Just as surgeons once believed pain was good for their patients some argue today that death
brings meaning to life. But given humans rarely live beyond a century - even while certain
whales can thrive for over two hundred years - it's hard not to see our biological limits as
profoundly unfair. No wonder then that most people nearing death wish they still had more time.
Yet with ever-advancing science will the ends of our lives always loom so close? For from
ventilators to brain implants modern medicine has been blurring what it means to die. In a
lucid synthesis of current neuroscientific thinking Zeleznikow-Johnston explains that death is
no longer the loss of heartbeat or breath but of personal identity - that the core of our
identities is our minds and that our minds are encoded in the structure of our brains. On this
basis he explores how recently invented brain preservation techniques now offer us all the
chance of preserving our minds to enable our future revival. Whether they fought for justice
or cured diseases we are grateful to those of our ancestors who helped craft a kinder world -
yet they cannot enjoy the fruits of the civilization they helped build. But if we work together
to create a better future for our own descendants we may even have the chance to live in it.
Because should we succeed then just maybe the future will love us enough to bring us back
and share their world with us.