both pediatrics and internal medicine,
link |
00:24:37.420
so I learned to care for both children and adults.
link |
00:24:40.260
In children, we do draw much less blood.
link |
00:24:42.140
They have a much lower blood volume
link |
00:24:43.820
and we use these tiny little tubes to draw their blood
link |
00:24:47.340
and we seemingly get equivalent information
link |
00:24:49.980
out of the larger tubes we draw from adults.
link |
00:24:52.180
And I'm still unclear to be honest,
link |
00:24:53.580
why we can't draw that little amount of blood from adults.
link |
00:24:56.300
It seems technically possible.
link |
00:24:58.220
I don't know what the barriers are.
link |
00:24:59.420
I'm sure there are or else we'd be doing it.
link |
00:25:02.220
But I do think that it is a very important goal
link |
00:25:04.820
and if Theranos had done it,
link |
00:25:06.060
they would have really revolutionized
link |
00:25:07.380
the practice of medicine.
link |
00:25:09.020
So to return to that cadaver that first day
link |
00:25:16.180
when you got to meet with a dead,
link |
00:25:18.340
with a human body that's no longer living.
link |
00:25:21.100
So how quickly did it take for you to get used to sort of,
link |
00:25:27.940
you said, looking at the surface muscles of the back.
link |
00:25:31.060
I mean, that can be overwhelming as a thought
link |
00:25:35.020
and people listening to this that have never dissected
link |
00:25:37.500
anything might be overwhelmed by that thought.
link |
00:25:40.220
So like how quickly were you able to get used
link |
00:25:43.660
to the brutal honesty of the biology before you?
link |
00:25:48.540
For me, it did not take long at all.
link |
00:25:50.300
I guess I've never been a squeamish person.
link |
00:25:53.100
So for me, it was kind of riveting
link |
00:25:55.140
and fascinating right from the first moment.
link |
00:25:56.980
But I do know some of my fellow classmates
link |
00:26:00.260
did have some trouble with it.
link |
00:26:01.820
Some of them I heard had nightmares in the first few weeks
link |
00:26:05.740
of anatomy lab, but then everyone,
link |
00:26:08.940
as far as I know, got used to it.
link |
00:26:10.620
And that was also actually a big lesson for me
link |
00:26:13.500
that it's pretty amazing what people can get used to
link |
00:26:15.860
in their daily lives.
link |
00:26:16.700
And I kind of extrapolated that to people living through war
link |
00:26:20.180
and through just terrible situations
link |
00:26:23.220
and living under oppressive regimes.
link |
00:26:26.860
And it really is amazing what people can get used to,
link |
00:26:30.060
almost anything.
link |
00:26:31.500
But you know, in war, people often come back
link |
00:26:35.740
and they have nightmares.
link |
00:26:37.300
They suffer through it.
link |
00:26:38.220
There's PTSD, there's a lot of complicated feelings
link |
00:26:41.660
with that.
link |
00:26:43.860
Are echoes of those same complicated feelings possible
link |
00:26:47.740
in the case of training to be and becoming a doctor?
link |
00:26:51.980
It's a good point.
link |
00:26:52.820
Yeah, I think sometimes just as a barbed wire fence
link |
00:26:56.340
can leave a scar on your skin,
link |
00:26:58.580
emotional psychological experiences
link |
00:27:01.020
can leave a mark on your brain or your memory.
link |
00:27:03.860
And I think that definitely could be a problem
link |
00:27:09.900
in medical training.
link |
00:27:10.740
You do see a lot of things that are very shocking,
link |
00:27:14.180
very repulsive things that you'd never forget.
link |
00:27:16.980
I know one of those students that had nightmares initially
link |
00:27:20.020
went on to be a surgeon.
link |
00:27:21.460
So I imagine she's not having the PTSD
link |
00:27:23.780
of kind of seeing inside her first dead body
link |
00:27:25.980
because she sees inside them all day every day now.
link |
00:27:28.580
But I'm sure it could.
link |
00:27:30.180
You know, we go on to see so many kind of grosser
link |
00:27:34.420
or more shocking things in medical training
link |
00:27:37.180
through medical school and then by working
link |
00:27:38.660
with actual living patients,
link |
00:27:40.460
not just dead and embalmed bodies.
link |
00:27:43.580
So I do think that things can leave a mark,
link |
00:27:46.660
but I don't think that initial cadaver
link |
00:27:49.020
would be the most traumatic.
link |
00:27:51.940
Yeah, but maybe some of that trauma,
link |
00:27:54.620
the demons make you a better surgeon.
link |
00:27:57.020
Just like some of your own psychological trauma
link |
00:28:00.540
might make you a better psychiatrist.
link |
00:28:03.140
Returning to the ordering.
link |
00:28:05.860
Is it order or is it chaos?
link |
00:28:07.980
To the ordering of the chapters from throat and heart
link |
00:28:12.500
and feces and genitals all the way to fingers
link |
00:28:14.940
and toes and blood.
link |
00:28:16.780
So I did mention that, you know,
link |
00:28:18.540
throat was the first one because I kind of wanted
link |
00:28:20.380
to throw the reader right into the brutal honesty of death.
link |
00:28:24.580
And I followed it up with feces as the third chapter
link |
00:28:27.260
and in a way partly to also throw them right
link |
00:28:30.260
into the deep end of how I like discussing parts
link |
00:28:34.020
of the body and revealing their gross
link |
00:28:36.380
and fascinating aspects.
link |
00:28:37.900
So I didn't want to hide anything.
link |
00:28:39.660
You know, when you train to be a doctor,
link |
00:28:41.260
everything is on the table, literally in the cadaver lab,
link |
00:28:44.540
but also just, you know, you deal with blood
link |
00:28:46.860
and piss and vomit and feces.
link |
00:28:48.820
And that's kind of the medium of your craft.
link |
00:28:51.260
And he has the medium of the craft, that's right.
link |
00:28:54.780
Right.
link |
00:28:55.620
Like if you're a painter, this is the paint that you wear.
link |
00:28:59.980
Exactly.
link |
00:29:00.820
And then you have to create a masterpiece with it.
link |
00:29:04.540
Like almost like a dance,
link |
00:29:05.700
because there's multiple painters.
link |
00:29:06.900
One of the painters is the biology.
link |
00:29:08.900
So let's return to throat.
link |
00:29:10.380
You mentioned it's a weird one.
link |
00:29:12.060
So first of all, a friend of mine said,
link |
00:29:14.740
I just see humans as like a bunch of holes
link |
00:29:19.660
that just walk around.
link |
00:29:24.020
Not untrue.
link |
00:29:25.580
It's a funny way to look at humans.
link |
00:29:27.460
So we have ears, we have nose, we have mouth.
link |
00:29:31.700
We have the sexual holes, vagina penis.
link |
00:29:36.980
And then, you know, what's the medical term
link |
00:29:40.540
for your asshole?
link |
00:29:42.700
Anus.
link |
00:29:43.540
Anus, thank you.
link |
00:29:45.500
This is a very technical discussion.
link |
00:29:47.220
The rectum's further in, don't confuse the two.
link |
00:29:49.740
Oh, that's very important.
link |
00:29:51.580
Is there a difference between throat and mouth?
link |
00:29:54.020
By the way, so when you say throat,
link |
00:29:56.100
are we talking about when that hole
link |
00:29:58.260
actually becomes tubular?
link |
00:30:00.900
The throat, I would count as just sort of the very back
link |
00:30:03.620
of the, you know, the back of the mouth,
link |
00:30:06.140
where the nose also comes down and meets it,
link |
00:30:08.620
where the tonsils are and the uvula.
link |
00:30:11.420
But you're right that, you know, we are a bunch of holes,
link |
00:30:13.220
but more accurately, we're a tube, right?
link |
00:30:15.180
We start in the womb as kind of this microscopic little disc,
link |
00:30:18.660
almost like a, you know, a flatbread.
link |
00:30:21.980
And then we roll almost like a burrito into this tube.
link |
00:30:25.980
And we're a simple microscopic tube.
link |
00:30:27.660
And from there, we grow into this bigger and bigger tube
link |
00:30:30.220
and we become more complicated.
link |
00:30:32.180
And each end of the tube does split into various holes.
link |
00:30:35.140
So all the holes you mentioned at the front end of the tube,
link |
00:30:37.180
the front end of our body, right?
link |
00:30:38.380
It splits into the nose, the mouth, the ears,
link |
00:30:41.500
the sinuses, the tube to the lungs, which is the windpipe,
link |
00:30:46.020
the tube down to the stomach, which is the esophagus.
link |
00:30:48.780
And then the other end of the tube splits as well.
link |
00:30:51.540
You know, men end up with two holes
link |
00:30:53.940
and women end up with three holes, you know,
link |
00:30:56.740
the urethra, the vagina and the anus and men,
link |
00:30:59.140
just, you know, the urethra
link |
00:31:00.620
and kind of the reproductive system, they share a whole.
link |
00:31:03.380
So I'm learning a lot today.
link |
00:31:05.860
It really is incredible that you start from sperm and an egg
link |
00:31:10.180
and you have some DNA information.
link |
00:31:12.380
And from that, the building project begins.
link |
00:31:15.540
And then what that leads to is like a pizza dough
link |
00:31:20.900
and then you roll it into a tube and that tube,
link |
00:31:25.340
then eventually sort of becomes more and more complicated
link |
00:31:31.740
and gets eyes and a brain and then can create a Twitter account.
link |
00:31:36.740
So from, it's really incredible that we're just a fancy tube.
link |
00:31:42.260
Right, we are.
link |
00:31:43.580
And we sprout eyes and a brain and a sense of smell and taste
link |
00:31:47.580
pretty much to regulate what comes in the front of the tube.
link |
00:31:50.580
You know, we don't want to eat anything dangerous or poisonous.
link |
00:31:53.740
You know, we want to choose what we eat,
link |
00:31:55.740
even choose who we kiss.
link |
00:31:57.140
Well, we seem to be motivated
link |
00:31:58.540
by what comes out of the tube as well in part.
link |
00:32:02.580
That's not just output, it's a feedback mechanism.
link |
00:32:05.940
It's a feedback mechanism, seemingly.
link |
00:32:07.900
Like we're also monitoring the functioning of the output.
link |
00:32:11.100
We're not just obsessed about the input.
link |
00:32:14.260
We're very obsessed with the output.
link |
00:32:15.700
You're absolutely right about that.
link |
00:32:17.940
People, you know, have medical complaints about their output
link |
00:32:21.460
very often that are, you know,
link |
00:32:22.940
I never, I never cease to be surprised
link |
00:32:24.860
by a new kind of complaint or observation about the output.
link |
00:32:28.100
I think people have gone to wars over the output
link |
00:32:32.380
and maybe sometimes the lack of the output
link |
00:32:35.020
or the desire for output
link |
00:32:36.700
for the particular other humans that you fancy,
link |
00:32:41.020
the brain and the eyes that sprouted
link |
00:32:44.380
somehow convinced the rest of the body
link |
00:32:48.140
that this one particular other tube is fanciful.
link |
00:32:51.820
So you're going to go to major wars
link |
00:32:53.460
and lead global suffering because of the fancy
link |
00:32:57.460
and the desire for additional output with the other tube.
link |
00:33:01.660
Okay, so that's, so on the throat, that part of the tube.
link |
00:33:09.500
Is it, you said the design is not,
link |
00:33:13.580
you could have thought of maybe a little bit better options
link |
00:33:16.260
because it's too multifunctional.
link |
00:33:18.340
Is that, can you sort of elaborate
link |
00:33:20.820
on the multifunctional nature of this part
link |
00:33:23.780
or a lot of parts of the human body multifunctional
link |
00:33:26.460
or do you find that it's more specialization
link |
00:33:29.500
is going to get the job done better?
link |
00:33:32.260
There is a lot of organs, for instance,
link |
00:33:34.060
do have multiple functions.
link |
00:33:35.740
The pancreas has two, is like two organs in one,
link |
00:33:39.540
one secretes hormones like insulin into the bloodstream
link |
00:33:42.460
and the other aspect of it secretes digestive enzymes
link |
00:33:45.940
into the gut to help you digest and absorb food.
link |
00:33:49.180
The liver is like 15 organs in one.
link |
00:33:51.060
It's just amazing how many different things it does.
link |
00:33:53.820
But the throat, so basically the problem with the throat
link |
00:33:57.460
is as I said, we have two tubes
link |
00:33:59.900
that are right next to each other in the throat.
link |
00:34:01.860
One is for food, drink, saliva, mucus, snot,
link |
00:34:05.380
whatever you're gonna swallow.
link |
00:34:07.060
All of that stuff must go down the esophagus,
link |
00:34:09.260
the food tube and end up in the stomach.
link |
00:34:11.420
And right next to the esophagus, millimeters away
link |
00:34:14.420
is the windpipe or the trachea,
link |
00:34:16.300
which goes down to the lungs.
link |
00:34:18.380
And your throat does these daily gymnastics
link |
00:34:21.860
to keep everything but air out of the windpipe
link |
00:34:26.340
because you slip up once and you can die.
link |
00:34:30.260
You can choke, you laugh or speak while eating
link |
00:34:32.820
and it's curtains, unfortunately.
link |
00:34:35.100
So it seems like every aspect of the body
link |
00:34:37.380
when I was learning about it in med school
link |
00:34:38.820
seems so brilliant and so perfectly designed by evolution
link |
00:34:43.460
or whoever you might think designed it
link |
00:34:46.340
to favor survival, to enhance life,
link |
00:34:51.660
but the throat seemed the opposite.
link |
00:34:53.700
It seemed set up almost for failure.
link |
00:34:56.700
And we developed all these mechanisms as a compensation.
link |
00:35:00.340
We have the gag reflex whenever food or something
link |
00:35:04.020
is headed towards your airpipe, your windpipe
link |
00:35:07.100
or down to your lungs.
link |
00:35:08.140
Your throat has this rejection of it.
link |
00:35:10.660
It pushes it away in a gag reflex.
link |
00:35:13.180
At the same time, we have a cough,
link |
00:35:14.500
which is something our body does
link |
00:35:16.380
when something inappropriate does get down the windpipe.
link |
00:35:19.060
When we get a little food down the wrong pipe,
link |
00:35:22.260
we end up coughing and the coughing does
link |
00:35:24.740
usually flush it out and get rid of it.
link |
00:35:27.340
We even have something called the mucus elevator
link |
00:35:29.940
in our lungs, which is this constant flow of mucus
link |
00:35:33.740
up the airways, up to the trachea,
link |
00:35:35.820
dragging with it all kinds of particulates
link |
00:35:37.940
that we've inhaled and perhaps some food
link |
00:35:40.100
that went down the wrong pipe
link |
00:35:41.220
and drags it up into the throat and we swallow it
link |
00:35:44.260
kind of unconsciously all day every day is the truth.
link |
00:35:47.140
Even the mechanism of swallowing is super complicated.
link |
00:35:50.180
It uses a number of cranial nerves.
link |
00:35:52.260
It uses over 15 different muscles.
link |
00:35:55.540
It's this coordinated act to keep food out of the airway.
link |
00:36:00.380
You can see someone's Adam's apple in their neck
link |
00:36:02.420
kind of jump upward when they swallow,
link |
00:36:05.180
which helps lift the airway up against the epiglottis,
link |
00:36:09.260
which plugs it closed and allows food or swallow drink
link |
00:36:12.980
to kind of skirt just past it.
link |
00:36:15.020
But every time we swallow,
link |
00:36:16.540
those things do come within millimeters
link |
00:36:18.580
of going down the wrong pipe
link |
00:36:19.780
and it's just thanks to these kind of compensations,
link |
00:36:22.420
these adaptations we have to the danger of the throat
link |
00:36:24.780
that keeps us alive.
link |
00:36:27.220
As I actually took a sip of water,
link |
00:36:30.140
it makes you appreciate the wonderful machinery of it all.
link |
00:36:36.980
By the way, we have pulled up your Instagram
link |
00:36:39.580
that people should follow.
link |
00:36:41.100
You have a post about the throat
link |
00:36:44.140
and just showing so many different components
link |
00:36:47.660
from the tongue to the trachea, the esophagus,
link |
00:36:52.300
just the entire machinery of it all.
link |
00:36:56.500
The teeth for the chewing, it's so interesting.
link |
00:37:00.460
And so a lot of the structure of this,
link |
00:37:02.820
the anatomy and the physiology,
link |
00:37:05.500
does it echo other mammals?
link |
00:37:08.860
So are we just basically borrowing
link |
00:37:10.780
a lot of stuff from evolution
link |
00:37:12.060
and maybe making small adjustments,
link |
00:37:14.500
maybe due to the fact that we're not using our mouth
link |
00:37:17.300
to murder things as other predators might?
link |
00:37:22.500
We use our thumbs.
link |
00:37:23.780
Exactly, we have hands, we don't need to bite them.
link |
00:37:26.820
Yeah, there's a lot of overlap
link |
00:37:28.260
between different animals,
link |
00:37:29.820
which I find very comforting and fascinating.
link |
00:37:32.940
Someone asked me,
link |
00:37:33.780
is there any animal in which the throat is better designed?
link |
00:37:36.660
And my first thought was whales,
link |
00:37:38.540
because the blow holes kind of up on the top of their head.
link |
00:37:40.740
So I was thinking, oh, maybe they are more separate.
link |
00:37:44.260
But when I looked into it,
link |
00:37:45.220
I actually know the paths do come very close,
link |
00:37:48.260
just like in us.
link |
00:37:49.100
And I saw a paper about some new discovered organ
link |
00:37:53.260
that actually helps keep food and drink
link |
00:37:55.340
out of the airway in whales
link |
00:37:56.740
that they hadn't ever noticed before.
link |
00:37:58.260
So it's a different mechanism,
link |
00:37:59.980
but the same kind of basic problem
link |
00:38:01.860
is that we're tubes and the air tube
link |
00:38:04.580
and food tube are right next to each other.
link |
00:38:06.540
How well do we understand,
link |
00:38:07.980
so just even lingering this little part,
link |
00:38:10.380
is there still some mysteries
link |
00:38:12.100
about the complexity of the system?
link |
00:38:13.780
Because you mentioned just even for swallowing
link |
00:38:16.380
all these parts in the brain that are responsible
link |
00:38:18.500
and all the different things that have to,
link |
00:38:20.700
like an orchestra play together.
link |
00:38:22.740
Do we have a good sense
link |
00:38:24.620
from both a medical perspective
link |
00:38:26.300
and a biology perspective,
link |
00:38:27.860
or is there still mysteries?
link |
00:38:29.060
There's definitely still mysteries.
link |
00:38:30.420
We understand a lot about, for instance,
link |
00:38:32.420
how the swallowing mechanism is coordinated
link |
00:38:35.300
in the brainstem,
link |
00:38:37.140
sometimes using some higher levels of the brain.
link |
00:38:40.100
But it is a very thoughtless thing,
link |
00:38:42.020
as you mentioned when you drank the water.
link |
00:38:43.980
It's not something we have to think about, thankfully,
link |
00:38:45.820
or we'd be thinking about it all day.
link |
00:38:49.060
There's a lot we don't understand
link |
00:38:50.100
about the basic mechanisms,
link |
00:38:51.420
perhaps about how the nerves fire
link |
00:38:53.940
and how they coordinate on the microscopic level,
link |
00:38:58.260
how ions rush into and out of nerve cells
link |
00:39:01.220
to kind of create that electrical signal.
link |
00:39:03.180
But we sure understand a heck of a lot,
link |
00:39:05.660
and it's very fascinating.
link |
00:39:07.860
So moving on to chapter two, we'll jump around.
link |
00:39:12.140
And you actually said the liver does a lot of things.
link |
00:39:17.180
I also saw you retweet something
link |
00:39:21.100
where it said, you know,
link |
00:39:23.420
showing that the liver is bigger than the heart,
link |
00:39:25.900
which is the body or the universe's way of saying
link |
00:39:28.980
you should drink more and care less, which is a good line.
link |
00:39:32.740
So you give props, like you said,
link |
00:39:36.900
to the kidney, to the liver,
link |
00:39:38.140
to the maybe, to the organs, to the parts
link |
00:39:41.340
that don't often get as much credit as they deserve.
link |
00:39:44.820
But let us go for time to the human heart.
link |
00:39:50.300
We'll get chest pain.
link |
00:39:52.860
We talk about it when we talk about love for some reason.
link |
00:39:55.700
Why do we talk about the heart when we talk about love?
link |
00:39:58.700
There sometimes can actually be some chest pain involved
link |
00:40:01.500
in love.
link |
00:40:02.340
I remember when I was a med student,
link |
00:40:03.740
I was very smitten with another medical student.
link |
00:40:06.780
He was totally brilliant and beautiful.
link |
00:40:09.260
And it actually does cause this kind of burning
link |
00:40:11.700
in your chest.
link |
00:40:12.540
I don't know what that is.
link |
00:40:13.700
I don't think it's from the heart itself.
link |
00:40:16.020
I don't know if it was like acid reflux
link |
00:40:17.740
because I was so nervous.
link |
00:40:18.580
I'm not really sure.
link |
00:40:20.020
But I definitely felt something in my chest
link |
00:40:22.500
whenever I saw her.
link |
00:40:23.660
I don't know what that is,
link |
00:40:24.700
but you could see why someone might think,
link |
00:40:26.740
oh, you know, maybe it is your heart.
link |
00:40:28.140
That's kind of the most prominent organ in your chest.
link |
00:40:30.340
And when people come to the ER with chest pain,
link |
00:40:32.220
you know, the big question is, is it my heart?
link |
00:40:33.940
And that's my main job is figuring out if it is or not.
link |
00:40:36.900
So I could see why, you know,
link |
00:40:39.460
the way ancients saw the functions of different organs
link |
00:40:42.260
is fascinating, but often hard to explain.
link |
00:40:46.300
Would it be fair to say that if you look at the entirety
link |
00:40:49.700
of human history, the way most people die
link |
00:40:53.260
has to do with the heart?
link |
00:40:55.460
Well, like in America today,
link |
00:40:58.100
cardiovascular disease and coronary artery disease
link |
00:41:01.460
is one of the most common,
link |
00:41:02.580
perhaps the most common cause of death,
link |
00:41:04.780
you know, a hundred years ago, 200 years ago,
link |
00:41:07.300
it was probably not, people were not living as long
link |
00:41:09.700
and people were dying of infections
link |
00:41:11.420
that we tend to die less of these days.
link |
00:41:14.220
Sure.
link |
00:41:15.260
That's true, but in terms of things to stab.
link |
00:41:18.940
So I'm trying to sort of introspect like,
link |
00:41:21.140
why talk about the heart and love?
link |
00:41:25.500
My thought would be that is because
link |
00:41:28.260
the heart was seen as the most important organism.
link |
00:41:31.780
It would be like the origin of life comes from the heart,
link |
00:41:35.740
the originator of life and the way you figure that out
link |
00:41:38.340
from sort of an ancient perspective
link |
00:41:40.620
is when you stab things, what is likely to lead to issues.
link |
00:41:46.100
It's like, it's possible to imagine that the brain
link |
00:41:48.740
is not as special as we might think
link |
00:41:50.980
from when you don't understand modern biology
link |
00:41:54.580
or physiology or neuroscience, all those kinds of things,
link |
00:41:58.660
especially cause pain, you know, it's painless too.
link |
00:42:02.900
If you stab it, the brain, I mean.
link |
00:42:07.540
Yeah, anyway, so that's really interesting.
link |
00:42:09.900
I'm sure there's a kind of a poetic answer to
link |
00:42:13.460
maybe the way people wrote about it,
link |
00:42:15.260
but what to you is the wisdom in the design of the heart?
link |
00:42:20.660
I mean, the main function of the heart basically
link |
00:42:22.460
is to push blood through the cardiovascular system,
link |
00:42:25.260
through the branching blood vessels
link |
00:42:27.780
to feed every cell in the body.
link |
00:42:30.380
You know, when I believe our ancestors started off
link |
00:42:33.260
as single celled organisms floating in some ancient brew
link |
00:42:37.300
and they were surrounded by the medium
link |
00:42:39.340
that would bring them all the nutrients they needed.
link |
00:42:41.020
So there's no issues there.
link |
00:42:42.500
And then once you start getting multicellular organisms,
link |
00:42:45.380
the kind that are thicker and the ones on the inside
link |
00:42:47.780
aren't in contact with that sort of nutritious brew
link |
00:42:50.540
that they're growing in, you kind of need a way
link |
00:42:53.180
to distribute those nutrients to every cell.
link |
00:42:55.540
And so that's what the heart
link |
00:42:56.580
and the branching vascular tree do.
link |
00:42:58.580
So the heart, you know, it's the biggest disconnect
link |
00:43:02.460
between how the organs talked about in poetry
link |
00:43:04.580
and through history versus this actual function
link |
00:43:06.900
is probably the heart because we ascribe all these things
link |
00:43:09.180
like love and passion and life itself sometimes to the heart.
link |
00:43:13.260
But actually it's just a simple mechanical pump.
link |
00:43:15.740
You know, that's all it is.
link |
00:43:17.180
I don't want to downplay it, it's amazing.
link |
00:43:18.700
But you know, it just pushes.
link |
00:43:20.420
It fills the blood and then squeezes it.
link |
00:43:22.540
Fills the blood and squeezes it.
link |
00:43:23.580
And just that squeezing, that pushing
link |
00:43:25.260
creates the blood pressure
link |
00:43:27.220
that you need to get blood to every cell in your body,
link |
00:43:29.740
especially when you're standing upright
link |
00:43:31.220
to get blood to your brain,
link |
00:43:32.780
you need a certain amount of pressure to get it up there.
link |
00:43:35.500
Isn't it amazing to you how much volume of blood
link |
00:43:39.300
just gets pushed through by this pump?
link |
00:43:42.980
Absolutely, they say every red blood cell
link |
00:43:45.140
takes about five minutes to circulate
link |
00:43:47.300
and come back to the heart.
link |
00:43:48.820
And that circulation kind of, you know,
link |
00:43:50.460
starts in the womb and continues
link |
00:43:52.820
and kind of until the moment that we die.
link |
00:43:55.580
But the volume is tremendous
link |
00:43:56.900
and it can never, you know, take a break basically.
link |
00:44:00.180
And it's sort of propagating
link |
00:44:03.020
all kinds of stuff throughout the body.
link |
00:44:04.540
It's a delivery mechanism,
link |
00:44:06.140
blood for all kinds of good stuff and bad stuff,
link |
00:44:09.740
nutrition, drugs, all of that.
link |
00:44:13.820
Right, medications too.
link |
00:44:15.180
Medications, such a fascinating design.
link |
00:44:19.060
And it also takes the waste away.
link |
00:44:20.740
You know, it kind of brings the nutritious stuff,
link |
00:44:22.940
brings the nutrients, especially oxygen,
link |
00:44:24.620
but many other things.
link |
00:44:25.540
And then it also, as it passes,
link |
00:44:27.580
the cell takes the cells waste.
link |
00:44:29.060
So it's sort of the freshwater
link |
00:44:30.940
and the sewage system in one.
link |
00:44:33.500
So about blood, what to use fascinating about blood?
link |
00:44:38.820
So we talk about the pump that spreads the blood,
link |
00:44:41.780
but the blood itself.
link |
00:44:43.220
Right, so the blood itself is sort of,
link |
00:44:44.980
I mean, it's the most important bodily fluid, of course.
link |
00:44:48.060
From moment to moment,
link |
00:44:49.300
every cell in the body needs a flow of blood
link |
00:44:53.340
to bring it most importantly oxygen,
link |
00:44:55.380
but also again, all the other nutrients
link |
00:44:57.060
and to take away waste.
link |
00:44:58.020
And if that stops for even a few moments,
link |
00:45:00.260
you can be in big trouble.
link |
00:45:02.380
So blood is sort of the most important medium.
link |
00:45:05.780
It's also, doctors use it to kind of evaluate the body.
link |
00:45:09.300
It does have this kind of all seeing quality to it
link |
00:45:12.620
where we can evaluate organs through the blood.
link |
00:45:16.740
I can tell you about your liver, your heart,
link |
00:45:18.380
your kidney just by taking a sample of your blood.
link |
00:45:21.220
So it's sort of like this crystal ball in a way.
link |
00:45:23.820
And we use it kind of all the time,
link |
00:45:25.980
to assess someone's health, to assess their disease.
link |
00:45:29.060
Is it also the attack vector for diseases,
link |
00:45:34.500
for bacteria, for viruses and all that kind of stuff.
link |
00:45:37.660
So viruses seem to attack either the throat,
link |
00:45:40.460
maybe you can correct me,
link |
00:45:41.460
but they seem to attack different parts of the body,
link |
00:45:44.140
depending on how easy it is to access
link |
00:45:46.180
and how easy it is to get in deep,
link |
00:45:50.540
depending on what you prefer.
link |
00:45:52.260
If you want to do a little bit of hard work,
link |
00:45:54.380
but you get in deep,
link |
00:45:55.900
or you don't want to do the hard work,
link |
00:45:58.540
but you don't get in deep,
link |
00:45:59.820
those are the choices viruses have.
link |
00:46:01.300
But is blood one of the sort of attack vectors?
link |
00:46:04.340
What's like, if you were trying to break
link |
00:46:05.580
into the human body,
link |
00:46:08.420
like a parasite, a virus, a bacteria,
link |
00:46:11.900
how would you do it?
link |
00:46:13.020
Like what would you,
link |
00:46:13.860
what would be the attack vectors you would explore?
link |
00:46:16.460
So you got to look for the body's weaknesses, of course.
link |
00:46:19.620
We have inherent weaknesses,
link |
00:46:21.020
for instance, like our respiratory tract,
link |
00:46:22.900
we have to breathe,
link |
00:46:23.860
we have to get air in from the outside.
link |
00:46:26.620
And so that's one of the entries into the body.
link |
00:46:28.660
And so when we inhale, let's say a poisonous gas,
link |
00:46:32.300
it's an easy way in, you have to breathe,
link |
00:46:34.420
can't hold your breath very long,
link |
00:46:35.860
but air in our lungs is still kind of contiguous
link |
00:46:39.780
with the external atmosphere.
link |
00:46:41.380
It's not really inside the body
link |
00:46:42.740
until it does cross across the lining of the alveoli
link |
00:46:46.660
into the blood, as you said,
link |
00:46:47.860
that's when it really gets inside.
link |
00:46:49.980
And the other besides the respiratory tract,
link |
00:46:51.460
the gastrointestinal tract is another way,
link |
00:46:53.940
kind of a chink in the armor,
link |
00:46:55.420
we have to eat, we have to drink,
link |
00:46:57.500
and therefore we're taking the external world
link |
00:46:59.380
into ourselves, into our gut,
link |
00:47:01.340
in order to extract from it what we need
link |
00:47:03.140
and let the rest kind of flow out.
link |
00:47:05.340
So those two, the gastrointestinal and respiratory tract,
link |
00:47:08.260
there's a reason that respiratory tract infections
link |
00:47:11.300
and gastrointestinal infections
link |
00:47:12.980
are kind of the most common that afflict us
link |
00:47:15.260
because those are the ways in to the body.
link |
00:47:17.780
So I would definitely pick one of those,
link |
00:47:20.140
not just be a lazy cold in the nose,
link |
00:47:22.100
but really a more aggressive pneumonia down deep
link |
00:47:24.460
in the lungs and get across that barrier into the blood.
link |
00:47:27.060
But also the whole sex thing that humans do.
link |
00:47:32.140
So speaking of which, let us go for time
link |
00:47:36.220
to the genitals chapter.
link |
00:47:38.500
So what are genitals?
link |
00:47:41.300
I think I've heard of those.
link |
00:47:43.380
I think I've read about a penis and a vagina.
link |
00:47:45.980
Can you explain to me how those work?
link |
00:47:48.940
Just asking for a friend,
link |
00:47:50.220
but also what to use, fascinating about it
link |
00:47:54.220
and maybe what's misunderstood or little known about them?
link |
00:48:00.180
Sure, so they're very unique organs.
link |
00:48:02.620
I would say one of the things that I like to point out
link |
00:48:05.620
is that while every organ from moment to moment
link |
00:48:08.700
keeps us alive and ensures our survival,
link |
00:48:10.860
the genitals are in a way the opposite.
link |
00:48:13.780
We don't need them from moment to moment.
link |
00:48:15.700
You don't even have to use them at all.
link |
00:48:17.900
And in fact, they often make us do stupid things
link |
00:48:20.060
that are the opposite of kind of enhancing survival.
link |
00:48:23.140
So, and they've affected the brain
link |
00:48:26.460
and you can become sort of focused and nuts
link |
00:48:29.140
based on those desires that kind of stem from the genitals.
link |
00:48:31.900
So they can be dangerous organs too.
link |
00:48:34.060
But I mean, sexual dimorphism helps with genetic variability
link |
00:48:39.540
as it does in so many other organisms.
link |
00:48:41.820
You take two people and mix them together.
link |
00:48:43.620
They're genetics.
link |
00:48:44.460
You just get a lot more variation
link |
00:48:46.100
and more opportunities to try different genetic codes
link |
00:48:50.460
and see what'll enhance survival
link |
00:48:52.180
as we talked about sex and death.
link |
00:48:54.380
I talk about in the book a lot of,
link |
00:48:55.980
for instance, the female genital tract,
link |
00:48:57.780
how the uterus is very unusual
link |
00:49:00.140
because it doesn't even sort of wake up
link |
00:49:02.780
and start doing its thing until the second decade of life.
link |
00:49:06.340
Even though babies, female babies are born
link |
00:49:10.860
with all of the eggs they'll ever have
link |
00:49:13.060
in their ovaries already.
link |
00:49:14.300
They're just sort of in this stasis
link |
00:49:15.980
until they start waking up kind of once a month.
link |
00:49:19.020
And it's this cycle.
link |
00:49:20.500
There's so much in our bodies that are cyclical
link |
00:49:22.500
and rhythmic, the heartbeat, the breathing,
link |
00:49:25.340
but menstruation is kind of a very strange rhythm
link |
00:49:28.660
that takes over a decade to start.
link |
00:49:31.340
And only the rhythm beats once a month,
link |
00:49:34.100
which is very slow compared to every other rhythm of the body.
link |
00:49:37.500
The other unusual thing is in medicine,
link |
00:49:40.340
when rhythms of the body cease, when they stop,
link |
00:49:43.300
those are emergencies, right?
link |
00:49:44.740
When your heart stops, that's a cardiac arrest.
link |
00:49:47.020
You need CPR, maybe an electric shock to restart it.
link |
00:49:50.180
When your breathing stops,
link |
00:49:51.940
you need a breathing machine to breathe for you
link |
00:49:53.700
or something to reverse whatever might be causing
link |
00:49:56.100
the suppression of your breathing.
link |
00:49:58.100
But when the menstruation stops,
link |
00:49:59.980
it's the point of menstruation in the first place.
link |
00:50:03.500
The whole reason that the uterus grows aligning
link |
00:50:06.180
and sheds it each month is to one day,
link |
00:50:08.460
you know, get fertile,
link |
00:50:10.580
though of them to get fertilized
link |
00:50:11.700
and for it to implant in the lining.
link |
00:50:13.460
And then the rhythm ceases.
link |
00:50:14.540
And that's obviously not a medical emergency,
link |
00:50:16.620
unlike most other rhythms, you know,
link |
00:50:18.500
cessations, it's the point of the whole thing
link |
00:50:20.620
in the first place.
link |
00:50:21.540
So these particular penis and vagina
link |
00:50:24.460
are that whole thing, the uterus, whatever.
link |
00:50:26.940
Am I not using the wrong terms?
link |
00:50:28.980
I don't know, I'll just keep saying.
link |
00:50:31.060
You use those terms.
link |
00:50:32.220
There's more technical, there's parts, various parts.
link |
00:50:35.300
In medical school, you learn every bump
link |
00:50:38.020
and you know, every little part of every little organ
link |
00:50:40.900
and including the genitals, so.
link |
00:50:43.860
I never really thought of it this way.
link |
00:50:46.580
As you said, is that most organs
link |
00:50:49.020
are kind of full time employees.
link |
00:50:51.460
Like 24 seven, they're doing something.
link |
00:50:54.300
And then there's some organs,
link |
00:50:56.060
penis and vagina being representative of this.
link |
00:51:00.900
They're not functioning all the time.
link |
00:51:03.260
They're only functioning every once in a while
link |
00:51:05.380
and then get us to do stupid stuff
link |
00:51:07.740
or awesome stuff and all that kind of stuff.
link |
00:51:09.540
But they're not essential for human survival
link |
00:51:11.700
on a second by second basis.
link |
00:51:14.220
Then the whole cyclical nature of the human body.
link |
00:51:18.300
How many other cycles are on a monthly basis?
link |
00:51:20.900
Like that far apart.
link |
00:51:23.380
That's a fascinating design
link |
00:51:25.820
that the human body would do that
link |
00:51:27.100
and wouldn't start until the second decade of life.
link |
00:51:32.460
It's almost like, what do I wanna say?
link |
00:51:35.740
There's some kind of meta planning going on.
link |
00:51:39.940
Like this is the optimal solution
link |
00:51:41.900
for the sexual selection mechanism
link |
00:51:44.420
among like somewhat intelligent species.
link |
00:51:48.380
Like it's useful to after the brain has developed
link |
00:51:53.380
sufficiently long to now be making
link |
00:51:57.100
sexual selection decisions.
link |
00:51:58.980
Like you need time for this computer,
link |
00:52:01.540
this really powerful computer to load in the info.
link |
00:52:05.780
Interesting.
link |
00:52:06.620
You also need the body to develop.
link |
00:52:08.420
A child simply isn't big enough to be pregnant
link |
00:52:11.780
and deliver another baby.
link |
00:52:14.420
I wonder if there's animals in which
link |
00:52:16.020
this happens much more accelerated pace
link |
00:52:17.860
in different stages.
link |
00:52:19.260
Definitely, especially certain kinds of insects
link |
00:52:21.620
like Drosophila, a lot of the fruit fly,
link |
00:52:25.300
a lot of experiments are done on
link |
00:52:26.580
because their life cycle is so rapid.
link |
00:52:28.740
A lot of insects and other creatures
link |
00:52:31.340
are almost ready to mate as soon as they're born.
link |
00:52:34.540
Not us.
link |
00:52:35.580
Not us.
link |
00:52:36.620
Is there any improvements to the design?
link |
00:52:42.740
So a lot of people are very interested
link |
00:52:45.380
in these particular body parts.
link |
00:52:47.780
If you were to sort of step back
link |
00:52:49.620
as a geneticist, biological designer,
link |
00:52:52.980
or maybe a computer scientist, computer engineer,
link |
00:52:55.500
trying to build human 2.0 or maybe a robot,
link |
00:53:00.620
how would you improve the penis and the vagina?
link |
00:53:05.380
Well, the penis for starters,
link |
00:53:06.780
I mean, let's also discuss the testicles.
link |
00:53:09.460
They're very important too.
link |
00:53:10.780
Which, okay, so they're fragile and they're important
link |
00:53:14.740
and yet they're hanging off the body in danger, basically.
link |
00:53:18.060
So does that make sense?
link |
00:53:20.300
You know, they begin in the womb,
link |
00:53:22.020
they begin inside the abdomen
link |
00:53:23.420
and they slowly descend and sometimes before birth,
link |
00:53:26.620
sometimes in the first year of life, sometimes never.
link |
00:53:29.100
They pop out of the body
link |
00:53:30.740
and end up hanging in the scrotum.
link |
00:53:32.700
There's a reason because the chemical reactions
link |
00:53:35.060
that create sperm function best
link |
00:53:37.700
at a few degrees cooler than body temperature.
link |
00:53:40.860
And so that's why you might notice in the warm weather,
link |
00:53:44.620
they might hang further down and in the cold weather,
link |
00:53:47.540
they scrunch themselves up to get closer to the body
link |
00:53:50.340
to maintain that ideal temperature a few degrees cooler.
link |
00:53:55.180
So it's hard, you know,
link |
00:53:56.260
if you could create a sperm production mechanism
link |
00:53:58.300
that did not rely on that lower temperature,
link |
00:54:00.100
that would be great.
link |
00:54:00.940
Keep them inside the body protected like the ovaries are.
link |
00:54:04.460
But oh, then you wouldn't rely on the lower temperature.
link |
00:54:07.140
I thought you meant create
link |
00:54:08.700
some kind of weird internal cooling mechanism.
link |
00:54:11.940
No, well, I guess that would be one solution,
link |
00:54:14.500
but just maybe a different type of chemical reaction
link |
00:54:18.100
would not be reliant on the lower temperature, let's say.
link |
00:54:21.900
You know, it would be great to design sperm metagenesis
link |
00:54:25.180
or sperm production process
link |
00:54:26.820
that would function best at body temperature.
link |
00:54:29.260
And then we can keep those delicate organs inside the body
link |
00:54:32.580
and not have them hanging out in danger.
link |
00:54:35.220
Or maybe the argument for this design is maybe it's nice
link |
00:54:40.220
to put them in danger so you are constantly concerned about it.
link |
00:54:45.180
Could be, maybe that's beneficial for male psychology.
link |
00:54:49.100
I'm not really sure.
link |
00:54:50.140
There's a psychological element here
link |
00:54:51.620
about the evolution that could be.
link |
00:54:53.340
So that's the testicle's penis.
link |
00:54:58.780
A better way to do it, you know?
link |
00:55:00.660
I mean, it's pretty good as it is, you know,
link |
00:55:03.340
it kind of when it's time for it to work,
link |
00:55:05.740
it grows and stiffens.
link |
00:55:07.460
And when it's time for it not to work,
link |
00:55:08.940
it kind of shrinks and hangs out.
link |
00:55:12.940
Saw this on a Seinfeld episode.
link |
00:55:15.260
So I know how it works.
link |
00:55:17.260
Shrinkage.
link |
00:55:18.180
Yeah, that was a good one.
link |
00:55:19.420
But, you know, that's also a bit unique,
link |
00:55:22.940
I suppose that, you know, the way it has this erectile tissue.
link |
00:55:26.540
Actually, they're similar in the mouth of certain baleen whales.
link |
00:55:30.700
There's a certain similar kind of erectile tissue
link |
00:55:34.100
that helps cool them off
link |
00:55:37.580
because they have so much blubber
link |
00:55:39.740
and create so much heat in moving around and feeding
link |
00:55:42.620
that they have actually a similar,
link |
00:55:43.980
similar to the penis organ in their mouth
link |
00:55:45.660
that helps cool their bodies because it's a big problem.
link |
00:55:48.100
They have to store all that blubber for fuel,
link |
00:55:50.980
but it makes them too hot.
link |
00:55:52.140
So as a compensation,
link |
00:55:53.100
they have this kind of erectile organ in their mouth.
link |
00:55:55.300
Okay, what about vagina?
link |
00:55:59.140
You know, the fact that miscarriages sometimes happen
link |
00:56:02.860
because of sexually transmitted diseases,
link |
00:56:05.740
because of trauma, you know, it'd be great
link |
00:56:08.020
if the uterus where the growing fetus is
link |
00:56:11.260
is sort of even more protected from those things.
link |
00:56:15.700
You know, I guess that's a side effect
link |
00:56:18.060
of the fact that people still have sex
link |
00:56:20.140
when they're pregnant or still exposed to injury.
link |
00:56:23.140
There was a way to make it more protected,
link |
00:56:25.380
perhaps that would be even better.
link |
00:56:27.460
I did see an article recently about artificial wombs,
link |
00:56:30.460
which are rapidly becoming a reality.
link |
00:56:33.700
And in animal studies,
link |
00:56:35.300
they're able to prolong the gestation of a fetus
link |
00:56:37.740
by a month in an artificial womb.
link |
00:56:40.740
Can you explain the artificial aspect
link |
00:56:42.700
of the artificial womb?
link |
00:56:43.660
Sure, it's...
link |
00:56:45.420
I believe it acts almost like a heart lung bypass machine.
link |
00:56:49.100
So when someone's getting bypass surgery,
link |
00:56:51.940
their heart is stopped.
link |
00:56:53.340
Literally, they throw ice in the chest
link |
00:56:55.100
and they give a potassium infusion through the blood,
link |
00:56:58.660
which stops the heart.
link |
00:57:01.020
But the blood is run through a machine
link |
00:57:04.180
that basically does the work of the heart and lungs together.
link |
00:57:07.980
It gets oxygen into the blood
link |
00:57:09.340
and then pushes it back into the body.
link |
00:57:11.780
So I believe it's a sort of similar mechanism
link |
00:57:14.060
to keep blood and nutrition flowing to this fetus.
link |
00:57:18.100
And so it's just not inside the body of a parent.
link |
00:57:20.860
It's in some kind of other device,
link |
00:57:23.300
but I think that science is gonna rapidly improve.
link |
00:57:27.140
One benefit is babies are born premature
link |
00:57:29.900
and while neonatology is able to continuously
link |
00:57:34.100
kind of lower the age of viability
link |
00:57:36.140
through better technology and understanding
link |
00:57:38.060
how what you can medicines and other things
link |
00:57:40.700
you can do to premature babies when they're born.
link |
00:57:43.460
Ideally, if let's say premature labor begins,
link |
00:57:46.220
you can't stop it.
link |
00:57:47.940
That baby's coming out one way or the other
link |
00:57:49.700
if you could just then stick it into an artificial womb
link |
00:57:51.980
where it can continue its development.
link |
00:57:54.420
That would save a whole host of problems off
link |
00:57:56.380
and those babies born very early suffer from damage
link |
00:57:59.620
to various organs, including the brain
link |
00:58:01.660
for the rest of their life.
link |
00:58:02.580
So that could be a very important technology.
link |
00:58:04.980
So some aspects of the human body,
link |
00:58:07.740
we can develop technologies that outsource them
link |
00:58:10.380
sort of offload some of the stress
link |
00:58:16.140
and the workload from the human body to do it elsewhere.
link |
00:58:19.780
Like dialysis does that for kidneys.
link |
00:58:21.820
People can live decades without kidneys
link |
00:58:25.220
as long as they get dialysis, which does the work for them.
link |
00:58:29.020
Not every organ can do that.
link |
00:58:30.460
For instance, the liver, there's no dialysis version
link |
00:58:33.580
for the liver, like if your liver fails,
link |
00:58:35.420
you need a liver transplant and that's the only thing
link |
00:58:37.660
that's gonna do it for you.
link |
00:58:40.620
So that's the world's first artificial womb for humans.
link |
00:58:45.660
And we're looking at a picture
link |
00:58:47.820
of what looks like gigantic balloons.
link |
00:58:50.300
Matrix, here we come.
link |
00:58:51.900
This is very matrixy.
link |
00:58:53.740
How are they floating?
link |
00:58:55.460
What are we even looking at?
link |
00:58:57.260
There's giants, red spheres.
link |
00:59:00.380
This really looks like the matrix.
link |
00:59:03.900
I wonder where it's from.
link |
00:59:04.740
So there seems to be a paper on this too.
link |
00:59:07.700
I don't know too much about it, but I did see that there.
link |
00:59:10.660
It's advancing very rapidly.
link |
00:59:12.780
The world's first artificial womb for humans.
link |
00:59:14.980
Scientists in the Netherlands say they're within 10 years
link |
00:59:18.740
of developing an artificial womb
link |
00:59:20.380
that could save the lives of premature babies.
link |
00:59:22.980
Premature births before 37 weeks
link |
00:59:24.980
is globally the biggest cause of death among newborns,
link |
00:59:27.660
but the development also raises ethical questions
link |
00:59:31.380
about the future of baby making and so on and so forth.
link |
00:59:36.300
Wow, we're going to be facing a lot of ethical questions
link |
00:59:41.420
as we start to mess with human biology.
link |
00:59:45.820
In an effort to help human biology,
link |
00:59:50.500
we might start to mess with it.
link |
00:59:52.580
As can be very interesting, let's take steps towards
link |
00:59:58.140
towards the matrix.
link |
01:00:01.220
All right, what about the neighbors, poop, feces?
link |
01:00:07.580
There seems to be a lot of interesting stories
link |
01:00:11.700
in that particular output as well.
link |
01:00:16.740
What to you is fascinating.
link |
01:00:20.300
What do you maybe is misunderstood
link |
01:00:26.900
or a little known about poop?
link |
01:00:30.620
Well, it's hilarious for one thing that we do it.
link |
01:00:33.820
Oh, okay.
link |
01:00:35.140
The word is great as well.
link |
01:00:36.660
There's so many different words.
link |
01:00:38.060
I do, you know, when I'm talking to the parents
link |
01:00:40.620
of pediatric patients, I use the word poop.
link |
01:00:42.780
I don't often when I'm talking to adult patients
link |
01:00:44.620
try to choose a more mature word, but poop is amazing.
link |
01:00:49.620
I mean, I guess it's sort of the most, the dirtiest,
link |
01:00:53.660
the most vile, the most hated aspect of our bodies.
link |
01:00:57.540
It's the grossest.
link |
01:00:59.060
We don't want to think about it, talk about it,
link |
01:01:00.980
have it anywhere near our food or social interactions.
link |
01:01:06.980
With good reason, I mentioned gastrointestinal infections
link |
01:01:09.860
are one of the most common infections
link |
01:01:11.340
the human body suffers from.
link |
01:01:12.900
And what we call the way they spread from person to person
link |
01:01:17.220
grossly enough is referred to as the fecal oral route,
link |
01:01:20.620
which means a bit of someone's stool
link |
01:01:22.820
is getting into your, you're swallowing it,
link |
01:01:25.460
you know, through the water supply.
link |
01:01:27.860
For instance, diarrhea is actually
link |
01:01:29.620
quite a brilliant mechanism of these microbes, right?
link |
01:01:32.780
If you, let's say you're in the intestine of one person,
link |
01:01:35.700
your goal is to get into the intestines of another person,
link |
01:01:38.860
brilliant to just trick their intestines
link |
01:01:41.580
into secreting all this fluid into the intestines
link |
01:01:44.980
to increase the volume of stool
link |
01:01:46.580
and its runniness so that when they do poop,
link |
01:01:48.860
it gets into the water supply
link |
01:01:50.100
and then everyone else kind of ends up
link |
01:01:51.380
getting infected as well.
link |
01:01:52.780
Wow, that's brilliant.
link |
01:01:54.380
Just the same way like, you know,
link |
01:01:55.940
tuberculosis or coronavirus kind of infects your lungs
link |
01:01:59.060
and makes you cough and you send it out into the air
link |
01:02:01.380
and it ends up in other people's lungs.
link |
01:02:02.740
And that's all evolution.
link |
01:02:04.580
Yeah, it's brilliant.
link |
01:02:05.980
So diarrhea is intelligent, is a big takeaway lesson.
link |
01:02:11.020
It's one of the most intelligent things we can do
link |
01:02:14.020
as an entirety of an organism,
link |
01:02:16.020
not just the particular cognitive organism,
link |
01:02:17.940
but there's, you know, we're made up of bacteria
link |
01:02:21.500
and viruses and there's a lot of visitors and so on.
link |
01:02:24.340
As the entirety of the system,
link |
01:02:25.780
diarrhea is one of our better accomplishments.
link |
01:02:28.380
It's fascinating.
link |
01:02:30.900
Why wonder, why is poop funny?
link |
01:02:34.540
I think a lot of that is socially constructed,
link |
01:02:37.060
just how it's sort of supposed to be hidden away
link |
01:02:39.460
yet something we always do, something, you know,
link |
01:02:41.860
we chuckle about as children.
link |
01:02:44.140
But even in healthcare, you know, it becomes this big
link |
01:02:46.860
topic of conversation,
link |
01:02:48.140
because you end up talking about it constantly.
link |
01:02:50.380
Like in the ER, people come in,
link |
01:02:53.620
there's complete strangers,
link |
01:02:55.140
sometimes like a nice old lady who resembles my grandmother
link |
01:02:58.740
and all of a sudden I have to ask her all about
link |
01:03:00.620
what's happening in the bathroom,
link |
01:03:02.020
like is she straining, what color is it, what, you know,
link |
01:03:05.980
what's the consistency?
link |
01:03:07.860
Does it float on top of the water more than it should?
link |
01:03:10.340
Is it hard to flush?
link |
01:03:11.220
I mean, there's a million different questions you learn
link |
01:03:13.740
as a medical student and you're like this poop detective
link |
01:03:17.420
when people come in with issues.
link |
01:03:19.380
And so it's funny, I guess, you know,
link |
01:03:22.300
in the exam room with the doctor patient relationship,
link |
01:03:25.060
there's sort of no barriers, you know,
link |
01:03:26.620
you talk about everything and you're talking about
link |
01:03:28.420
the most intimate details of a person's life,
link |
01:03:31.380
even though you just met them a second ago,
link |
01:03:33.260
it's so different than normal social interactions.
link |
01:03:36.780
Yet there is this social aspect,
link |
01:03:38.940
a lot of what I do is social, you know,
link |
01:03:40.700
it seems like doctors, what they do is mostly scientific,
link |
01:03:43.900
but actually it's just relating to another person
link |
01:03:46.540
and you have to maintain, you know,
link |
01:03:48.660
your professional demeanor and this normal human level
link |
01:03:51.300
interaction, even though you're talking about poop.
link |
01:03:54.820
And that's a skill, that's an art and a science.
link |
01:03:57.460
Well, okay, actually I wanna linger on that
link |
01:03:59.620
because I'm a fan of just diving into conversations
link |
01:04:03.260
right away with strangers, just getting no small talk.
link |
01:04:08.340
And this is like the ultimate, I don't know if it's
link |
01:04:11.900
the ultimate, but it's one version of no small talk.
link |
01:04:14.540
You get right to the point.
link |
01:04:18.180
That's really powerful from a psychology perspective.
link |
01:04:21.340
You're a kind of therapist or you have the power
link |
01:04:24.140
to be a therapist.
link |
01:04:26.140
I don't mean just about the medical condition of the body,
link |
01:04:28.780
but the psychological, there's so much fear connected
link |
01:04:33.180
to this concern.
link |
01:04:35.860
Also self doubt, insecurities,
link |
01:04:42.780
even sort of existential thoughts about your mortality,
link |
01:04:46.260
all of those things are right there in the room.
link |
01:04:50.020
So I think one way doctors deal with that
link |
01:04:52.500
is they kind of have this cold way about them.
link |
01:04:54.940
They almost have a dual mode.
link |
01:04:56.740
One is like, I'm going to be friendly on the surface
link |
01:05:00.860
and cold about the brutal honesty of the biology.
link |
01:05:05.980
But I wonder if there's like a skillful middle ground,
link |
01:05:11.900
this dangerous place where you can help people deal
link |
01:05:16.100
with their psychological insecurities, concerns,
link |
01:05:19.260
fears, all those kinds of things.
link |
01:05:20.980
Is that just really tough to do?
link |
01:05:23.140
Yeah, it's a huge part of being a doctor is dealing
link |
01:05:26.700
with the psychological aspects of whatever's going on
link |
01:05:29.300
with a patient's body.
link |
01:05:30.300
I mean, in the ER, you deal with psychiatric emergencies
link |
01:05:32.980
kind of left and right more than ever these days.
link |
01:05:35.540
And that's a huge issue,
link |
01:05:37.420
not to mention sort of drug use, alcohol related stuff.
link |
01:05:41.540
That gets into sort of psychology
link |
01:05:43.140
and the human love of intoxicants
link |
01:05:45.340
and changing the brain's chemistry and in habit,
link |
01:05:49.220
of course, where creatures of habit
link |
01:05:50.700
and that plays in as well.
link |
01:05:51.940
I mean, a big part of, for instance,
link |
01:05:53.340
pediatrics is reassuring parents
link |
01:05:56.180
and kind of convincing them,
link |
01:05:59.220
giving them the confidence that what's going on
link |
01:06:01.260
with their child is not serious, will go away on its own,
link |
01:06:03.940
does not need any particular intervention.
link |
01:06:06.500
And but adults too, reassurance is a huge part of the game.
link |
01:06:13.180
Yeah, in the ER, you see humanity at its most raw.
link |
01:06:17.620
I feel like you get this tremendous insight into people,
link |
01:06:20.980
how they live, what they worry about,
link |
01:06:22.500
what they think about, how their body works
link |
01:06:24.260
and also how their mind works
link |
01:06:25.500
that you almost don't see anywhere else.
link |
01:06:28.340
It's a really interesting place to work.
link |
01:06:31.140
And also the way our society is shaped,
link |
01:06:33.180
the ER is where people go for almost everything.
link |
01:06:35.700
When they're suicidal, they come to the ER.
link |
01:06:37.980
When they're too high on drugs to walk,
link |
01:06:39.740
they come to the ER.
link |
01:06:40.860
Children who have been abused, sexually abused,
link |
01:06:42.980
physically abused come to the ER for us to investigate.
link |
01:06:46.100
It's sort of like the all purpose waste spin
link |
01:06:48.580
for the dregs of society,
link |
01:06:49.980
what people do to themselves
link |
01:06:51.500
and what they do to other people.
link |
01:06:53.460
You mentioned you're interested in the darkness of humanity.
link |
01:06:55.620
It made me think of the ER where you really see
link |
01:06:58.940
what human life is like in the ER.
link |
01:07:02.020
Okay, you tweet about, you write about,
link |
01:07:04.460
you think about the emergency room ER.
link |
01:07:07.700
That's really fascinating.
link |
01:07:10.140
Just the little window you give to that world is fascinating.
link |
01:07:16.420
What lessons about humanity do you draw?
link |
01:07:20.620
From this place where you're so near to death,
link |
01:07:24.420
there's so much chaos.
link |
01:07:26.860
There's so much variety of what's wrong,
link |
01:07:29.180
so little information or the urgent nature
link |
01:07:34.740
of the information inflows such that you can't really reason
link |
01:07:39.380
sort of thoroughly and deeply and collect all the data
link |
01:07:41.900
on those kinds of things, you have to act fast
link |
01:07:44.300
and then everybody's freaking out.
link |
01:07:45.900
Can you just speak to the human condition
link |
01:07:48.060
that you get a glimpse at through the ER experience?
link |
01:07:54.980
Yeah, I think you do see all those things.
link |
01:07:57.380
I think on one end of the spectrum,
link |
01:08:00.340
it is this very unique place
link |
01:08:02.060
where you get all these unique insights.
link |
01:08:03.780
On the other end, it can become a ho hum workplace
link |
01:08:07.220
just like any other, which is sort of surprising.
link |
01:08:09.620
As I mentioned before,
link |
01:08:10.460
humans seem to be able to get used to almost anything
link |
01:08:13.300
and doctors can get ho hum used to,
link |
01:08:15.500
oh, dying of a heart attack, oh, actively in labor
link |
01:08:18.180
and the baby's half out, oh, just ho hum,
link |
01:08:21.620
I know what to do, going about my job and go home
link |
01:08:24.140
and have dinner with my family
link |
01:08:25.980
and not think too much about it.
link |
01:08:27.260
That's amazing.
link |
01:08:28.540
I do try to maintain both my fascination.
link |
01:08:33.180
I think writers in general tend to think more
link |
01:08:35.780
about what they see, write more about what they see,
link |
01:08:37.580
maybe draw connections with what they see to other things.
link |
01:08:40.580
So I do think that writer's perspective
link |
01:08:42.340
does help me kind of maintain my fascination
link |
01:08:45.900
and my kind of more of an insightful perspective
link |
01:08:48.740
than just a ho hum, water cooler conversation.
link |
01:08:53.140
But you do see a lot.
link |
01:08:55.900
In a way, medical problems are sort of
link |
01:08:57.980
the great equalizer, right?
link |
01:09:00.140
Class, race, culture, background,
link |
01:09:03.140
the failings of the human body, the way it fails
link |
01:09:05.900
and what we can do to help in those situations
link |
01:09:08.460
is almost universal.
link |
01:09:10.300
I always like this quote from,
link |
01:09:11.820
Chekhov was a doctor and a writer
link |
01:09:14.100
and he treated a lot of peasants, very low class
link |
01:09:19.180
and also treated a lot of aristocrats
link |
01:09:20.820
and he wrote that they all have the same ugly bodies,
link |
01:09:24.220
basically, which I think is really right on.
link |
01:09:27.340
And it's sort of, you can see people
link |
01:09:29.900
underneath the superficial layer of clothing,
link |
01:09:32.300
maybe it's the most expensive clothing
link |
01:09:34.060
bought from the fanciest places,
link |
01:09:35.660
but underneath their body is still failing in the same way
link |
01:09:38.420
and they still have the same anxieties,
link |
01:09:39.980
the same worry about mortality,
link |
01:09:41.900
the same concerns about whether poop turned green today,
link |
01:09:45.500
all these things that they bring to the table.
link |
01:09:47.340
So in a way, it is this great equalizer
link |
01:09:49.940
where people are kind of all the same in some ways.
link |
01:09:53.540
Yeah, I feel like people sometimes,
link |
01:09:56.460
class, money, fame, power,
link |
01:10:01.180
makes you for time forget that you're just a meat vehicle.
link |
01:10:06.180
And you're just as good and just as bad
link |
01:10:09.780
as the other meat vehicles all around you.
link |
01:10:14.060
In that sense, there's this question sometimes raised,
link |
01:10:18.140
are some people better than others?
link |
01:10:20.260
And I usually answer no to that question because of that.
link |
01:10:24.700
Yeah, some people might be better at math,
link |
01:10:26.580
some people might be better at music,
link |
01:10:29.500
but in the end, we're just meat bags.
link |
01:10:33.260
Beautiful as we are.
link |
01:10:34.980
There's a poem that just a small tangent I wanna take.
link |
01:10:39.820
I just saw it just acting that you have written.
link |
01:10:47.100
I have to, would you classify it as a poem?
link |
01:10:49.980
Yeah.
link |
01:10:50.900
At first, if I may read it,
link |
01:10:53.220
at first you enter the clinic shoulders weighed down
link |
01:10:55.860
by white coat pockets, bookstuffed, timid.
link |
01:10:59.860
You act out a role, your white coat, a costume,
link |
01:11:03.740
your questions, a script, your demeanor, a rehearsed act.
link |
01:11:08.420
No one is going to buy this.
link |
01:11:10.580
But then as you play the role again and again,
link |
01:11:13.900
repeating the lines and the motions,
link |
01:11:16.340
the script slowly dissolves
link |
01:11:18.020
and the interaction becomes thoughtless.
link |
01:11:20.940
And the rehearsed act slowly fades into a profession.
link |
01:11:24.340
You suddenly find yourself unable to tell
link |
01:11:27.000
if you're still acting or if you're doing it for real.
link |
01:11:31.180
And now you're a doctor.
link |
01:11:33.660
Jonathan Reisman, MD, Harvard,
link |
01:11:36.300
Massachusetts General Hospital Medicine,
link |
01:11:38.100
Pediatrics Department.
link |
01:11:40.020
Beautiful.
link |
01:11:40.860
So that is what it is to be a doctor.
link |
01:11:44.180
You're just acting, fake it till you make it.
link |
01:11:46.420
Exactly, fake it till you make it.
link |
01:11:48.180
And I think, I imagine every medical student
link |
01:11:50.460
has this feeling when they first go into a room.
link |
01:11:53.060
Like I talked about asking this nice old lady
link |
01:11:56.140
about the color of her poop for the first time.
link |
01:11:58.460
And you're just like, what am I doing here?
link |
01:12:00.340
Like, does she believe I'm a doctor?
link |
01:12:02.660
You know, this just feels absurd.
link |
01:12:04.540
But then it's, again, how hum becomes normal.
link |
01:12:09.100
Now, there's not a sperm chapter in your book.
link |
01:12:13.740
This, you mentioned offline that this is a second
link |
01:12:16.700
and a third book that you're working on
link |
01:12:18.820
all about sperm.
link |
01:12:19.660
No, I'm just kidding.
link |
01:12:21.300
But, or maybe I'm not.
link |
01:12:23.980
Humor tends to make way for reality.
link |
01:12:28.740
So the tweet was that an average human male
link |
01:12:32.580
produces 500 billion sperm, I believe,
link |
01:12:36.140
which is about four to five times more
link |
01:12:39.340
than the number of people who have ever lived.
link |
01:12:42.860
And each of those sperms is genetically unique.
link |
01:12:45.740
So you can think of them, you can kind of imagine
link |
01:12:48.700
the possible humans they could have created.
link |
01:12:51.020
And they're all different.
link |
01:12:53.140
They have similarities, of course,
link |
01:12:54.580
but they have peculiarities that make them different.
link |
01:12:57.740
And you can think of all the different trajectories,
link |
01:12:59.500
all the Einstein's, the Feynman's, the Hitler's,
link |
01:13:03.700
and all the people who would have died during childbirth,
link |
01:13:08.180
who would have died early in their years,
link |
01:13:09.900
given the different diseases.
link |
01:13:11.300
It's fascinating to think about.
link |
01:13:13.260
An average human.
link |
01:13:15.420
Yeah, we're all winners of a very competitive race.
link |
01:13:19.060
So the people who make it, we're winners, hashtag winning.
link |
01:13:23.860
Is there something that you find
link |
01:13:28.100
fascinating, interesting, beautiful, ugly,
link |
01:13:35.420
surprising about sperm?
link |
01:13:38.540
I think sperm is, yes, it isn't a very interesting
link |
01:13:42.380
bodily fluid, maybe I'll write about it
link |
01:13:44.140
in a second or third book, we'll see.
link |
01:13:45.780
But I guess sperm is interesting
link |
01:13:48.980
because it's kind of the only projectile bodily fluid
link |
01:13:53.420
from the body.
link |
01:13:56.140
Vomit can be projectile.
link |
01:13:57.620
Usually that's a disease state,
link |
01:13:59.020
that's not the expected kind of normal, healthy state.
link |
01:14:01.420
Oh, sneezing, would you classify that or no?
link |
01:14:03.860
True, I guess there's some particles in the air.
link |
01:14:06.900
I guess it's not a fluid, I mean, not a liquid.
link |
01:14:11.340
But true, I mean cough, in addition to sneeze, right?
link |
01:14:13.820
Sneeze is how our nose gets rid of something
link |
01:14:16.220
that shouldn't be there.
link |
01:14:17.060
Cough is how our lungs get rid of something
link |
01:14:18.460
that shouldn't be there.
link |
01:14:19.420
Vomiting is sometimes how our stomachs
link |
01:14:20.860
get rid of something that shouldn't be there.
link |
01:14:22.900
All projectile, sometimes in their own way.
link |
01:14:25.420
Sperm is sort of interesting, it's created with the food
link |
01:14:28.220
for its journey, sperm mostly feed off of fructose,
link |
01:14:30.660
the kind of sugar for the few days
link |
01:14:33.340
that they live inside the female genital tract.
link |
01:14:35.820
But it's sort of, I like comparing our genitals
link |
01:14:38.140
to the genitals of the plant world, which is flowers.
link |
01:14:40.460
And in the same way that a touch me not, for instance,
link |
01:14:44.580
the kind of flower where when you brush up against it,
link |
01:14:46.700
it sort of launches seeds into the distance
link |
01:14:48.900
to try to survive in a way kind of the sperm
link |
01:14:53.580
is doing something similar, launched into the female genital
link |
01:14:56.220
tract, and then all trying to find this competing
link |
01:14:59.380
against each other to find this egg.
link |
01:15:01.340
It's really amazing, and when you learn about it
link |
01:15:03.180
from the biological perspective, the most amazing thing
link |
01:15:06.020
is how many things can go wrong, just in the sperm not
link |
01:15:10.700
surviving long enough for it making it to the egg,
link |
01:15:13.540
and then some genetic abnormality causing a miscarriage.
link |
01:15:17.700
It's sort of astounding that it works as often as it does,
link |
01:15:21.220
and I think the lesson there is just that people
link |
01:15:23.660
have a lot of sex, and so statistics just
link |
01:15:26.180
favor it's going to work out a good number of times.
link |
01:15:29.220
Yeah, and there might be intelligence
link |
01:15:30.900
in the design of just the sheer number of sperm.
link |
01:15:33.900
Maybe that's yet another way to inject variety into the system.
link |
01:15:38.580
And redundancy, I guess.
link |
01:15:40.260
We have two kidneys.
link |
01:15:41.460
We have two hands.
link |
01:15:42.620
If we lose one, we can still go on.
link |
01:15:44.500
We have however many millions of sperm
link |
01:15:47.860
get sort of launched in every ejaculation,
link |
01:15:50.140
is if a bunch fail or don't make it inside others will.
link |
01:15:54.340
There's papers on this, by the way,
link |
01:15:56.180
that I've read for some reason, not read, but skimmed,
link |
01:15:59.580
for some reason, which is talking about which sperm usually
link |
01:16:03.860
wins, like what are the characteristics of sperms
link |
01:16:06.140
that are winning, and it's not the fastest.
link |
01:16:09.380
So apparently there's some kind of slaughter
link |
01:16:13.380
that happens early on, people will correct me,
link |
01:16:15.340
but it's not the fastest.
link |
01:16:17.260
There is an aspect of it's the luckiest.
link |
01:16:19.300
It really is, like the body tries
link |
01:16:21.340
to make it a random selection.
link |
01:16:23.380
They try to make it fair in making it as random as possible.
link |
01:16:27.900
Interesting, and also interesting that they're fueled
link |
01:16:30.100
by fructose, I didn't really think about that.
link |
01:16:32.300
So they're a car bloated athlete.
link |
01:16:37.260
Right, with food for the journey.
link |
01:16:38.860
Food for the journey.
link |
01:16:39.700
Because I'm somebody that actually does a lot of running
link |
01:16:42.380
on, I guess you would call me a fat adapted athlete,
link |
01:16:46.380
so I do sort of meat heavy diet,
link |
01:16:51.180
and so you could do a lot of endurance kind of stuff
link |
01:16:53.860
when you don't need any carbs, any glucose,
link |
01:16:56.500
any of that kind of stuff, and any are very low.
link |
01:16:59.980
It's interesting to think that sperm are like,
link |
01:17:01.900
nope, they're total bros, let's go to the gym,
link |
01:17:05.980
sprint, performance, short term performance is everything.
link |
01:17:10.980
All right, well, that sperm, they're turning to the liver,
link |
01:17:16.420
the place that deals with all our poor decisions.
link |
01:17:20.460
No, many of them.
link |
01:17:22.420
Many of our poor decisions.
link |
01:17:24.060
Is there, you said that the liver does quite a few things.
link |
01:17:30.380
What do you, is fascinating, beautiful about the liver?
link |
01:17:32.980
I would say it's primary function seems to be
link |
01:17:35.860
as the sort of gatekeeper for what we eat and absorb.
link |
01:17:40.220
You know, the entire gastrointestinal tract
link |
01:17:42.900
from the esophagus to the rectum,
link |
01:17:45.820
the blood flows from it, not back to the heart,
link |
01:17:48.700
but to the liver, where it's first examined
link |
01:17:51.900
kind of things are evaluated, packaged,
link |
01:17:55.660
you know, processed, detoxified perhaps.
link |
01:17:59.300
And it's kind of this great overseer
link |
01:18:01.140
of what we digest and absorb.
link |
01:18:03.860
And so it kind of keeps track of what's coming in,
link |
01:18:07.660
you know, the outside world that comes in
link |
01:18:09.620
and will become part of us.
link |
01:18:11.860
You know, that's why partly the liver suffers sometimes,
link |
01:18:15.140
the injury from certain toxins like alcohol.
link |
01:18:19.260
But beyond that, the liver is also the place,
link |
01:18:21.700
as I said, it metabolizes things too.
link |
01:18:23.780
So it metabolizes alcohol and why it can be injured
link |
01:18:26.860
by alcohol and metabolizes drugs like Tylenol,
link |
01:18:29.300
which is why Tylenol can be very toxic to the liver
link |
01:18:33.660
when taken as an overdose.
link |
01:18:36.460
So the liver, you know, even beyond that,
link |
01:18:38.540
the liver produces a lot of different, you know,
link |
01:18:42.140
things that float in the bloodstream.
link |
01:18:43.580
It packages cholesterol and fats
link |
01:18:46.300
and sends them to where they're needed.
link |
01:18:48.140
It deals with protein in the blood.
link |
01:18:50.140
It deals with clotting factors in the blood,
link |
01:18:51.940
helping the blood clot, you know,
link |
01:18:54.980
processes things like bilirubin and other things.
link |
01:18:57.380
It really, as I mentioned,
link |
01:18:58.460
is like 15 organs wrapped into one.
link |
01:19:00.460
Maybe that's why it's sort of the biggest internal organ.
link |
01:19:02.860
The skin's bigger, but it's not an internal organ.
link |
01:19:06.340
Right, the biggest organ in the human body is the skin.
link |
01:19:10.340
Right, but the liver's the biggest internal organ
link |
01:19:13.100
and it really is a powerhouse and does a lot,
link |
01:19:16.020
which is why when people suffer from liver failure,
link |
01:19:18.620
kind of everything goes wrong in a way.
link |
01:19:21.460
And in terms of replacing organs,
link |
01:19:24.060
what are organs that are easily replaceable, which are not?
link |
01:19:29.900
Like on the list of things that are hard to replace and not,
link |
01:19:32.580
where would you put a number one?
link |
01:19:34.820
What would you put it like at the bottom?
link |
01:19:37.140
Well, let's say the kidneys are, you know, nothing's easy,
link |
01:19:39.540
but kidneys are easiest in a way.
link |
01:19:41.820
Partly, I mean, maybe a big factor there
link |
01:19:44.020
is that other people have two of them and can give one to you.
link |
01:19:46.420
So you don't have to wait for people to die,
link |
01:19:47.940
which is the case with hearts and livers.
link |
01:19:49.980
Sometimes you can take a part of a liver
link |
01:19:51.940
from someone who's alive.
link |
01:19:53.380
And the liver does have this kind of mythological ability
link |
01:19:57.060
to regenerate itself in the myth of Prometheus.
link |
01:20:01.180
He's, you know, chained to a rock
link |
01:20:03.020
and the bird eats his liver every day
link |
01:20:04.860
and it grows back every day.
link |
01:20:06.860
And that's actually biologically accurate.
link |
01:20:09.900
It's not that you can completely get rid of it
link |
01:20:11.700
and it'll appear again, but when pieces of it
link |
01:20:13.900
are removed or injured,
link |
01:20:15.060
it does regenerate itself pretty amazingly.
link |
01:20:19.220
So I'd say the kidneys,
link |
01:20:20.140
the fact that they're more around,
link |
01:20:21.900
also it's, you know, the kidney's a smaller organ.
link |
01:20:24.140
It's often just, you don't have to put a transplanted kidney
link |
01:20:27.260
where the kidney should be in the back of the abdomen.
link |
01:20:29.300
You can just kind of stuff it into the pelvis there
link |
01:20:31.620
because it's a smaller organ, the liver would be hard
link |
01:20:33.660
because it's huge.
link |
01:20:36.180
And I guess we just have the most experience
link |
01:20:38.100
with kidney transplants because they are the most common.
link |
01:20:41.860
And the heart and the brain are probably quite difficult.
link |
01:20:46.420
Brain, as far as I know, hasn't been successfully done.
link |
01:20:49.460
The heart is done.
link |
01:20:52.060
And definitely I've evaluated a lot of patients
link |
01:20:55.340
with a heart transplant.
link |
01:20:56.900
It does work pretty well.
link |
01:20:58.180
The mechanical heart substitutes are also advancing
link |
01:21:01.980
quite rapidly these days.
link |
01:21:03.620
For a failing heart, there's certain kinds of devices
link |
01:21:06.220
they can surgically implant.
link |
01:21:08.300
Like when a failing heart isn't able to push hard enough,
link |
01:21:10.900
you know, that's the heart's job is pushing blood
link |
01:21:13.100
with sufficient pressure to create blood pressure.
link |
01:21:15.580
When it fails, there are actually these devices
link |
01:21:17.780
you can strap onto the heart to help it pump harder.
link |
01:21:21.460
Those are rapidly advancing.
link |
01:21:23.140
Many of those were not available even 10 years ago
link |
01:21:25.300
when I got out of med school
link |
01:21:26.980
and now they're commonly used.
link |
01:21:29.300
So maybe heart transplant won't be as necessary
link |
01:21:31.220
in the future if those mechanical things do advance.
link |
01:21:34.500
And as I said, the heart is basically a mechanical pump.
link |
01:21:37.180
So perhaps it would be the easiest organ
link |
01:21:39.220
to replace with some mechanical device.
link |
01:21:41.900
Now for something completely different,
link |
01:21:43.580
returning to testicles for a time.
link |
01:21:45.060
You posted Instagram posts of testicles as food.
link |
01:21:51.540
Perhaps eating them doesn't help libido
link |
01:21:54.260
because ingested testosterone is totally metabolized
link |
01:21:58.220
in the liver, returning to our liver,
link |
01:22:01.180
leaving none to reach the bloodstream.
link |
01:22:03.460
That is why testosterone only comes as injection
link |
01:22:06.460
or topical foam, not as pills.
link |
01:22:10.380
On the other hand, estrogen and progesterone
link |
01:22:14.220
can be absorbed orally, hence the pill.
link |
01:22:17.380
But testosterone is mostly responsible
link |
01:22:19.820
for libido in women too.
link |
01:22:21.460
I was not expecting for this biology lesson
link |
01:22:23.660
when I was looking at an Instagram picture
link |
01:22:27.060
of are we looking at testicles?
link |
01:22:30.020
Yeah.
link |
01:22:30.860
Are these like which species?
link |
01:22:34.180
I believe all those are from cows.
link |
01:22:36.380
From cows, cow testicles.
link |
01:22:37.380
Cows are technically females though, bulls.
link |
01:22:39.900
Yeah, well, speaking of which,
link |
01:22:42.060
just we'll jump around a bit,
link |
01:22:43.820
but you've also traveled the world quite a bit.
link |
01:22:47.740
What have you, what is the craziest food you've eaten
link |
01:22:54.900
across the world?
link |
01:22:55.980
What have you learned about the extremes
link |
01:22:58.820
of the culinary arts by traveling the world?
link |
01:23:03.700
I would say, I guess I've always been extra fascinated
link |
01:23:07.700
with the diets of natives of the far North.
link |
01:23:11.620
I spent some time there in Russia and in Alaska
link |
01:23:15.300
and always loved their diet.
link |
01:23:18.460
So when I worked in Alaska in emergency room
link |
01:23:21.540
and did some other travels in Arctic Alaska,
link |
01:23:24.060
and they eat a lot of fat traditionally
link |
01:23:28.460
before contact, more than half of all calories
link |
01:23:31.420
in the Inupia Descomode diet came from blubber,
link |
01:23:35.060
marine mammal fat, or also fat from fish,
link |
01:23:37.860
fat from ducks and other birds
link |
01:23:39.820
that go up there to mate in the summer.
link |
01:23:41.620
So things like raw whale blubber was especially interesting
link |
01:23:46.260
for me and very exciting.
link |
01:23:48.140
You know, I had some beluga whale chowder,
link |
01:23:51.580
things like that.
link |
01:23:52.420
There's just all these very unusual dishes.
link |
01:23:55.900
You know, there's a dish called Mickey Yuck,
link |
01:23:58.700
which is whale meat fermented in whale blood,
link |
01:24:03.340
which is quite delicious actually.
link |
01:24:05.020
So is it cooked?
link |
01:24:06.460
Is it eaten raw?
link |
01:24:07.820
Is it, how do they like their fat?
link |
01:24:09.540
Like in the same up north in Russia, as you mentioned.
link |
01:24:14.780
So they often eat it raw.
link |
01:24:16.780
So the raw whale blubber is called muck duck,
link |
01:24:20.140
and it's often just sliced thin.
link |
01:24:22.060
And it's sort of cold, but not frozen often when they eat it,
link |
01:24:25.580
and they slice it thin.
link |
01:24:26.820
And a lot of people assume it would be very chewy,
link |
01:24:30.100
but it's not that chewy.
link |
01:24:31.380
It's quite pleasant actually,
link |
01:24:32.500
and has this kind of sea smell to it as you're eating it.
link |
01:24:36.260
I quite like it.
link |
01:24:38.060
And what's the culinary culture like?
link |
01:24:41.460
Meaning, is it just source of energy or is it art?
link |
01:24:45.660
Well, traditionally, there's not a lot of cooking
link |
01:24:49.380
in the Arctic.
link |
01:24:51.580
A lot of things are eaten raw,
link |
01:24:53.140
partly because there's not a lot of fuel for making fires.
link |
01:24:56.700
So they will, some in some of the big rivers in Russia,
link |
01:25:00.700
for instance, that flow north,
link |
01:25:01.940
they will bring trees, dead trees and logs up to the north,
link |
01:25:05.740
and they can get some wood that way.
link |
01:25:07.660
And same thing in some of the rivers
link |
01:25:09.580
kind of flowing northward from the Brooks Range of Alaska.
link |
01:25:12.860
You do get some trees,
link |
01:25:14.020
but just not enough to really produce a culinary art
link |
01:25:18.220
that requires cooking with heat.
link |
01:25:20.780
You know, they do have traditionally blubber lamps
link |
01:25:24.020
where the blubbers of seals and whales are used
link |
01:25:26.340
to create a little flame.
link |
01:25:28.260
Often that's for light and for a little bit of heat,
link |
01:25:32.300
and less for cooking.
link |
01:25:34.580
But eating things raw is definitely a huge part
link |
01:25:37.220
of the culture there.
link |
01:25:38.060
And while I was, I went on a whale hunting trip
link |
01:25:40.220
out on the spring ice in the Arctic Ocean by Barrow, Alaska.
link |
01:25:44.700
And two of the guys, the Inupiat guys who had invited me,
link |
01:25:48.820
were kind of talking about how eating things raw
link |
01:25:51.460
is sort of the most essential characteristic
link |
01:25:53.460
of Inupiat culture.
link |
01:25:54.860
And the one guy who's half white, half Inupiat,
link |
01:25:56.940
said people often doubt his ethnicity
link |
01:25:59.140
because he looks like a white guy.
link |
01:26:00.660
So he'll, you know, bite the head off of a raw bird
link |
01:26:04.340
to show them that he is truly Inupiat, as already said.
link |
01:26:07.340
That's how you prove you're legit.
link |
01:26:09.100
We're looking at an Instagram pic.
link |
01:26:11.100
As a doctor, I was used to knowing fat
link |
01:26:14.100
as the most maligned of all body parts,
link |
01:26:17.140
and the culprit in an obesity epidemic.
link |
01:26:19.540
But in Arctic Alaska, fat has always meant
link |
01:26:23.020
health and survival.
link |
01:26:24.740
In fact, the entire story of life in the Arctic,
link |
01:26:27.300
especially human life, is basically a tale of fat.
link |
01:26:30.740
And in Barrow, what's A.K.?
link |
01:26:33.620
Alaska.
link |
01:26:34.300
Alaska.
link |
01:26:34.900
OK.
link |
01:26:36.700
A lawn covered with a whale blubber
link |
01:26:39.140
is still equivalent of a plush green lawn
link |
01:26:42.460
in temperature suburbia, swelling in its owner with pride.
link |
01:26:46.980
And that's what we're looking at is a lawn full of whale blubber.
link |
01:26:53.540
A beautiful, and this is, I mean,
link |
01:26:55.260
there's a lot of calories there.
link |
01:26:56.780
Oh, yeah.
link |
01:26:57.100
And this can feed a lot of people.
link |
01:26:58.900
A lot of energy, a lot of warmth.
link |
01:27:01.220
Absolutely.
link |
01:27:02.100
And it's delicious.
link |
01:27:03.300
This was like a, I was a kid in a candy store, basically.
link |
01:27:06.940
I rounded a corner in Barrow.
link |
01:27:08.460
So when people do get a whale during the spring
link |
01:27:11.300
whaling season, they raise a flag,
link |
01:27:13.060
or the whaling captain raises a flag over his house,
link |
01:27:15.500
and everyone in town is welcome to come try some.
link |
01:27:18.660
And so before I went inside to try some,
link |
01:27:21.580
I was kind of playing around with blubber.
link |
01:27:23.940
And I saw that this is a bowhead whale.
link |
01:27:26.300
I saw its heart, which was huge, like the size of a yoga ball.
link |
01:27:31.540
And that was, for me, just like amazing.
link |
01:27:33.740
I spent probably the next 45 minutes just looking
link |
01:27:36.020
at all aspects of it.
link |
01:27:37.020
And the stump of aorta that was attached to it
link |
01:27:39.580
was the size of my thigh.
link |
01:27:41.860
That was really fascinating.
link |
01:27:43.620
It's similar Alaska and northern Russia,
link |
01:27:46.020
like Siberian out there.
link |
01:27:48.140
So where were you?
link |
01:27:50.540
I think you have some picks from that time.
link |
01:27:53.940
Where were you in Russia?
link |
01:27:55.500
So I spent a lot of time in kind of Western Russia as well.
link |
01:27:58.420
But I did take two trips to Kamchatka,
link |
01:28:02.140
including northern Kamchatka.
link |
01:28:04.380
I didn't go far enough, nor I didn't go to Chukotka,
link |
01:28:07.660
for instance, until more recently when
link |
01:28:09.620
I was a ship doctor on a wildlife cruise that
link |
01:28:13.260
sailed from Anadyr, Russia, up to through the Bering
link |
01:28:16.900
Strait and to Rangel Island.
link |
01:28:19.380
And we stopped in some villages in Chukotka,
link |
01:28:21.380
and I got a chance to try some whale and stuff like that.
link |
01:28:25.220
Northern Kamchatka, where it's more the Koryak or the indigenous
link |
01:28:28.540
people, they do a lot of seal hunting.
link |
01:28:30.460
So I had a lot of seal blubber, but I don't believe
link |
01:28:32.620
they do any whale hunting quite there.
link |
01:28:35.500
But the Chukchi in a way are sort of
link |
01:28:38.020
similar to the Inupia in their diet and their lifeways.
link |
01:28:42.300
Of course, everyone's diet, all these people's diet,
link |
01:28:44.460
has changed dramatically in the last 100 years,
link |
01:28:47.060
as it has for actually everyone living in kind
link |
01:28:49.180
of modern societies.
link |
01:28:50.740
But for them, perhaps more than anyone else,
link |
01:28:52.580
since their diet was the most extreme,
link |
01:28:54.660
I think, of any human culture on Earth.
link |
01:28:57.540
Just to stay on the wild travel you did.
link |
01:29:01.100
And I should say, I'm using the word travel,
link |
01:29:03.420
but it really, you were a doctor there.
link |
01:29:11.100
First of all, can you just comment on the decision
link |
01:29:13.060
to go to such places and to help people to be a doctor there?
link |
01:29:18.260
What was the motivation?
link |
01:29:19.500
What was the thinking behind it?
link |
01:29:20.980
Well, I think I got the travel bug
link |
01:29:22.620
before I ever went to medical school
link |
01:29:25.100
and even wanted to be a doctor.
link |
01:29:26.780
So right after college, I kind of wasn't very into college,
link |
01:29:31.260
didn't enjoy things, kind of wanted to get out there
link |
01:29:33.940
and see the world, get out of New York City
link |
01:29:36.540
where I was a student at NYU.
link |
01:29:39.780
The first thing I did after finishing college
link |
01:29:42.140
was I was invited to be an intern at a research center
link |
01:29:45.540
in St. Petersburg, Russia.
link |
01:29:47.300
I spent six months there on my first trip
link |
01:29:49.180
and went back four more times to Russia, traveled all over,
link |
01:29:53.780
including to Kamchatka twice and other parts of the country.
link |
01:29:57.660
I'd never heard of cities like Petrozovodsk
link |
01:30:00.660
and Siktivkar and Pskov.
link |
01:30:02.700
I didn't even know a word could start with PSK,
link |
01:30:05.700
like the city of Pskov, but it can.
link |
01:30:07.620
Yeah.
link |
01:30:08.860
And I was sort of fascinated.
link |
01:30:10.940
I was actually studying the international environmental
link |
01:30:14.460
movement and how it came to Russia
link |
01:30:16.540
after the fall of the Soviet Union
link |
01:30:18.540
and how organizations like Greenpeace
link |
01:30:20.260
and World Wildlife Fund and the World Bank
link |
01:30:23.180
are trying to kind of push the timber industry,
link |
01:30:27.140
which is huge in Russia, toward a more sustainable path.
link |
01:30:29.900
And so I was sort of evaluating how is it working, if not, why not?
link |
01:30:34.260
And that seems like such a little niche,
link |
01:30:36.300
such a small detail about Russian society.
link |
01:30:38.860
But in a way, researching that in depth
link |
01:30:41.580
was almost this window into the entire country
link |
01:30:44.700
and the history in a place I knew nothing about.
link |
01:30:46.940
And I learned the language, traveled all over the country,
link |
01:30:50.740
got to know the food, the history, the literature.
link |
01:30:53.020
It was just an immersive and amazing and life changing
link |
01:30:55.980
experience that made me want to see every spot on the globe,
link |
01:31:00.540
basically, and learn about every culture.
link |
01:31:03.100
So I took that desire with me to medical school.
link |
01:31:06.220
I decided I would go to medical school.
link |
01:31:08.340
And from the very beginning, I was
link |
01:31:10.860
intent on traveling around the world.
link |
01:31:13.420
So a lot of my career has been fashioned
link |
01:31:16.140
so that I'm practicing medicine in a place
link |
01:31:18.300
with an interesting geographic context,
link |
01:31:20.420
an interesting place, with an interesting cultural context.
link |
01:31:24.580
And that just makes it more interesting, I find.
link |
01:31:27.460
Not only are medical services often more
link |
01:31:29.460
needed in these remote and rural parts of the country
link |
01:31:31.820
and world, so I feel like I'm taking my knowledge
link |
01:31:35.460
and education experience to places where it's needed.
link |
01:31:38.500
But also, for me, it's just such an enlightening experience.
link |
01:31:41.820
The way culture, history, geography, climate
link |
01:31:44.900
affects medical disease, but just getting to know people,
link |
01:31:47.820
getting to know their culture, being a very useful traveler
link |
01:31:51.420
by providing medical services in that place.
link |
01:31:54.740
And that's taken me to Arctic Alaska,
link |
01:31:57.300
to Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota.
link |
01:31:59.420
I currently work in a few different parts
link |
01:32:01.340
of Pennsylvania, Appalachia, which for me
link |
01:32:04.180
is a unique geography and culture that I didn't grow up with,
link |
01:32:08.020
wasn't familiar with.
link |
01:32:08.860
So in some ways, it's exotic for me as well.
link |
01:32:12.140
Now, I worked in other places too, like Calcutta, India,
link |
01:32:15.580
and Nepal.
link |
01:32:16.620
Just I think my love of travel has shaped my medical career.
link |
01:32:20.580
And being a doctor does give you these opportunities
link |
01:32:23.460
to go to places and travel in a unique way
link |
01:32:27.060
through the medical profession.
link |
01:32:30.060
You know, there's a documentary, Happy People,
link |
01:32:32.340
You're in the Tiger, or something like that.
link |
01:32:35.660
I think Warner Herzog voices it.
link |
01:32:39.500
It tells a story of a simple life of survival in the tiger.
link |
01:32:43.780
And I think they're trapping for food.
link |
01:32:47.100
And there's a lot.
link |
01:32:48.980
There's an alcoholism problem too as well.
link |
01:32:51.660
There's like a very basic life of survival,
link |
01:32:57.460
of loneliness, of desperation.
link |
01:32:59.460
But also there's a, I think the underlying claim
link |
01:33:04.820
of the documentary is that that simple life actually
link |
01:33:12.020
has a kind of simple happiness to it.
link |
01:33:17.100
Hence the name Happy People.
link |
01:33:18.420
Is there, can you speak to the life
link |
01:33:22.060
that people live in those places when it may be simpler
link |
01:33:27.220
than you would in a sort of big city life?
link |
01:33:32.500
It's definitely very different for sure.
link |
01:33:36.060
You know, I guess I found like in some of the remote villages
link |
01:33:39.860
of Kamchatka, I was actually surprised
link |
01:33:42.700
how similar they were in that, you know,
link |
01:33:45.740
there was, I saw the same family strife,
link |
01:33:48.820
the same fights, the same, you know,
link |
01:33:51.980
kind of pairing of relationships and bickering and politics.
link |
01:33:57.460
And, you know, in a way, I'm from the New Jersey suburbs
link |
01:34:01.020
and yet being in this remote village of Northern Kamchatka,
link |
01:34:05.660
I remember writing an email to my friend
link |
01:34:07.220
about how it just seemed so similar
link |
01:34:08.940
even though on the surface it was this exotic other world.
link |
01:34:12.540
The incredible material know how they must have
link |
01:34:15.500
to get their food from the land, you know,
link |
01:34:17.740
that the number of animal species, plant species,
link |
01:34:20.740
the behaviors of the animals, seasons, how to live that way.
link |
01:34:25.220
In a way, it's more complicated in a way
link |
01:34:26.980
that I find fascinating, how people live on the land
link |
01:34:29.660
and the knowledge and experience it takes
link |
01:34:31.420
to do it well and survive.
link |
01:34:33.380
You know, obviously other aspects of modern life
link |
01:34:35.900
in a city are much more complicated
link |
01:34:38.820
than they would be there, but I guess it's,
link |
01:34:41.100
that was something that struck me too
link |
01:34:42.420
that it's simpler in some ways,
link |
01:34:43.740
but more complicated in other ways.
link |
01:34:45.820
So some of the complexity that happens in life
link |
01:34:48.500
is originated from humans, not from the technology
link |
01:34:52.060
or all that kind of stuff around us.
link |
01:34:55.460
You can take the human out of modernity,
link |
01:34:57.220
but they're still human.
link |
01:34:58.380
They're still human.
link |
01:34:59.460
And they fill the empty space
link |
01:35:01.060
with their own human complexities.
link |
01:35:03.340
Are there people that just stand out, memorable people,
link |
01:35:08.540
memorable experiences from those places?
link |
01:35:13.700
Some people that maybe made you smile,
link |
01:35:16.740
made you cry, changed who you are as a man,
link |
01:35:20.500
changed who you are as a doctor.
link |
01:35:22.580
Anything jumps to mind?
link |
01:35:24.100
I think, you know, when I was, is interesting,
link |
01:35:26.180
when I was in Russia, I found that most
link |
01:35:29.020
of the people I hung out with were old women.
link |
01:35:31.780
I'm not sure why.
link |
01:35:32.860
I mean, they're, actually I didn't meet a lot
link |
01:35:34.780
of old men in Russia, which might speak
link |
01:35:36.780
to kind of life expectancy there for men in particular.
link |
01:35:41.140
But I found women, older Russian women,
link |
01:35:44.380
including, you know, Russian from St. Petersburg
link |
01:35:46.980
or some of the elderly women in Kamchatka who were,
link |
01:35:50.500
you know, some were Koryak, some were half Koryak,
link |
01:35:52.980
half Russian, some were Chukchi.
link |
01:35:55.340
I just found them to have, to be so enlightening
link |
01:35:58.060
the way they talked about history, about people,
link |
01:36:01.980
so insightful about humanity.
link |
01:36:03.660
You know, all they've lived through in the last 50 years
link |
01:36:05.860
in some of these parts of Russia,
link |
01:36:07.780
just like the upheaval, societal upheaval,
link |
01:36:10.380
the destruction, the building up,
link |
01:36:12.460
it's just something I could not even imagine.
link |
01:36:15.820
And I think their insights were just very,
link |
01:36:17.980
I'm not thinking of anything in particular,
link |
01:36:19.900
but I just remember I could listen to some
link |
01:36:22.180
of these elderly women talk about their lives
link |
01:36:24.140
for hours and hours.
link |
01:36:25.380
I remember there was this older, elderly blind Koryak woman
link |
01:36:29.940
who you would have thought was the, you know,
link |
01:36:32.060
most country bumpkin of country bumpkin,
link |
01:36:34.100
and yet she couldn't stop talking about
link |
01:36:35.540
how much she loved reading Dostoevsky and Tolstoy,
link |
01:36:37.980
and which might also speak to the Soviet education system.
link |
01:36:41.660
And it was just sort of surprising and fascinating
link |
01:36:43.820
and just those stories and perspectives on life
link |
01:36:46.900
really stayed with me.
link |
01:36:48.740
Yeah, with Babushki.
link |
01:36:52.220
There's a wisdom, there's a kindness.
link |
01:37:02.220
I mean, I suppose that's true for older people in general,
link |
01:37:06.140
but there's something about, it's not just Russia,
link |
01:37:09.460
it's Eastern Europe.
link |
01:37:11.820
It's like this kind of look of wisdom
link |
01:37:16.820
and not just like sort of middle class wisdom
link |
01:37:22.500
or something like that.
link |
01:37:23.740
It's like I have seen some shit wisdom.
link |
01:37:28.300
I've seen it all.
link |
01:37:30.140
And on the other side, I'm left here
link |
01:37:33.580
with a pragmatism and a compassion
link |
01:37:37.220
and also an ability to cook really well.
link |
01:37:39.660
That's for sure, absolutely.
link |
01:37:41.540
There's just this balance of just deep intelligence
link |
01:37:44.900
and deep kindness.
link |
01:37:47.060
Yeah, I mean, part, much of who I am
link |
01:37:50.740
is because of the relationship I had with my grandmother,
link |
01:37:53.100
who is a Russian, Ukrainian born Russian grandmother.
link |
01:38:01.980
Did you learn the Russian language?
link |
01:38:03.860
I did, it's quite rusty at this point,
link |
01:38:05.940
but I did one of these wonderful elderly Russians
link |
01:38:10.180
in St. Petersburg, it sort of adopted me.
link |
01:38:12.620
I think that was another thing
link |
01:38:13.660
that a lot of these elderly women
link |
01:38:16.220
on every side of the country kind of adopted me
link |
01:38:19.220
or saw me as this real curiosity.
link |
01:38:21.780
Sort of just not, I mean, this was around 2002, 2003.
link |
01:38:24.940
It just wasn't common for this sort of strange American
link |
01:38:28.620
to suddenly show up in the middle of Khomchatka
link |
01:38:30.500
or even St. Petersburg.
link |
01:38:32.140
And just absolutely ravenously curious
link |
01:38:34.860
about everything they had to say.
link |
01:38:36.500
So I often got adopted and one of them taught me Russian
link |
01:38:40.220
and had a ride a horse.
link |
01:38:41.500
So the same Babushka taught me both of those things.
link |
01:38:46.580
And like you said, also I should mention
link |
01:38:48.660
that there's something about the Soviet education system
link |
01:38:51.140
where everybody reads Tolstoy, Dostoevsky.
link |
01:38:54.620
It's exceptionally well read.
link |
01:38:56.580
No matter where life has taken you,
link |
01:38:58.500
no matter where you come from,
link |
01:39:00.260
the literature, the mathematics, the sciences,
link |
01:39:02.820
they're all like extremely well educated.
link |
01:39:06.460
And that creates a fascinating populace.
link |
01:39:12.180
Like then you take that education,
link |
01:39:15.140
that excellent early education
link |
01:39:18.380
and you throw a bunch of hardship at those people.
link |
01:39:22.060
And then they kind of cook in that hardship
link |
01:39:26.380
and come out really fascinating people on the other end.
link |
01:39:30.540
It makes me surprised sort of that, for instance,
link |
01:39:32.580
like Russian medical science is not,
link |
01:39:35.780
doesn't, you don't see a lot of sort of studies,
link |
01:39:38.860
medical studies, advancing of medical science
link |
01:39:41.100
come out of Russia.
link |
01:39:42.380
It's just sort of, I'm surprised sort of,
link |
01:39:44.660
I wish that it would, you know,
link |
01:39:45.900
I visited Akademgorodok outside Novosibirsk,
link |
01:39:49.420
which is an entire city the Soviets created
link |
01:39:51.300
just for the study of science.
link |
01:39:52.540
And it's like, there's the geology building
link |
01:39:54.500
and there's the biology building
link |
01:39:55.900
and there's the chemistry building.
link |
01:39:57.420
And I just feel like Russia has this potential
link |
01:40:00.300
to be a science powerhouse or even in the medical sciences,
link |
01:40:03.100
but I guess you just, I don't see it.
link |
01:40:05.620
I'm not sure why.
link |
01:40:07.660
I mean, you can certainly guess as to why.
link |
01:40:10.580
And I see the same thing in the other,
link |
01:40:13.620
in the sciences, I hold the dearest sort of
link |
01:40:15.900
in computer science, in engineering fields.
link |
01:40:20.780
I kind of long held this desire by long,
link |
01:40:25.060
I mean, last couple of years
link |
01:40:27.060
because a bunch of people reached out to me
link |
01:40:29.420
from Yandex and Moscow state to give lectures there,
link |
01:40:33.060
to sort of connect, you know,
link |
01:40:34.620
why so little science is coming out of there?
link |
01:40:37.740
Why so little that we hear about?
link |
01:40:41.540
And it feels like we should be able
link |
01:40:42.700
to bridge the scientific community.
link |
01:40:44.820
Like science, let's even say,
link |
01:40:49.820
even in torumological politics,
link |
01:40:51.780
even in global conflict,
link |
01:40:53.700
I feel like science should be bigger than that.
link |
01:40:56.740
But why do we not hear from the scientists
link |
01:41:00.460
is because of the limitations on human freedoms,
link |
01:41:03.500
on scientific freedoms.
link |
01:41:05.060
I feel like in China, in Russia,
link |
01:41:09.100
in any regime of its sort,
link |
01:41:13.140
you should give freedom to scientists to flourish
link |
01:41:17.780
and to interact with others.
link |
01:41:19.180
And you can only grow from that.
link |
01:41:20.860
You shouldn't suppress that.
link |
01:41:23.300
The sort of Cold War ideas, we should put those aside.
link |
01:41:27.380
As somebody who spent time in Russia,
link |
01:41:31.140
as somebody who learned Russian,
link |
01:41:35.580
do you have some thoughts that you want to say
link |
01:41:38.620
about the war in Ukraine currently?
link |
01:41:41.940
It's tragic, of course,
link |
01:41:44.540
seemingly pointless to watch the destruction
link |
01:41:47.540
of a country in real time.
link |
01:41:51.540
I guess it's, you know, when you read Russian history
link |
01:41:53.780
and Ukrainian history, I guess it just,
link |
01:41:55.820
it's sort of, you know, destruction is a big part of it.
link |
01:41:59.940
The populace being beaten down is a big part of it,
link |
01:42:02.780
you know, from the Mongolian hordes
link |
01:42:06.780
through the Tsar and the Soviets and Putin.
link |
01:42:09.140
I guess, you know, it's just in science,
link |
01:42:12.300
in particular medical science,
link |
01:42:13.540
it feels like this sort of unrealized potential,
link |
01:42:15.900
you know, the culture is so beautiful,
link |
01:42:18.140
the people are so smart and well educated.
link |
01:42:20.620
I think the word unrealized potential
link |
01:42:23.100
is kind of how I feel.
link |
01:42:24.380
That's why I wanted to celebrate that part of the world.
link |
01:42:27.580
Is there so many beautiful people,
link |
01:42:29.380
so many brilliant people?
link |
01:42:31.940
And I just happened to know the language,
link |
01:42:33.620
so I'm able to appreciate the beauty of those people.
link |
01:42:36.500
I'm sure the same is true in China.
link |
01:42:38.660
I'm sure that that's one of the things
link |
01:42:40.020
that makes me sad is there's all these cultures
link |
01:42:42.220
that I don't know about.
link |
01:42:44.700
I can't fully appreciate their brilliance.
link |
01:42:46.420
Even Japan and places like that that are sort of,
link |
01:42:50.580
there's channels of communication wide open
link |
01:42:52.940
and there's a lot of interaction is still not knowing
link |
01:42:55.780
the language, I feel like I miss some of the culture
link |
01:42:58.620
or Portuguese and, you know,
link |
01:43:00.740
looking at South America and all that kind of stuff.
link |
01:43:04.500
But anyway, in Russia,
link |
01:43:05.460
there certainly is that unrealized potential.
link |
01:43:08.380
In Ukraine, so many brilliant scientists,
link |
01:43:12.060
engineers came from Ukraine, from Russia.
link |
01:43:14.500
And I hope they get to flourish soon.
link |
01:43:18.500
And I hope we put this,
link |
01:43:20.220
I hope we stop this war, because all war is hell.
link |
01:43:29.140
Is there something to comment about the biology of war?
link |
01:43:35.900
Is there echoes of the emergency room experience?
link |
01:43:41.020
Have you dealt with patients
link |
01:43:46.780
that have been touched by wartime?
link |
01:43:48.540
Definitely war and medicine has a very intricate
link |
01:43:51.980
and complex relationship.
link |
01:43:53.740
I don't know if it was Walt Whitman who said it,
link |
01:43:55.780
though he was a nurse during the Civil War,
link |
01:43:58.180
that war is the best medical school,
link |
01:44:00.180
but some people have said that.
link |
01:44:02.780
And, you know, even the advancements in medicine
link |
01:44:05.980
come from war, you know, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
link |
01:44:09.700
have in some ways really revolutionized certain aspects
link |
01:44:12.900
of the way we treat trauma patients
link |
01:44:14.700
in the civilian world as well.
link |
01:44:16.340
The importance of tourniquets,
link |
01:44:18.740
the importance of transusing whole blood
link |
01:44:20.860
instead of, you know, red blood cells isolated
link |
01:44:23.340
from serum and platelets, et cetera.
link |
01:44:25.780
The importance of pain control in the battlefield,
link |
01:44:27.900
that's changed dramatically.
link |
01:44:29.300
Everything from ketamine injections
link |
01:44:31.060
to fentanyl lollipops in the battlefield.
link |
01:44:34.180
So war has really improved medicine in many ways.
link |
01:44:37.580
In another way, you know, the Department of Defense
link |
01:44:41.380
spends a lot of money on medical research
link |
01:44:43.140
and kind of really pushes the envelope
link |
01:44:45.340
you know, DARPA is one aspect of the military budget
link |
01:44:48.900
that really funds these moonshot experiments
link |
01:44:51.580
that are really fascinating and to really push
link |
01:44:54.620
the frontiers more than seemingly most, you know,
link |
01:44:58.460
kind of universities doing doctors and researchers
link |
01:45:01.740
doing their research.
link |
01:45:03.060
So in a way, you know, the space program
link |
01:45:05.620
which sort of was military initially
link |
01:45:07.220
then became civilian under NASA
link |
01:45:09.140
also led to a lot of advances and understandings
link |
01:45:12.540
of health, you know, on Earth.
link |
01:45:14.220
And in space, so the military is,
link |
01:45:17.460
or war in general is a huge way that medicine advances
link |
01:45:21.460
not to mention the epidemics that come, you know.
link |
01:45:24.220
My grandmother was from what's today Moldova,
link |
01:45:27.220
what was then Romania, she got typhus during World War II.
link |
01:45:32.220
So there's typhus outbreaks, there's cholera outbreaks,
link |
01:45:34.220
you know, all these even infectious disease things
link |
01:45:37.620
can advance in war, which you wouldn't expect.
link |
01:45:39.620
You expect sort of trauma to be the sort of main problem.
link |
01:45:42.420
But actually infection is a huge problem
link |
01:45:44.820
throughout history in war.
link |
01:45:45.820
So we can learn a lot.
link |
01:45:47.820
It's this kind of horrific natural experiment
link |
01:45:50.420
in medical care.
link |
01:45:52.420
Yeah, and I've recently been reading about
link |
01:45:55.420
some of the horrific medical experiments
link |
01:45:58.420
performed by Nazi scientists, Nazi Germany.
link |
01:46:02.420
I'll talk about it another time, perhaps,
link |
01:46:05.420
but nothing reveals the honesty of human biology like war.
link |
01:46:10.420
Just to stay on your wild journeys for a little bit longer.
link |
01:46:15.420
You have a tweet about Shackleton saying,
link |
01:46:18.420
here's a photo of Shackleton's medical kit
link |
01:46:21.420
from his storied expedition to Antarctica in the 1910s.
link |
01:46:25.420
Some paragoric for pain, some laxatives.
link |
01:46:29.420
Only the essentials.
link |
01:46:32.420
Would you put laxatives under the essentials?
link |
01:46:35.420
Anyway, sorry to interrupt.
link |
01:46:37.420
When I worked as a ship doctor in Antarctica in 2018,
link |
01:46:42.420
I had a huge cabinet full of meds and even EKG machine.
link |
01:46:47.420
So if you can comment sort of on that contrast.
link |
01:46:52.420
First of all, your own journey, how harsh was it?
link |
01:46:55.420
How difficult was it?
link |
01:46:57.420
And given that context, can you think about
link |
01:47:01.420
how hard Shackleton's journey was?
link |
01:47:04.420
I think the difference is unimaginably stark.
link |
01:47:08.420
One thing I do want to point out is that the use of laxatives
link |
01:47:12.420
early in the 20th century and before that,
link |
01:47:14.420
they were used for a surprising number of ailments
link |
01:47:18.420
where they probably did not help at all.
link |
01:47:20.420
But I think that was a holdover from sort of the old theory of medicine,
link |
01:47:24.420
the humoral theory where you have to balance the fluids in the body
link |
01:47:28.420
and so causing people to vomit, causing them to have diarrhea
link |
01:47:31.420
or purposely taking blood out of them in bloodletting was a big part.
link |
01:47:36.420
And I think that crazy use of laxatives was maybe a holdover from that time.
link |
01:47:41.420
But that being said, they were probably not eating very high fiber food
link |
01:47:45.420
on that expedition, so perhaps laxatives could have been helpful.
link |
01:47:49.420
You know, there's a lot of seal, penguin and seal meat being eaten,
link |
01:47:54.420
which is not super high in fiber.
link |
01:47:56.420
So I don't want to discount the importance of laxatives in that setting.
link |
01:48:00.420
But that wouldn't be the essential thing if you're thinking of a tiny kit
link |
01:48:04.420
that has only the essentials.
link |
01:48:06.420
I mean, pain, yes, laxatives, I don't know, maybe not.
link |
01:48:11.420
I think the medical kit possibilities were much narrower back then.
link |
01:48:15.420
You know, this was before antibiotics,
link |
01:48:18.420
before I think germ theory might have been, you know, it was known,
link |
01:48:23.420
but there wasn't much to do about it.
link |
01:48:25.420
So the availability of medicines,
link |
01:48:27.420
I mean, that's something that exploded over the course of the 20th century.
link |
01:48:30.420
So what I can put in a backpack today filled with modern medications,
link |
01:48:34.420
whether injectable or to be taken orally is, you know,
link |
01:48:37.420
just many orders of magnitude greater than what they had back then.
link |
01:48:41.420
So when I, I mean, when I went, my expedition was nothing like Shackleton's.
link |
01:48:46.420
I was on a huge cruise ship with 160 Japanese passengers
link |
01:48:51.420
who came with their own translators.
link |
01:48:53.420
And as I said, I had a cabinet, not just one cabinet,
link |
01:48:58.420
many cabinets full of medications, both injectable, some patches, some pills.
link |
01:49:04.420
I was very impressed actually with what was available there.
link |
01:49:08.420
And I didn't have to use a lot of it, thankfully,
link |
01:49:11.420
though I did use some of it for people.
link |
01:49:13.420
But, and I slept in, you know, I got free room and board on the ship.
link |
01:49:19.420
Every southern summer cruise ships go take people to Antarctica,
link |
01:49:24.420
the Southern Atlantic Islands, like the Falklands and other parts of the South Pacific.
link |
01:49:28.420
And then in the northern summer, the same kind of cruise ship explosion happens,
link |
01:49:33.420
you know, going to Greenland and Iceland and Svalbard and Franz Josef Land
link |
01:49:37.420
and other parts of the North Alaska.
link |
01:49:40.420
So, and every ship needs a doctor.
link |
01:49:42.420
So it's a great opportunity.
link |
01:49:44.420
They want specifically ER doctors, you know, to deal with emergencies.
link |
01:49:48.420
But you're really working in the middle of nowhere.
link |
01:49:51.420
And all you have is the medications there on the ship and supplies
link |
01:49:55.420
and your knowledge and experience.
link |
01:49:57.420
And so it's a very different experience than working in a high tech modern hospital
link |
01:50:01.420
with every bit of technology and every subspecialist consultant available.
link |
01:50:05.420
But I sort of like that challenge.
link |
01:50:07.420
I mean, I like going to the ends of the earth.
link |
01:50:09.420
It's beautiful. It's exciting. It's fascinating.
link |
01:50:12.420
Practicing medicine in those settings is extra challenging
link |
01:50:15.420
and really makes you hone some of your skills, which is part of the reason that I sought them out.
link |
01:50:21.420
Do you see echoes of some of that same effort?
link |
01:50:24.420
I've gotten a chance to interact with astronauts and those kinds of folks working on space missions.
link |
01:50:30.420
Do you see some of those same echoes of challenging efforts going out into space
link |
01:50:35.420
and maybe landing on Mars and maybe beginning to build a small colony on Mars?
link |
01:50:41.420
Yeah, I think the health care that is needed will be a big part of that.
link |
01:50:45.420
Obviously, we're probably going to send overall quite healthy people.
link |
01:50:49.420
But there's a lot of medical decisions to make about what should be brought, what should be expected.
link |
01:50:54.420
To some extent, I've had a lot of doctors say,
link |
01:50:57.420
oh my goodness, I can't believe you work in the middle of nowhere.
link |
01:50:59.420
What do you do if someone gets a brain bleed, like falls, hits their head, needs a neurosurgeon?
link |
01:51:04.420
I mean, the obvious answer is they die.
link |
01:51:07.420
They get things when you're in the middle of Antarctica, things kill you that wouldn't
link |
01:51:11.420
if you're inside a university hospital that's fully equipped to help with every problem that arises.
link |
01:51:16.420
Mars takes that to a crazy extreme, obviously.
link |
01:51:20.420
I know that even going to Antarctica, different countries have had different strategies.
link |
01:51:24.420
I believe Australia used to, kind of just in anticipation, remove people's gallbladders
link |
01:51:31.420
just so that it wouldn't get inflamed because that is a very common medical emergency.
link |
01:51:36.420
Just remove it beforehand, even though it was not disease at all.
link |
01:51:39.420
Just so that while they're stuck in Antarctica over the winter, for instance, that wouldn't be a problem.
link |
01:51:44.420
There's many other issues that kind of rise.
link |
01:51:47.420
So those are some decisions to make.
link |
01:51:49.420
Maybe the people who go into Mars should have their appendix removed, their gallbladder removed.
link |
01:51:53.420
Maybe they should have a cardiac cath to see if they have coronary artery disease
link |
01:51:56.420
just to know their chances of getting a heart attack there, though it's not always predictive.
link |
01:52:00.420
It's hard to predict who's going to get a heart attack,
link |
01:52:02.420
but maybe with all the data around today, we'll get better at predicting.
link |
01:52:06.420
But that will be a huge part.
link |
01:52:07.420
We can't have people, the few pioneers in a Mars colony dying of heart attacks and things like that.
link |
01:52:12.420
Don't anticipate stuff.
link |
01:52:13.420
Would you go, you've gone to some harsh conditions to be a doctor.
link |
01:52:18.420
Would you go to Mars to be a doctor?
link |
01:52:20.420
It would definitely be amazing, I think, because I have a wife and two small children,
link |
01:52:26.420
probably not in the cards for me at this point.
link |
01:52:29.420
But you humans with your human attachments.
link |
01:52:33.420
Sex and death.
link |
01:52:35.420
If you just put more priority on the death than sex, I think it would be better off.
link |
01:52:42.420
No.
link |
01:52:43.420
I would love to go to Mars.
link |
01:52:45.420
And actually, I practice high altitude medicine in Nepal.
link |
01:52:48.420
Space medicine is sort of an extension of that.
link |
01:52:50.420
The air is just much thinner, like non existent.
link |
01:52:53.420
As you go higher in the mountains, the things that happen to human physiology are very bizarre and strange.
link |
01:52:58.420
And still not well explained by science.
link |
01:53:01.420
And in space, it's just like a crazy extension of high altitude.
link |
01:53:06.420
If I could just return to this.
link |
01:53:08.420
We didn't really, I think we mentioned a little bit about the food you had.
link |
01:53:12.420
Just if we can high level say, what is the greatest meal you've ever had?
link |
01:53:18.420
So your last meal.
link |
01:53:19.420
Let's go.
link |
01:53:20.420
If one more meal, I get to murder you after this.
link |
01:53:25.420
This is your last day.
link |
01:53:26.420
We get to spend it together.
link |
01:53:28.420
Where in the world would you go?
link |
01:53:29.420
What would you eat?
link |
01:53:31.420
I would say the most delicious thing is bone marrow.
link |
01:53:35.420
And I would love a full meal of bone marrow for my last dish.
link |
01:53:39.420
I did, on my birthday in 2002, eat a kilogram and a half of crab meat in Kamchatka.
link |
01:53:46.420
And that was also amazingly delicious.
link |
01:53:49.420
The king crab they have there is incredible.
link |
01:53:52.420
But I would go with bone marrow, which is I think just one of the most delicious foods.
link |
01:53:57.420
And it's sort of this weird body part.
link |
01:53:59.420
You know, it's basically all your stem cells, not all of them, but the stem cells that produce all your blood cells.
link |
01:54:04.420
So they are spitting out billions of white blood cells, red blood cells and platelets every day.
link |
01:54:09.420
And there's a bunch of fat in there as well.
link |
01:54:11.420
Just one of the places the body stores fat.
link |
01:54:14.420
And so you basically add heat and that's all you need.
link |
01:54:17.420
It's like the perfect food.
link |
01:54:18.420
You add heat, the fat for frying the stem cells is already there.
link |
01:54:21.420
There's naturally a bone vessel to contain it all.
link |
01:54:24.420
Probably add some flavor too.
link |
01:54:26.420
It's like the perfect food.
link |
01:54:28.420
Does it matter which animal?
link |
01:54:32.420
I prefer a larger animal just so there's more of it.
link |
01:54:35.420
I actually really like bone marrow from chicken bones.
link |
01:54:40.420
Right, just sucking it out of the bone.
link |
01:54:42.420
Yes, I'm known for leaving absolutely nothing edible on the plate except bone itself.
link |
01:54:48.420
There's one other human I know that loves bone marrow as much as you do.
link |
01:54:55.420
And that's Joe Rogan.
link |
01:54:56.420
So go, it's unnatural how much that man loves bone marrow.
link |
01:55:01.420
I understand why it's amazing.
link |
01:55:02.420
I love the steak part.
link |
01:55:03.420
The bone marrow, like, you know what, let me, let me argue with you because I don't know, it could be an acquired taste,
link |
01:55:11.420
but there's just too much, it's like too much with too little work for it.
link |
01:55:19.420
Like it's as if you gave me lobster meat without the lobster having to clean the lobster.
link |
01:55:26.420
I just feel like I'm spoiling myself.
link |
01:55:29.420
So it's very fatty.
link |
01:55:31.420
I don't know, maybe I want to work for something that tastes like that.
link |
01:55:35.420
Well, if you start from the whole animal, you do have to work to get at it, right?
link |
01:55:38.420
A lot of animals have the teeth and the jaw muscles to chomp through bone.
link |
01:55:43.420
We do not.
link |
01:55:44.420
So, you know, when you buy it from the store, it's already sawed up,
link |
01:55:48.420
but I've definitely gotten marrow out of deer bones, you know, with a hatchet,
link |
01:55:52.420
just chop off the fat end and start spooning it out.
link |
01:55:56.420
Well, maybe I'll revisit it.
link |
01:55:57.420
That's fascinating.
link |
01:55:58.420
And where, where would you eat it?
link |
01:56:01.420
Where, in which place of the world?
link |
01:56:03.420
Is there something about who cooks it, who you eat it with?
link |
01:56:09.420
You're not allowed to pick your family.
link |
01:56:12.420
Right.
link |
01:56:13.420
So, like, which place in the world, rural or in the city, those kinds of things,
link |
01:56:21.420
you've been to so many fascinating places.
link |
01:56:24.420
I would say Antarctica, I would say, is one of the most picturesque places I've ever been.
link |
01:56:30.420
I really did not, I didn't know how mountainous it was.
link |
01:56:34.420
And I guess I knew there'd be ice, but just, I didn't know how much ice it was.
link |
01:56:39.420
You know, it's ice and mountains, just overwhelming.
link |
01:56:41.420
I just, you know, as, as kind of overwhelming bone marrow might seem to you,
link |
01:56:45.420
sort of that feast for your eyes.
link |
01:56:48.420
And just ice in general is amazing.
link |
01:56:51.420
Like the icebergs floating around in Antarctica is just astounding.
link |
01:56:54.420
Like the different shapes, the sizes are incredible.
link |
01:56:59.420
There's actually a, I believe it's a U.S. Navy website that tracks the largest icebergs.
link |
01:57:03.420
And you can read about each of them and how big they are and just the formations you see.
link |
01:57:08.420
Similar up near Greenland, though I have not been to Greenland,
link |
01:57:12.420
just ice in general is just amazing.
link |
01:57:14.420
So I could just look at its different forms while eating bone marrow forever until you kill me.
link |
01:57:18.420
Yeah.
link |
01:57:19.420
And afterwards we go.
link |
01:57:21.420
It's back to the death of the death and sex.
link |
01:57:24.420
What is it about the ice?
link |
01:57:26.420
Is it sort of the normity of nature?
link |
01:57:29.420
It just reminds you that it's going to be there before you and after.
link |
01:57:34.420
And then you get to partake in the eating of the thing you need
link |
01:57:39.420
for maintaining of your biological, temporary biological organism.
link |
01:57:44.420
Yeah.
link |
01:57:45.420
I think it's a few things.
link |
01:57:46.420
One is just the shapes that you see, you know, the wave action,
link |
01:57:50.420
just eating away at these pieces of ice.
link |
01:57:53.420
You get these arches and just these shapes.
link |
01:57:55.420
I mean, it's just like geometry.
link |
01:57:57.420
The geometry alone is amazing.
link |
01:57:59.420
I studied math as an undergrad and I've always appreciated geometry.
link |
01:58:04.420
And just the shapes alone are just look like brilliant works of modernist art.
link |
01:58:09.420
And just obviously no two are ever the same.
link |
01:58:12.420
Not to mention a lot of them are this unearthly blue color that is just really startling and fascinating.
link |
01:58:18.420
The same color of glaciers, you know, in various parts of the world.
link |
01:58:22.420
That blue color is just really amazing.
link |
01:58:25.420
And I also just love how it's sort of this constant shedding from our Antarctic continent from Greenland.
link |
01:58:31.420
You know, it's this constant process of snow falling inland and pushing the glaciers further out to sea
link |
01:58:36.420
and then breaking loose.
link |
01:58:38.420
I mean, obviously it seems to be happening faster these days,
link |
01:58:40.420
but it's sort of this constant shedding and sort of I always like thinking about how the body has something similar.
link |
01:58:46.420
You know, we're constantly shedding and renewing and rebuilding everything.
link |
01:58:51.420
And so ice is sort of this constant similar process.
link |
01:58:55.420
Yeah, I did not know you were a math undergrad.
link |
01:59:00.420
So that I mean, you're just keep getting more fascinating.
link |
01:59:04.420
Can you maybe take a small step into that direction?
link |
01:59:08.420
What do you find beautiful about mathematics?
link |
01:59:11.420
Why did you journey into that part of the world for a time?
link |
01:59:15.420
I liked math.
link |
01:59:16.420
I especially like so college math.
link |
01:59:18.420
I did some calculus in high school.
link |
01:59:20.420
When I got to college math, I was amazed that there were no more numbers, you know, the digits disappeared.
link |
01:59:26.420
It was just variables, concepts, you know, there was almost no more numbers at all.
link |
01:59:32.420
It was like this totally abstract, you know, kind of way of thinking.
link |
01:59:38.420
But that sort of reflects the natural world and teaches you about the natural world,
link |
01:59:41.420
though it's sort of this perfect, you know, platonic ideal, perhaps of the natural world
link |
01:59:46.420
that can still sort of help explain what happens in the natural world.
link |
01:59:49.420
But just these concepts are so abstract from like life and from, you know, the natural world.
link |
01:59:56.420
I was actually getting interested in the natural world at the same time when I was in at NYU studying math.
link |
02:00:02.420
You know, I took a tour of Central Park that was pointing, the guy Steve Brill was pointing out these wild edible plants.
link |
02:00:09.420
And I was learning to identify the first plants and knowing what's edible, what's not.
link |
02:00:13.420
That was totally fascinating and sort of this kind of thing that I felt like was connecting me to nature.
link |
02:00:18.420
And it was balanced with this utterly abstract science, you know,
link |
02:00:23.420
or utterly abstract lessons I was getting in math class where I was thinking through series, you know,
link |
02:00:28.420
as we approach infinity, what happens to these equations and concepts of like rings and abstract algebra.
link |
02:00:34.420
I don't know, it was just this dichotomy that I enjoyed both aspects of.
link |
02:00:39.420
Yeah, the concepts, but so, so different, this kind of logical, rigorous view of the world and the world of biology.
link |
02:00:51.420
Why the big, how did that feel to take the leap into the biological, the mushy mess of the human body from the mathematical, which is all very clean.
link |
02:01:04.420
Right. It does, it does feel like a big step.
link |
02:01:07.420
I think there's more connection than you think, you know, we talked about symmetry of the body earlier.
link |
02:01:12.420
That is a real thing, you know, fluid dynamics of how our various bodily fluids flow and what makes them not flow as well and what makes them flow better.
link |
02:01:21.420
And, you know, all these different aspects of science go into the body.
link |
02:01:27.420
You know, everything from hard bone to softer kind of flesh to liquids of various consistencies.
link |
02:01:35.420
You know, a lot of science does and math does teach you about kind of how the body works, how it can work better, what happens in sort of disease states.
link |
02:01:45.420
Yeah, I suppose there's a, there's a connection.
link |
02:01:48.420
There's also kind of a sort of computational biologists.
link |
02:01:54.420
There's computational equivalents of each of the disciplines, which are becoming more and more fascinating,
link |
02:02:00.420
with all the work that DeepMind is doing in the work of genetics, all that kind of stuff, simulating different parts of the body to try to gain an intuition and understanding of it.
link |
02:02:09.420
That to me is super fascinating, but sometimes it does feel like an oversimplification of the way the body really does it,
link |
02:02:16.420
because the body is an incredibly weird, complex system and it finds a way.
link |
02:02:24.420
The adaptability, the resilience, the redundancy that's built in, it's weird.
link |
02:02:30.420
It's incredibly powerful and so unlike the kind of computer based systems that we build, at least we engineer in the software engineering world,
link |
02:02:40.420
which kind of starts to make you think, how can we engineer computer systems in a different way that make them more resilient in the real world?
link |
02:02:50.420
That's sort of a robotics question.
link |
02:02:53.420
What do you think about that?
link |
02:02:55.420
What does it take to build a humanoid robot or robots that are as resilient as the human body?
link |
02:03:02.420
How difficult do you think is that problem?
link |
02:03:04.420
Having studied the human body, how hard is the engineering problem of building systems like that guy over there,
link |
02:03:11.420
the legged guy that is as resilient as the human body to the harsh conditions of the real world?
link |
02:03:19.420
I think it's very hard and we definitely haven't gotten there yet.
link |
02:03:22.420
I think we could probably learn lessons from people who are trying to grow artificial organs in the lab to eventually transplant into people,
link |
02:03:29.420
which would solve the huge problem of needing to get those organs from others and the rejection of putting a foreign material inside your body.
link |
02:03:36.420
Your immune system tends not to like that.
link |
02:03:40.420
That has advanced a lot recently.
link |
02:03:42.420
I think some advances actually have been where we pay a lot of attention to stem cells, stem cells, stem cells.
link |
02:03:49.420
We can grow whatever we want out of stem cells, but now there's sort of a recognition that what we call the extracellular matrix,
link |
02:03:56.420
which is sort of the foundation of the body, the thing that holds all the cells into their proper shape and keeps them where they should be.
link |
02:04:05.420
That is actually crucial and there's probably a lot of signaling that goes on.
link |
02:04:09.420
You stick a stem cell on the right extracellular matrix.
link |
02:04:12.420
It will turn into the kind of cell that you want and take the right shape and position and start functioning.
link |
02:04:17.420
I think that's been a huge advance knowing that it's not just these celebrity stem cells that are the answer.
link |
02:04:25.420
It's this kind of part in the background, this sort of just like laying the foundation, the system that you put these cells onto.
link |
02:04:31.420
We're not there yet, but there's definitely a lot happening, a lot of research happening and I think there'll be some advances probably soon.
link |
02:04:39.420
So now on the topic of interaction of computational systems with biology.
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02:04:47.420
So if you look at a company like Neuralink or the whole effort of brain computer interfaces, now there's a neurosurgery component there.
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02:04:56.420
We have to connect electrical systems with biological systems.
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02:05:04.420
So just even the implanting is difficult, then the communication is difficult.
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02:05:10.420
What would you say from what you know about the brain, what you know about the human body and all the beautiful mess that's there?
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02:05:18.420
How difficult is the effort of Neuralink? Do you think it's feasible?
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02:05:22.420
I think it's definitely feasible.
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02:05:24.420
I think we need to probably know more than we do and know how to connect it in all these ways.
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02:05:31.420
I think some advances, for instance, much less sexy but really already impacting medical care is something called deep brain stimulation,
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02:05:40.420
which is done for Parkinson's disease and others where neurosurgeons implant this device that's electrically stimulates the part of the brain
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02:05:48.420
that is not functioning in Parkinson's disease and it's quite dramatic how effective it works.
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02:05:53.420
I remember as a med student watching a neurologist literally turn the electricity up on this handheld thing and you could see the person's Parkinson tremor go away
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02:06:02.420
and you could see them start to walk in a more steady fashion.
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02:06:06.420
There may be studies in the future studying the same deep brain stimulation for everything from eating disorders to severe OCD,
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02:06:19.420
like paralyzing OCD, not just like, I want to wash my hands three times.
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02:06:25.420
I think the potential is there but I guess connecting the brain in a microscopic way in sort of a multifaceted way,
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02:06:35.420
there needs to be sort of a million connections or some very high number of connections for them to work fluidly.
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02:06:40.420
As far as I know, I'm not an expert in the area.
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02:06:43.420
First of all, I believe and I trust in the adaptability of the biological system to whatever crazy stuff you try to shove in there.
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02:06:50.420
So it's going to potentially reject things, but it's also going to, if it doesn't reject things, adapt.
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02:06:57.420
And if we can create computational systems that also adapt, AI systems that adapt and can kind of both of them reach towards each other and figure stuff out.
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02:07:08.420
But actually our current AI systems are not very adaptable in the wild way that biology is adaptable, like adaptable to anything.
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02:07:19.420
And if we can build AI systems like that, I feel like there's some interesting things you could do.
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02:07:23.420
But of course, there's ethics and there's real human lives at stake.
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02:07:29.420
And there you can't quite experiment.
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02:07:32.420
You have to have things that work.
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02:07:34.420
And maybe simulation can help, but reality is it's a dangerous playground to play on.
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02:07:43.420
It is messy.
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02:07:45.420
You tweeted that quote, if you look back from far enough into the future, every doctor today will look like a total quack.
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02:07:56.420
First of all, that's humbling to think about.
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02:07:59.420
Like we don't know what we're doing in the great, like there's been so much progress that we kind of have this confidence that we figured it all out.
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02:08:09.420
If you look at history and you read how people thought, I mean, there's so many moments in history where people really thought that they figured it all out.
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It's almost like there's nothing else left to do at every stage in history.
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02:08:23.420
And then you realize, no, progress often happens like exponentially.
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02:08:29.420
And every moment you continue to think you figured it all out.
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02:08:33.420
But if you're being honest, if you're being humble, then you realize we're just shrouded in mystery.
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02:08:39.420
So what do we make of this?
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02:08:41.420
Like how should we feel that?
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02:08:42.420
How should you feel as a doctor?
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02:08:44.420
How should we feel as scientific explorers of the human body, the fact that we're probably going to be wrong about everything we currently know?
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02:08:54.420
Right. There's a saying actually, by the time you finish med school, half of what you learned is wrong, which is quite illustrative.
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02:09:02.420
And becoming more true as time goes on, you know, so much medical research going on, so much learning going on, it's really wonderful in a way.
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02:09:10.420
But in some ways, we still learn these concepts, you know, from the past.
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02:09:14.420
And I know when you take a test as a medical student, sometimes you know they want you to give the old answer, but you know there's a new answer because of recent science.
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02:09:24.420
But you know to give the old answer, that's now incorrect to get the question right on the test.
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02:09:28.420
That happens actually quite a bit because things change so quickly.
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02:09:32.420
Yet, you know, when I look back at doctors from centuries past, I mean, it's absurd what they were doing to their patients.
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02:09:39.420
I mean, probably for most of human history, they were doing more harm than good.
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02:09:43.420
You know, they're draining people of their blood.
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02:09:45.420
That was, you know, bloodletting was a huge part of medical care.
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02:09:50.420
You know, George Washington died of a paratonsular abscess, an abscess right next to the tonsil, which has the great name of Quincy, and they bled him to death.
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02:10:00.420
You know, I mean, kind of adding insult to injury. Doctors are menace and do a lot of harm.
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02:10:05.420
I mean, hopefully not intentionally. You know, even medical errors are still a huge problem, cause of death and morbidity.
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02:10:13.420
So we do a lot of things that are not great, but you know, our knowledge, it's very imperfect at this point.
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02:10:19.420
I do have some confidence. You know, I guess perfect scientific studies that try to get at the reality of the universe are essential.
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02:10:28.420
Because when I think of why a certain medication works for a certain condition, it might make perfect sense in my head knowing the biology, the biochemistry, the anatomy.
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02:10:38.420
It makes perfect sense. It must work. I gave it to the patient. They got better and that's happened 20 times in the last year.
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02:10:44.420
But it's, you know, I'm wrong. Like when you actually do a study, it actually doesn't help. Maybe it hurts.
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02:10:50.420
And that's really, I think the way we explain medications working in our minds is often wrong when you end up finally doing the study.
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02:11:00.420
And some of the most interesting experiments involve what we call sham surgery.
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02:11:05.420
So for instance, people who injure their knee, you know, arthroscopy where an orthopedic surgeon goes in there with a scope, gets bits of bone out, shaves down the cartilage, you know, cleans things up.
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02:11:16.420
And it helps some people, but they actually did some studies where one group of people got the true arthroscopy and others just got sham surgery where they put them to sleep,
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02:11:25.420
made little cuts in the skin so that they woke up with scars. And then it turned out that it's not clear arthroscopy is actually helping.
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02:11:33.420
And the same, there was a recent huge study of putting a stent in someone's coronary arteries if they have stable chest pain.
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02:11:41.420
Not like I'm having a heart attack. You need a stent like right then. But, you know, kind of chronic coronary artery disease where every time I run up the stairs, like a chest pain, then when I rest, it goes away.
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02:11:52.420
Like obviously you put a stent, you increase blood flow to the heart. Like how could that not work? But then when they did the sham catheterization, it actually looks like it might not actually help better than the sham.
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02:12:04.420
So I think those placebo controlled studies are essential. I mean, it is shocking, and this has been driven home during the last two years, how hard it is to figure out what the hell's going on in the universe and especially with our bodies.
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02:12:16.420
Like it is really hard to get at the truth. And what you think makes sense, like often turns out, I mean, the history of modern medicine is littered with examples where it made perfect sense and it seemed to help some patients and it turns out it's not doing anything or it's harmful.
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02:12:31.420
There's all kinds of narratives swimming around. We convinced ourselves as a human civilization that something is true. There's propaganda machines. There's just self delusion.
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02:12:41.420
There's centralized communities. Like there's a scientific community that believes a certain thing. There's the conspiracy theories that believe a certain thing.
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02:12:51.420
Sometimes the scientific community writes, sometimes the conspiracy theorists are right throughout human history. I mean, and we now think the scientific community, well, now the science has really figured it out.
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02:13:02.420
We're way smarter than we were in the past. And then there's these like interesting studies that I've seen. I think Robin Hansen mentioned it to me, that if you look at the entirety of medication, like the effect of medication on human health,
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02:13:19.420
if you do those kinds of broad studies, does it actually help? Like does quality of life, lifespan, certain measures of the well being, if you look at human society as a whole, does taking medication or not actually help?
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02:13:37.420
And those studies find there's no positive or negative effect with medication. And that's a very kind of interesting perspective. I mean, you could probably argue a lot of ways, but the point is, because you can bring up literally a billion cases where
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02:13:58.420
medication has significant positive impact on a particular patient, but you have to kind of zoom out and honestly look at the positive effects of medicine, of lifestyle choices, diet choices, of exercise or not.
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02:14:12.420
You know, maybe we'll find eventually that exercise actually bad for you. Maybe like there's all kinds of things that we're going to, I feel like we're going to figure out.
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02:14:24.420
One of the things I think we're going to figure out, everything I've learned about my body is that, aside from it being adaptable, there's a lot of very unique parameters that are opaque to me that I'm measuring through this feedback mechanism by trying stuff and learning about it.
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02:14:43.420
And one of the things we might learn is that medicine cannot be done without collecting a huge amount of data about each individual human. So like it's absurd to be, like if I show up and see a doctor, it's absurd for that doctor to have just a couple of minutes with me.
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02:15:02.420
Like just, like looking at basic symptoms, looking at such like crappy data, like first of all, no long term data, no longitude, no data, no historical data, no detailed analysis of all the possible things, not just related to your symptoms, but related to other things that you're not complaining about.
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02:15:30.420
Just giving you a full picture of the data and then using AI to help the human doctor highlight the things that you should perhaps pay extra attention to.
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02:15:41.420
I think we'll look back at this time as ridiculous that doctors were expected to help anybody whatsoever without having the data, without having a huge amount of data about the human body. Like you have to do so much with so little data.
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02:15:55.420
It's very 19th century. It's very 19th century. So it relies on the brilliance of doctors and of course the intuition, the instinct you build up over time.
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02:16:04.420
And that's quite powerful. The human brain is pretty damn good for using experience to teach you how to make a good decision, but still it's, you might as well be bloodletting. Like it's humbling to think about that. It's humbling.
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02:16:22.420
It is humbling and it's important. I think doctors sometimes lose that humble perspective on what they do. And I think it's very important because as I said, you know, medical history is just medical dogma has been tossed into the trash bin so many times.
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02:16:37.420
Something doctors were sure of was the case is not. And it's important to be cognizant of that.
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02:16:46.420
You tweeted about somebody that had a big impact just by reading about him on my life as well.
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02:16:55.420
I still think about him.
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02:16:57.420
Rest in peace, Dr. Paul Farmer, a big inspiration to me. His medical career was a testament to what one person can do to improve the world. So who was Paul Farmer? And what made him a great doctor and a great man and somebody who was an inspiration to you?
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02:17:15.420
So Paul Farmer was a kind of pioneer of global health. He started Partners in Health, which is kind of an international health organization that operates originally in Haiti, also Rwanda and elsewhere.
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02:17:30.420
And I think he was just so a zealot for getting health care to some of the poorest people in the world. And I remember reading some of his books and a book about him by Tracy Kitter, that's really great, Mountains Beyond Mountains, about how even when he was a medical student, he was flying back and forth to Haiti in between exams
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02:17:50.420
and just with this really intense focus and interest in getting health care to where it's not. And I think traveling around the world, especially to poorer places like India, Calcutta, Nepal, you really see how unevenly the benefits of modern medicine are spread over the surface of the earth.
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02:18:10.420
Not only because if you're an Antarctica and have a heart attack, you're in serious trouble, but just medications that cost pennies a day can help people. A lot of children in India under five die of diarrhea and all they need is oral rehydration solutions to stay hydrated.
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02:18:30.420
They can't afford IV fluids, for instance, to get admitted to the hospital and really dehydration just kills hundreds of thousands of kids throughout the world. Not to mention, bacterial pneumonia also is a major cause of death in children under five.
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02:18:44.420
And many of them not all would be saved by amoxicillin, which is just pennies. And for me, I took a path and I wanted to have a career in global health.
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02:18:56.420
And I started traveling abroad to India and elsewhere when I was a medical student and continued doing that.
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02:19:01.420
Paul Farmer was sort of one of the first to kind of open everyone's eyes, I think, about the good you can do with just money that we would change, you know, change that we would throw away.
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02:19:12.420
Just, you know, put in a person, forget it or wherever we accumulate change these days. So that's very eye opening.
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02:19:18.420
And while medical science advances, and that's good, you know, we shouldn't forget that 100 year old treatments could save lives in parts of the world where they're just not available.
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02:19:27.420
People should definitely read mountains beyond mountains. Just for me, at least sort of a person from outside all of it, it was the first person to make me realize how difficult and the amount of humanity that's involved in being a doctor.
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02:19:45.420
So it's not some kind of cold economics based argument about where to send treatments and so on. That is there too.
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02:19:54.420
Like you said, basic treatments can help hundreds of thousands, millions of people in many parts of the world.
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02:20:01.420
But it's also when you have a patient in front of you, there's some aspect of you that's willing to give a lot of your time, a lot of your money, a lot of your effort to saving them, even though it doesn't make any sense.
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02:20:19.420
It's irrational in some sense, but it's also human. And that's the struggle of every doctor, like when you have to choose how to allocate your time, how to allocate your mental energy.
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02:20:30.420
It's a tough choice that a doctor has to make and it's a human choice. It's not some kind of cold game theoretic choice. It's also a human choice and it can be irrational in some sense.
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02:20:43.420
People are asking you for help. That's basically what every patient interaction is. Someone's asking you for help.
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02:20:49.420
So your inclination is to help them and even if it means going above and beyond, a lot of factors affect how compassionate a doctor might be in any given day or point in their career, their own stress and burnout, etc.
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02:21:04.420
But it's someone asking you for help and so you do what you can to help them.
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02:21:10.420
You've done quite a lot of things in your life. It's been an interesting journey. Of course, there's a lot of story yet to be written.
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02:21:20.420
But what advice would you give to young people today? In high school, maybe undergrad college starting out on that journey.
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02:21:29.420
Maybe trying to pick majors, trying to pick jobs, careers, dreams and goals that can pursue.
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02:21:38.420
What advice would you give them to have a career they can be proud of or to even have a life they can be proud of?
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02:21:45.420
Well, I think having passion, which isn't always a voluntary thing. You just have it or you don't perhaps.
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02:21:52.420
But becoming passionate about something and following it, wherever it takes you, I think is really important.
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02:21:59.420
When I finished college and went to Russia for the first time, that was in some ways the beginning of my whole career and passions in my life.
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02:22:08.420
I didn't know what I was going for, what was going to happen, what kind of career it would turn into, what kind of job would it help me get when I got back?
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02:22:15.420
I wasn't thinking about anything of that. I'm very fortunate I got that opportunity.
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02:22:20.420
I was very fortunate to be able to go and see those places and have my mind opened and I think that really just the fuel from that passion that was created during that time is still 20 years later going strong.
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02:22:33.420
I'm partial to health care. I love being a doctor. I think it's the perfect combination of intellectual problem solving, being a detective while also working with your hands.
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02:22:44.420
When you do procedures, especially in the ER, it's sort of the perfect combination. I'm not a surgeon, but I do use my hands quite a bit for a variety of reasons.
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02:22:55.420
I always loved working with my hands. I loved crafts, especially prehistoric crafts, before medical school.
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02:23:03.420
I just love problem solving, getting clues, figuring out what's going on, following your nose, using your instincts, your knowledge, and also just keen observation of the patient.
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02:23:14.420
After seeing patient after patient, hundreds of patients, maybe thousands over years, you do get this innate sense, this gestalt about what might be going on.
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02:23:24.420
It's not always a numbers thing. There's gestalt is actually a big part of medicine. You often in ERs or in hospitals, a nurse or doctor say something like, this patient just doesn't look good.
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02:23:37.420
You can't point to a number, a value, a level in their blood, a test, but something about them.
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02:23:45.420
A lot of that I think has to do with the color of their skin, believe it or not, which can change in certain disease states.
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02:23:52.420
I think that medicine combines this observation, the skills, the knowledge, its art and science, its human and its robotic algorithmic at the same time.
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02:24:06.420
I think it just combines all my passions all in one. If anyone's going into healthcare, I'd strongly encourage them to do so, but I'm very biased.
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02:24:16.420
With that early passion, whatever that little flame was that brought you to Russia, were you able to vocalize it or was it just something like a gut that pulled you towards some exploration of the unknown or something like this?
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02:24:32.420
I think it was a combination of things. One was just going to a different place that was different from where I grew up.
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02:24:39.420
The suburbs, when you're in high school, you hate them. Later on, they don't seem so bad. I'm very fortunate how I was raised and never wanted for anything that wasn't rich.
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02:24:51.420
Just to get out and see a different place, a different people with a different culture and history and language and literature and to see different climates and geographies and ecosystems.
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02:25:01.420
I just wanted to see something different. I guess that's what I've sought after ever since. That was just so fascinating.
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02:25:09.420
My trip to Kamchatka in 2003, where I was there for four months and I didn't speak English for, I think, two months out of it.
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02:25:17.420
I remember lying on the floor, some wooden floor in a hunter's cabin in the middle of northern Kamchatka just being like,
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02:25:24.420
what am I doing here? I was so grateful for the experiences I was having, what I was seeing and realizing and learning.
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02:25:32.420
I was so grateful, even though I was lying on this hard uncomfortable floor. It's just like, this is so amazing.
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02:25:37.420
I don't think I'll ever have another travel as meaningful and life changing as that particular trip to Kamchatka was, though I'm still striving after it.
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02:25:47.420
You never replicate that first high, but you always try. I just think that seeing something different is kind of the game.
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02:25:55.420
There wasn't really a plan. I got a chance to talk to the CEO of Qualcomm recently. His advice is, always have a plan.
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02:26:07.420
It sounds like you're saying, don't have a plan. Don't need to have a plan. Just listen to your gut, your passion and follow that and see where that takes you because it's telling you something.
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02:26:22.420
I guess the plan could be specific or could be as general as, I just want to go far away and see something very different. That's my plan.
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02:26:31.420
That's one line. Just followed my nose from one thing to the next, just being interested, following my passion and, again, very fortunate I could do that.
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02:26:40.420
Are there places in the world you're kind of thinking about that your life might take you at some point to be a doctor there for a time, to explore for a time that you haven't yet?
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02:26:57.420
You know, I have some colleagues who do kind of global health work in various countries in Africa and Central and South America.
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02:27:04.420
I would really love to go to some of those places, not just for a short trip, but hopefully for an extended period of time with sort of the health care being the ticket in,
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02:27:16.420
but then maybe even bringing my children or just, you know, I guess at this point, some of the travel I dream about is sort of replicating what I did and showing it to my kids in a way.
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02:27:26.420
But there's still a lot I haven't seen and would love to see as well.
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02:27:30.420
But I think those opportunities sort of lend themselves well, you know, as a doctor with kind of the ability to go there and sort of help patients, but also teach medical students and residents.
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02:27:41.420
Teaching is actually a huge part of being a doctor that's underappreciated, but that's actually part of the fun of being a doctor is that you're also a teacher.
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02:27:49.420
Of course, the word doctor means teacher, but it's come to mean something else. But, you know, in some of my jobs, I'm working alongside medical students and residents and I'm giving them my knowledge, my wisdom, sharing with them stories.
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02:28:04.420
And so that's a very satisfying part of the job.
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02:28:08.420
If we could take a brief step into a dark place together for a time. Is there a, what is a dark place you've gone in your mind in your life?
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02:28:22.420
What would be the darkest place you've ever gone for time, for a moment?
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02:28:32.420
And how did you survive? How did you overcome it?
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02:28:36.420
That's a very good question. I would say I haven't had as dark moments as many of the people who I care for in the emergency room.
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02:28:49.420
I'm fortunate in that way. I've had a pretty, you know, enjoyable, satisfying life.
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02:28:55.420
You know, I think everybody has dark moments, though, including me.
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02:29:00.420
One of the most shocking things I feel like becoming an adult, my two big realizations have been, one, no one knows what they're doing.
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02:29:08.420
And two, suicide is incredibly common, like in all humans and all societies. That I just find shocking.
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02:29:15.420
I mean, I've never seriously contemplated myself, but I wouldn't say it hasn't crossed my mind during some more stressful times of life.
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02:29:25.420
I think it crosses everyone's mind. And it sort of, as a kid, I found that I never would have guessed how common suicide is.
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02:29:32.420
It's an important question to sort of the Camus question, like why live? Why? Why?
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02:29:42.420
Because like life, especially when you're struggling, especially when life is shit, like why am I doing any of this?
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02:29:50.420
And then on top of that chemistry of your brain, it could be as simple as diet and nutrition and aforementioned exercise and things like this
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02:30:01.420
that affect the chemistry such that you're more predisposed to go to the places of asking the question why and maybe struggling to find a good answer.
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02:30:13.420
Because it's actually a question with no good answer, except something in your chemistry says, well, I kind of like it.
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02:30:22.420
But there's no good intellectual answer. And especially if day to day it's pain.
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02:30:28.420
You get to see these stories of, you know, Robin Williams, these people that are on top of the world from an external perspective,
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02:30:37.420
but from an internal perspective, it's struggle. Every day is pain.
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02:30:44.420
It feels hopeless. And yeah, that's the question we all have to struggle with or learn how to ignore.
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02:30:52.420
Maybe because if you ask the question too much, you're not going to find a good answer.
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02:30:58.420
That's a choice you make. I personally think you should ask that question a lot.
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02:31:05.420
But maybe because I have the luxury of the chemistry I have where I'm not in danger of seriously contemplating suicide.
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02:31:14.420
But why live is an important question to answer constantly and struggle to answer that constantly.
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02:31:21.420
I've been extremely fortunate to meet people over the past couple of years that are really struggling.
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02:31:35.420
You have probably met people who are really struggling like orders of magnitude more people who are really struggling.
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02:31:44.420
Some of it is psychological. A lot of it is biological. And man, life is a motherfucker. It's pretty tough.
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02:31:54.420
Very true. I do think also past trauma plays a big role there like we talked about, you know, war wounds and PTSD.
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02:32:02.420
And a lot of people grew up, I mean, with just horrific childhoods, they're abused in one way or another.
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02:32:08.420
And I think a lot of people who have not, I'm not saying a majority, but a lot of people, for instance, who I see in the ER
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02:32:16.420
coming in for threatening suicide or actually trying and failing and being brought to the ER.
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02:32:21.420
You know, a lot of them just have really traumatic experiences.
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02:32:25.420
You know, saw their parent commit suicide, were abused, you know, these leave scars in the human brain and mind.
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02:32:32.420
And a lot of their subsequent lives of whether it's substance abuse, alcoholism, et cetera, is almost trying to escape from their own memories.
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02:32:40.420
And it's sort of such this overwhelming battle sometimes, like sometimes people get ruined, it seems, and just can't be fixed.
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02:32:50.420
You know what I mean? Yes, you can improve diet and health and your life choices and seek out your passion and exercise.
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02:32:57.420
And those definitely will help. But sometimes just like, you know, you bear the scars of the past and there's no getting rid of them.
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02:33:03.420
Yeah, I think it's possible to live with them through the struggle.
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02:33:09.420
I would never say give up, you know.
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Keep fighting.
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It is a constant, it can be a constant battle for some people.
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I know it can be, and I've talked to many of those folks, I know it can feel hopeless, but keep up the good fight.
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Hopelessness is kind of one of the big suicide risk factors that you sort of ask about as a doctor, you know, do you feel hopeless?
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And that sort of can be a harbinger.
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I have quite a few dark moments, so if you're listening and you're struggling, we're in this together, brother and sister, keep up the good fight.
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02:33:50.420
Life is a motherfucker, as you said. It's really harder.
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02:33:54.420
I think as a kid, you know, in a joy free childhood, you don't realize like, obviously there's a ton you don't realize about life.
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But then when you get to be an adult, you realize just how complex and hard it is.
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Is it this hard for adult animals? I don't know. I don't think it is.
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So I haven't seen the honesty of biology before you.
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02:34:18.420
Do you think about your own death?
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Do you contemplate death? Are you afraid of your own death? How do you make sense of it?
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I've definitely thought about it, especially maybe while doing certain risky things.
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Ice climbing and others where every time I look down, I thought about my own death, but I think, you know, I think having kids changes the equation for sure.
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Should change the equation perhaps? So I think a lot of, now when I think about what will happen when I die, you know, there's a lot of worrying about what will happen to the people I care for.
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02:34:58.420
You know, you think about things like insurance policy, life insurance and, you know, disability insurance, that's not related to death, but more just injuries.
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That's part of the weight, I guess, that, you know, you feel as an adult that I think grows rapidly when you have kids.
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Though not only, you know, there's other people you can care for, your own parents and loved ones, like a lot of people depend on individuals.
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And so you think about what will happen to the other people when you die.
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But also to push back that weight might be something you've convinced yourself to think about. It's an important way to think about.
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But you focus on that weight to escape the other weight, which is, at one point, this consciousness just comes to an end and it's hard to make sense of that.
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We kind of delude ourselves in thinking, okay, it just, yeah, it's ends. That's the natural way of things and so on that makes sense.
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02:36:00.420
Okay, that's the way of life. But I don't think it's, like, cognitively easy to just realize how terrifying that is.
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We love life so much that the end of it, it just, it's something that makes no sense.
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And if you linger on that thought, I think it's a painful, it's a painful, I would say even terrifying thought, not scared of, like, in a way that's almost like philosophically terrifying.
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Like, it just reminds you, maybe humbles you that you don't know anything about anything.
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But one of the things we do as humans really well is we, especially with kids, you realize, okay, we start caring for others in the community and the family and so on and that distracts us.
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Because then we can at least focus on other people's problems and not deal with our own.
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02:37:02.420
When I was a medical student, I was particularly fascinated with kind of what actually happens as people die, like in the last minute, seconds of life.
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It's sort of surprising sometimes, like, what actually kills people, you know, like, you can get a, let's say, a bad head injury and, you know, what kills you.
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Sometimes it's just your consciousness decreases and you become kind of comatose, you aspirate your oxygen plummets and you get cardiac arrest, you know, that kind of sequence of events.
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Or, you know, a heroin overdose, let's say you stop breathing, similarly, your oxygen goes down, then you get a cardiac arrest.
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So I was really fascinated with what actually happens, what makes people die.
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And it was sort of a morbid fascination, obviously, like most of med school is.
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And I had many instances where I've had patients pass and as a medical student, I was sort of learning what's actually happening, watching it happen and, you know, not always being able to prevent it.
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It was sort of a scientific exploration.
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02:38:02.420
Then the patient's family comes in and are just devastated.
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And then it's like, rips you out of this scientific perspective and you just realize how horrible death is.
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But the person's fine, you know, it's the family, I guess.
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And that's why it's always, I guess, that pointed out just how what people leave behind is often kind of the horribleness of death, like just becoming unconscious and staying that way doesn't seem, I guess, to me personally, so bad.
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Sort of like going to sleep, not waking up, not counting the pain and stuff that precedes it.
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So the actual pain, the actual suffering is often felt by the people who love the person who died.
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02:38:38.420
Right.
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So both financial pain, psychological pain for years, missing them, all those kinds of things.
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02:38:46.420
Right.
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02:38:47.420
Never forgetting the anniversary of their death, you know, just having flashbacks or something reminding you.
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That sort of brought home to me sort of what death means.
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And it was more about what people leave behind than what happens to them specifically.
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02:39:01.420
See, I like those concerns because I feel like I can do a lot about those.
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Those make sense to me.
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02:39:08.420
Then just be, if you're a father, just be a good father.
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02:39:11.420
If you're sort of, you mentioned sort of insurance, yeah, there's like financial stuff to take care of.
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But I don't know what to do with is the philosophical existential crisis of the fact that this fricking thing ends.
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It doesn't, like, I don't know how to deal with the mystery that's beyond death.
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02:39:34.420
Why are we here?
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02:39:36.420
Why are we born at all?
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02:39:37.420
What is consciousness?
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02:39:39.420
And you just look at yourself.
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What is this?
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Why do I have the capacity to suffer?
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02:39:43.420
Why? Why? All these kinds of why questions that don't have answers.
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02:39:48.420
Speaking of which, let me ask you a why question.
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The biggest, ridiculous one.
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02:39:53.420
What do you think is the meaning of life?
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02:39:56.420
Having with this book studied the incredible, beautiful biology of life.
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02:40:03.420
The components, the engineering components, they make up this human body.
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02:40:09.420
But when you look at the entirety of it, what is why?
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02:40:14.420
Why are we here?
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02:40:16.420
Sometimes, probably more often than not, feel like the question of why is a trick of the human brain.
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And outside of our thoughts, there is no why.
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02:40:25.420
Why is not something that's in the universe?
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02:40:28.420
It's just this trick happening inside our brain.
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So why is a game that the human brain plays on itself?
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02:40:36.420
And then the reality of life doesn't have whys.
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02:40:41.420
I do wonder if asking why is sort of an evolutionary adaptation.
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02:40:45.420
Like why, you know, maybe hunting, gathering.
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02:40:49.420
Why does this plant grow there and not there?
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02:40:51.420
Why do I see the same deer tracks and by the same tree every three days?
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02:40:55.420
Why, you know, why is this?
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02:40:57.420
Why is that?
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02:40:59.420
Why does this plant make me vomit and that plant doesn't?
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02:41:03.420
I guess those whys are very practical and oriented towards survival.
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02:41:08.420
But then obviously, you know, we not only use whys, you know, we use it to maybe hunt better, gather better, survive better,
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02:41:15.420
but then we sort of extrapolate it into these unanswerable questions, you know, about why.
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02:41:22.420
Like why does life exist?
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02:41:24.420
And it's possible that they're not unanswerable in the long arc of science and history.
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02:41:30.420
We're just striving for the really difficult questions.
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02:41:33.420
Right now, we just don't know much about anything.
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02:41:36.420
And so we're striving.
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02:41:38.420
But there's long, so most of human history, you were asking why questions for which we now have very precise answers,
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02:41:47.420
including with biology and physics and all those kinds of things.
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02:41:50.420
And maybe the whys, the cutting edge of science of the explorer of the curiosity of the human mind.
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02:41:57.420
Like man's search for meaning is the sort of the ultimate driver of the whys.
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02:42:03.420
And it's almost like it could be an evolutionary adaptation of asking exceptionally hard whys questions that will never get answered.
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02:42:13.420
Like, so you should always have, like, it's like a cue.
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02:42:18.420
It's a stack of questions, whys questions, and that thing should never come to the bottom.
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02:42:23.420
You should always be striving, and that's useful for humans to come up with better and better ways of survival.
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02:42:30.420
And maybe in a bigger perspective for the universe to figure out something about itself.
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02:42:36.420
And it's just humans, just a useful tool for that.
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02:42:39.420
Or life on Earth is a useful tool for that.
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02:42:42.420
Well, John, for people who should know, you're from Philadelphia.
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I'm from Philadelphia.
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02:42:50.420
So it's an honor that you will travel all this way from a place I love to the new place I love.
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And that you will write this really incredible book that celebrates the human body in the most honest of ways.
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02:43:03.420
And thank you for everything you do, for being a great educator, for being a great doctor, for being a great person,
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02:43:08.420
and for spending your really valuable time with me today.
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02:43:11.420
Thank you, John.
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02:43:12.420
Thanks for having me, Lex.
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02:43:14.420
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Jonathan Reisman.
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02:43:17.420
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
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02:43:21.420
And now, let me leave you with some words from Paul Farmer,
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02:43:24.420
a doctor who has inspired both Jonathan and me with the way he practiced medicine and the way he lived his life.
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02:43:32.420
The idea that some lives matter less is the root of all that is wrong with the world.
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Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.