All The Ghosts You Will Be
Vsauce
0:01 Hey, Vsauce, Michael here.
0:03 A single piece of refined flour is on average just 82.67 microns wide.
0:09 That means a 5 lb bag of flour
0:12 contains about 2.7 billion individual specks of flower dust.
0:16 Now, if each of those particles were a person,
0:19 three bags could represent every single human alive on Earth today.
0:24 8.1 billion itty bitty things.
0:27 Are you under 30 years old?
0:29 Is a question that could roughly divide everyone alive today in half,
0:33 the yeses and the nos.
0:34 But can you imagine a second question that could
0:37 then divide both of those groups in half?
0:39 Well, if so, and if you kept doing that, after just 33 questions,
0:43 you would be left with more than 8 billion groups,
0:46 each containing just one person.
0:48 In other words, out of everyone alive today,
0:50 we could pinpoint a specific individual,
0:52 for example, you, with just 33 yes or no questions.
0:57 What would those questions be?
0:59 Do they even exist?
1:01 We don't know.
1:02 But we do know that every year about this many people die.
1:05 A little bit more than a/4 cup.
1:08 But about twice as many as that are born.
1:11 But how many people have ever been born?
1:14 This many.
1:16 117 billion.
1:18 But out of all of these people, out of everyone who has ever existed,
1:22 this is how many you will ever meet.
1:26 You are a stranger to your own species.
1:29 This is a video about how you will be forgotten.
1:32 It's about the ghosts that surround us and how they're getting closer.
1:38 Our journey begins 2500 km above the surface of the sun.
1:42 There, a hot layer of ionized gas begins
1:45 its reach millions of kilome out into space.
1:49 It's called the solar corona.
1:51 And normally it's outshon by the rest of the sun
1:54 because it gives off just 1 millionth as much light.
1:57 But during an eclipse it can be seen.
2:01 When you are eclipsed your own sort of corona will remain as well.
2:05 The memories people have of you.
2:07 Your treasure and junk.
2:10 Emails and texts you sent.
2:12 The fact that your child has a nose like yours.
2:15 Every appearance you made in the background of a stranger's photo.
2:18 Those are all traces of you that shine while you're alive,
2:22 but can also continue long after you're gone.
2:25 Douglas Hoffetter called them your solar corona.
2:29 I love that phrase because it makes
2:30 a cosmological phenomenon personal by literally including you.
2:37 How long will you be here?
2:39 Well, that's why I made this clock.
2:42 It tells the time, but it also tells your time.
2:46 Just answer a few questions and then when it's ready,
2:49 push the red button and the clock will begin
2:51 counting down the seconds you have left to live approximately.
2:55 Now, whenever you want, you can switch it to show the time.
2:59 But that's not nearly as fun.
3:00 Also, this clock never forgets.
3:03 If you take away its power, it'll go dark, but it's still thinking about you.
3:07 Next time you plug it in, it will pick right back up where it should be.
3:11 Now, if you would like a practical retro momento mori,
3:15 you can pre-order one of these now.
3:18 Omnis vulnerant ultim nat is Latin and it refers to these passing seconds.
3:23 It means each of these wounds the last kills.
3:28 Mox knocks means soon it will be night and it will.
3:33 But while this is ticking down, something else is ticking up.
3:37 The number of ghosts in the world.
3:40 Your nominal ghost is your name.
3:43 It's out there representing you whether you're there or not.
3:46 It won't haunt the world forever.
3:48 Though, as we've often been reminded, you die twice.
3:51 Once when your heart stops beating, and then again,
3:54 usually sometime later, when your name is spoken for the last time.
3:59 But whose name has been remembered the longest?
4:03 Well, signed here on this 5,000-year-old tablet
4:06 is the oldest written name we've ever found.
4:09 Kusham, the first named character we know in the written history of humanity.
4:15 Probably it's not entirely clear whether Kusham is the name
4:19 of a person or just the title of an office holder.
4:22 You know, if you want to be really sure,
4:24 a generation or two later, this tablet was made.
4:27 It contains three names.
4:29 G Saul and two people he enslaved in Pop X and a woman named Sakalger.
4:36 These individuals are the reigning chance of avoiding the second death.
4:40 And with archival practices and technologies being what they are today,
4:44 your name could conceivably last just as long as these have already.
4:49 But you know, I got to say, if you want your ghosts to last longer,
4:54 it helps to bend the truth a little bit.
4:58 Toby Jukenov built this interactive globe that shows
5:01 the most famous person born in every location.
5:05 Fame is based on Wikipedia data.
5:07 How long their article is,
5:09 how many languages it's in, how many visits it gets per day, stuff like that.
5:13 By the way, out of everyone alive right now, about this many of us,
5:16 almost exactly a quarter teaspoon are mentioned on Wikipedia.
5:20 Now, let's zoom in on Stillwell, Kansas.
5:23 Oh, hey there, good-looking.
5:25 But here's the thing.
5:27 I wasn't born in Stillwell.
5:29 I I grew up there.
5:31 I lived there from ages 5 to 18, but I was born in Kansas City.
5:36 For a while, a lot of things online said that I was born in Stillwell,
5:39 so that's probably how I wound up here.
5:42 But should I correct it?
5:43 What's more important?
5:45 The truth or a little lie that prolongs and enhances my nominal ghost?
5:51 Maybe the truth?
5:53 Because even if my name is forgotten, images of me may stick around.
5:57 And that is your second ghost, your likeness.
6:01 Figurative portrayals of what you look like.
6:03 Now, we have no idea what most people who have lived looked like long ago.
6:08 No records were made.
6:09 Eventually, some were and have survived.
6:12 So, who's the earliest known person where like we know what they looked like?
6:17 Well, it's probably Gudea.
6:20 He was an ancient Sumerian ruler and 27 4,000year-old
6:24 statues of him have been found in southern Iraq.
6:27 They stand out not just for their craftsmanship,
6:29 but also for the fact that earlier depictions
6:32 of human forms are either more abstract or generalized,
6:35 but because these depictions of Guda are more realistic,
6:39 are so similar to each other, and have been found spread so widely,
6:42 it's tenable that they're similar to the actual face
6:46 of the actual individual as he appeared in life,
6:49 the first known illustrated person in our history.
6:54 Even if your figural ghosts don't stick around as long as gudas have,
6:58 things that look kind of like you might.
7:01 I'm talking about your genetic ghost,
7:04 your personal genomic variation that can be carried on by your descendants.
7:08 Now, interestingly, even if your progeny are especially fckened,
7:13 your genetic ghost probably won't stick around that long.
7:16 Just how much of your unique genetic code winds up in your grandkids,
7:21 for example, depends partly on chance.
7:23 It could be anywhere from 23 to 27%.
7:27 Your great grandkids will only contain 9 to 14% of you.
7:33 Your great great great great great grandchildren will on average be
7:37 no more similar to you than you are to any stranger.
7:42 In fact, it is at that distance
7:44 that it becomes possible to be genetically left behind.
7:47 For absolutely no personal chunks of your genome to be present in anyone more
7:53 than 70% of your ancestors from 11 generations ago aren't in you at all.
7:58 So, you're not so much the genetic foundation on which
8:01 your progeny sit as you are their baby teeth.
8:05 A thing that served a purpose but was
8:08 destined to then fall out and be set aside.
8:12 Where should you be buried if you want to become a fossil?
8:15 Fossils last a long time.
8:17 Your legacy could be representing our species in a cool
8:21 bony pose at a museum millions of years from now.
8:24 Well, as it turns out, fossilization,
8:27 the mineralizing of bones into rocky ghosts, is an exceedingly rare occurrence.
8:33 Bill Bryson puts it this way.
8:35 Less than onetenth of 1% of a species is ever lucky enough to become fossilized.
8:40 Which means that millions of years from now,
8:43 all that will be left of every single person alive today
8:46 in the US will probably just be about 60 fossilized bones,
8:51 not even one full human skeleton.
8:54 The best way to improve your chances of becoming a fossil
8:57 are to be buried rapidly and deeply with no coffin under
9:00 the seafloor of a still mass of water at low elevation
9:03 where sediment deposits will be swift and fine and oxygen levels low.
9:07 Some locations that fit this bill are parts of the Black Sea,
9:10 the Gulf of Mexico where the Mississippi disorgges
9:13 and the mangrove swamps along the northern coast of Australia.
9:17 But even then, there's risk, right?
9:20 Earth is an active churning rock and erosion can wear you away.
9:24 Metamorphic activity could melt you back down.
9:27 So if you want to be a trace for a long time, leave.
9:33 The oldest unchanged piece of Earth wasn't even found on Earth.
9:36 It was found on the moon where geological activity is less brutal.
9:41 A monolith engraved with your name and biography
9:43 buried on the moon would be a good idea.
9:46 Except in, you know, 5 to 10 billion years,
9:49 our sun will expand into a red giant,
9:52 engulfing the Earth and Moon, likely destroying them forever.
9:55 So, a copper disc coated in aluminum
9:58 and gold floating through space would be even better.
10:01 The golden records aboard the Voyager
10:03 spacecraft could exist for trillions of years.
10:07 They could conceivably still be legible even after the last star goes dim.
10:13 But your final type of ghost will be there, too.
10:16 It's what I call your ripple ghost.
10:19 The diffused domino effect of all of your actions.
10:22 There will be people, for example, a century from now who could enjoy the shade
10:26 of a tree you planted without ever wondering who put it there.
10:30 The butterfly effect effectively guarantees us
10:33 all a sort of anonymous minute immortality.
10:37 Just by being born, technically you changed the universe irrevocably.
10:43 The tiny and subtle but very real way your mass affects the planet Saturn right
10:48 now will contribute in some extremely small way
10:51 to exactly how and when its rings collapse.
10:55 When the universe enters its heat
10:56 death and it's the same temperature everywhere,
10:58 the arrangement of matter in the universe will
11:01 be the way it is because you existed.
11:04 There will be no minds to observe it.
11:07 So you won't be remembered, but you won't be annihilated.
11:12 But like, so what?
11:15 Oh, I've got ghosts that stick around.
11:18 News flash, buddy.
11:19 I'm not my ghosts.
11:21 Okay, first of all, yeah,
11:24 that's exactly why talk of fame and legacy gets so fizzily.
11:28 For what?
11:28 I won't be around to enjoy it and eventually no one will be.
11:32 But secondly, that's actually a pretty good definition of the self.
11:36 You are everything you take with you when you die.
11:40 Your secrets, the things you could have done or said but never did.
11:45 That's what you are.
11:46 Now, you could desperately try to do as much as you can
11:49 and leave as much on the table as possible, but life is short.
11:53 Too short.
11:54 Well, Derek Parett has pointed out that the brevity
11:57 of life probably has nothing to do with its meaning.
12:00 If your life was twice as long, would it have twice as much meaning?
12:05 If we were all immortal, would the meaning of life suddenly be obvious?
12:10 No.
12:10 Meaning is separate from the sheer participation we crave.
12:14 We just want to keep playing this game.
12:16 And there's never been more game to play.
12:18 Staggering amounts of what we want to experience have been
12:21 tamed into beasts so lightweight and so fast that like ghosts,
12:26 they can pass through walls.
12:28 The soy bomb only lasted 36 seconds.
12:31 But because a digital ghost of it lingers in Earth's largest haunted house,
12:35 an average of 40 people have seen it every day for the last 30 years.
12:40 Old music started out selling new music for the first time in 2015.
12:44 Today, we each spend an average of 7 hours and 3 minutes a day
12:48 in a haunted house full of avatars and messages from the living and dead alike.
12:52 People and ideas and art and the past
12:54 have become not just accessible, but accessible.
12:58 We are on these ghost portals so much it's
13:01 become pretty much the only way anyone finds companionship anymore.
13:04 For crying out loud,
13:05 more people on this planet own cell phones than toothbrushes.
13:10 Documentality is the word Maritzio Ferraris gave to his ontology of traces,
13:15 but it's also a great word for the extent
13:17 to which day-to-day life in a society happens as documentation.
13:23 In a society of high documentality,
13:25 nearly every transaction, click, step, every memory,
13:29 everything said or done is vulnerable to recording
13:32 or simply comes into the world already pre-remembered.
13:37 not as an ephemeral oral exchange or a haphazard note,
13:40 but as a highfidelity timestamped cataloged artifact.
13:44 In such a world, it shouldn't be surprising if it starts to feel
13:48 like there are more things you've said than things you could say.
13:52 More ways things have been than ways things could be.
13:57 The future isn't what it used to be.
13:59 But don't get it twisted.
14:01 Complete documentality is far from here.
14:03 As I've mentioned before, our estimates of the current human population have
14:07 about a 2 to 3% margin of error.
14:09 That means that about this many people may or may not exist.
14:13 And at any given moment in the US alone,
14:15 there are about 40,000 deceased bodies whose identities are unknown.
14:21 When Steve Faucet failed to return to the Flying M Ranch in 2007,
14:25 search and rescue efforts sent to find
14:27 him discovered eight previously unidentified airplane
14:31 crashes that weren't him but had been out there for in some cases decades.
14:36 And when authorities searched for Gabby Patito,
14:38 they found her and the bodies of at least
14:41 eight other people they weren't even looking for.
14:45 We are not a documented species.
14:47 We are a bunch of animals walking in and out of rooms.
14:50 That said, some things changed.
14:53 The last time a body was interred in the tomb
14:55 of the unknown soldier was after the Vietnam War,
14:58 but it was removed in 1998 after DNA testing connected it to a name,
15:03 Michael Joseph Blassie.
15:05 In 2014, prosecutors didn't need witnesses
15:08 or security cam footage to construct what happened
15:12 between Michelle Carter and Conrad Roy because
15:15 they had these thousands of text messages.
15:18 Despite living just 35 mi apart,
15:21 Carter and Royy's relationship occurred almost entirely through text.
15:26 So these are not pieces of their relationship.
15:28 They're not evidence of the whole story.
15:31 They are the whole story.
15:33 These messages aren't missing the glances, the nods, the way he or she said it.
15:39 This is all they each saw.
15:41 And we have it all.
15:43 an entire human relationship that happened as and still is undying documents.
15:51 They're all online just a few taps
15:54 deep in the world's largest ocean of documentation.
15:57 And we just keep filling it up,
15:58 turning more and more of what we do and see into ghosts,
16:02 not just to remember, but to experience.
16:05 When we instinctively watch events through our phones,
16:08 it's not that we aren't living in the moment.
16:10 It's that we are.
16:12 Today to be in the moment you have to be fully in the moment.
16:17 Every part of you, even the eye,
16:19 you have to charge and the mind you share with others.
16:23 See what's happening?
16:24 We are not just getting more ghosts.
16:26 We are beginning to live as ghosts as an account, a like, a post, a view.
16:33 And it's great.
16:34 We're spared the humilities of confrontation.
16:36 And to be an image is to be something.
16:40 Frederick Douglas and Sojourer Truth knew this.
16:42 They had photographic images of themselves printed up.
16:45 To own and control and sell your own figural ghost meant that you had power.
16:50 But today, being a ghost surrounded by other
16:54 ghosts causes a certain kind of new fangled anxiety.
16:58 In his 1985, Amusing Ourselves to death,
17:02 Neil Postman describes what he calls the information action ratio.
17:06 Now, even though this book predates the worldwide web,
17:08 it may as well have been written about it.
17:10 Let me ask you a modern version of a question he asks in here.
17:14 How often does something you see on social media cause
17:18 you to alter your plans for the day or to take
17:21 some action you would not otherwise have taken or provide
17:24 you with insight into some problem you are required to solve?
17:29 When everything persists, irrelevance takes over.
17:34 But the constant scroll of doom and pleasure
17:37 and distraction isn't just irrelevant, is it?
17:40 No, it's truly a ghost that can pass right through you.
17:44 You can sit and stare for an hour
17:46 and not remember a single thing you were served.
17:49 We don't do that because it feels good.
17:51 We do it because our minds want to be unsettled.
17:56 A neverending scroll of decontextualized news and horror and comedy
18:01 and family and back flips isn't some unholy modern abomination of nature.
18:05 It is exactly the niche we evolved to thrive in.
18:10 Oh.
18:11 Oh no.
18:12 My brain evolved to eat berries in a cave.
18:14 No, it evolved to reach the lushness
18:17 of Southeast Asia and then cross the Wallace line.
18:20 Not because it had to and not because it could,
18:23 but because what laid beyond was next.
18:26 And we've got autoplay on.
18:28 Hey, let's build a thing that floats and like we could fit in it.
18:32 Um, we could call it a boat.
18:33 Huh?
18:34 What's that?
18:35 Where will it take us away?
18:39 We are not the universe experiencing itself.
18:42 We are the universe ignoring itself.
18:45 We are the universe looking for something else.
18:49 In order to be here for long, we needed to not be here for long.
18:55 I don't think it's the risk or the challenge that motivates us.
18:59 Good stories and curiosity and adventure are
19:02 the icing on the cake we really desire.
19:05 Unsettledness.
19:09 Not knowing what's going to happen next can be exciting.
19:13 Why?
19:14 I think in the same way that long necks were selected
19:17 in giraffes because no one was eating the way up high leaves.
19:20 And in the same way that white fur was
19:22 selected in polar mammals because no one was eating snow,
19:26 imagination was selected in humans because no one was eating possibilities.
19:32 As soft apes in the midst of climatic change,
19:35 those who survived didn't wait for natural selection to provide an answer.
19:38 No, they relied, as we still do today, not on evolution, but on resolution,
19:45 on picturing and manipulating an analog world
19:49 inside the theater of their own minds.
19:52 Up here, we can imagine things that aren't, hypotheticals,
19:56 the distant past and future, the way things might be.
19:59 We can recognize that collecting firewood now will be worth it.
20:02 We can recognize that if there's no water here, we can bring it to us.
20:06 The world is not our home.
20:09 It's fuel for the fire up here where we really live.
20:13 But because of that fire, we have made the whole world our home.
20:18 Our ancestors are those homminids whose resolving never resolved.
20:23 Now, sure, binge watching TV or scrolling a social
20:27 media feed are pretty different than crossing the bearing straight,
20:29 but they're still unsettling, right?
20:32 What's going to happen next?
20:33 Each next swipe brings you something different.
20:35 Like the cognitive niche we built for ourselves, it never resolves.
20:39 But unlike the travails of our ancestors, there's so much less danger.
20:44 We can witness and interact safely from home.
20:47 Like pieces of luggage being moved at light speed without moving at all.
20:52 The internet is a bounty of torqus and vales,
20:56 pushes that spin us around but don't move us anywhere,
20:58 and wishes not strong enough to inspire action.
21:02 We're not amusing ourselves to death.
21:05 We're amusing ourselves to life, a longer, scarier life.
21:11 And as always, thanks for watching.
21:20 [Music] [Music] Don't forget to pre-order your very own death clock.
21:32 After you've answered its questions and pressed the red button,
21:35 the button stays locked down.
21:37 It cannot change.
21:38 It's locked to your soul, to your life,
21:41 unless you want to give it to someone else or you made a mistake or something,
21:44 in which case you can reset it by just poking this into the hole in the back.
21:47 But you better pre-order now because time is literally running out.