what is life ! - when is
death ? - path to salvation is Sriman Narayana
What is life ? – what is
death ! – when life ends ! – what constitutes death ! – Death is the final
cessation of all activities including stoppage of heart and brain
!! - death is perceived as the
greatest evil: not merely because it sets an end to our life, but because it
renders all we do meaningless.
Death is the irreversible
cessation of all biological functions that sustain an organism. For organisms
with a brain, death can also be defined as the irreversible cessation of
functioning of the whole brain, including the brainstem, and brain
death is sometimes used as a legal definition of death. The remains
of a former organism normally begin to decompose shortly after death. Death is
an inevitable process that eventually occurs in all
organisms. Figuring out when someone is dead has been a
problem. Initially, there was the definition of death when breathing and the
heartbeat ceased. However, the spread of CPR no longer meant it was
irreversible. Brain death was the next option, which fractured between
different definitions. Some people believe that all brain functions must cease.
Some believe that even if the brainstem is still alive, their personality and
identity are dead, so therefore, they should be entirely dead.
Yaksha Prashna is the famous
incident in Mahabharata. It is found in the Aranya
Parva. Ignoring and failing to answer the question of Yaksha and
trying to drink water from the pond, Nakula, Sahadeva, Arjuna and Bhima are
killed, but are restored to life when Yudhisthira answers the questions
correctly.
மஹபாரதம் மஹாகாவ்யத்தில் வனபர்வத்தில் யக்ஷனின் கேள்விகளும் யுதிஷ்டிரனின் பதில்களும் சிறப்பானவை. யக்ஷன் - ஓ! குந்தியின் மகனே {யுதிஷ்டிரா}, முதலில் எனது கேள்விகளுக்குப் பதிலளித்துவிட்டு, நீ விரும்புமளவுக்கு {நீரை} எடுத்துச் செல்!” என - யுதிஷ்டிரன் “ஓ! யக்ஷா, ஏற்கனவே உனது உடைமையாக இருக்கும் ஒன்றின் மேல் நான் ஆசை கொள்ளவில்லை! தன்னையே பாராட்டிக் கொள்ளும் ஒருவனை அறம் சார்ந்த மனிதர்கள் அங்கீகரிப்பதில்லை. உனது கேள்விகளுக்கு எனது புத்திக்கூர்மையினால் பதிலளிக்கிறேன், நீ என்னிடம் கேள்!” என்றான்.
அவற்றில் ஒரு கேள்வி
: இவ்வுலகில்
- அதிசயமானது எது? : தர்மரின் பதில்
: நாளுக்கு நாள் எண்ணிலடங்கா உயிரினங்கள் யமனின்
வசிப்பிடம் செல்கின்றன. இருப்பினும், மீந்திருப்பவை {உயிரோடு இருக்கும் உயிரினங்கள்}
தங்களை இறவாத்தன்மை கொண்டவை என்று நினைத்துக் கொள்கின்றன. இதை விட வேறு எது அதிசயமானதாக
இருக்க முடியும்? என வினவினான்.
Human heart is a fantastic
machine – it is an electrical system that controls the rate and rhythm of
heartbeat. Stoppage of heart is heart attack – it happens
when blood flow to the heart is blocked. Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) is a
condition in which the heart suddenly stops beating. When that happens, blood
stops flowing to the brain and other vital organs. During a
heart attack, the heart usually doesn't suddenly stop beating. With an SCA, the
heart stops beating.
.. .. .. the good part of
Science is that it defines everything and the difficult part of Science is – it
redefines systematically all that was defined earlier !!
On a chilly holiday
Monday in January 2020, a medical milestone passed largely unnoticed. In a New
York City operating room, surgeons gently removed the heart from a 43-year-old
man who had died and shuttled it steps away to a patient in desperate need of a
new one. More than 3500 people in the United States receive a new
heart each year. Yet this case was different—the first of its kind
in the country. “It took us 6 months to prepare,” said the surgical head of
heart transplantation at New York University (NYU) Langone Health, where the
operation took place. The run-up included oversight from an ethics board,
education sessions with nurses and anesthesiologists, and lengthy conversations
with the local organization that represents organ donor families. Physicians
spent hours practicing in the hospital’s cadaver lab, prepping for organ
recovery from the donor.
That’s because this
donor, unlike most, was not declared dead because of loss of brain function. He
had been suffering from end-stage liver disease and was comatose and on a
ventilator, with no hope of regaining consciousness—but his brain still showed
activity. His family made the wrenching choice to remove life support.
Following that decision, they expressed a wish to donate his organs, even
agreeing to transfer him to NYU Langone Health before he died so his heart
could be recovered afterward.
In individuals declared
brain dead, organs can be recovered before life support is disconnected, as
these people have already died; such machinery keeps organs oxygenated and
healthy prior to transplant. But for this man the donation process would be
altered: Life support had to be withdrawn for death to occur. His heart
stopped, and his circulation with it.
As is customary
regardless of whether organs will be donated, physicians waited 5 minutes to
ensure that the heart didn’t start beating again on its own. It did not, and
the man was declared dead. The baton then passed to the organ recovery and
transplant team. They clamped blood vessels running from the torso to the brain
and reconnected his body to machines that circulated oxygenated blood, causing
the heart to begin pumping again.
These two
interventions—initiating a heartbeat after death is declared and taking steps
to prevent blood flow to the brain—are at the core of a raging debate about the
ethics of such donations. To some people, the approach risks disrupting the
dying process; to others, it allows that process to continue as the family
desires, while also honoring individual or family wishes for organ donation. The
debate touches on the definition of death, “When the heart
stops, we say, ‘time of death, 5:20 a.m.’” But, “The fact of the matter is,
death is a process. Death is not a time point.” Cells can take hours to die.
Sophisticated machinery can induce a heartbeat hours after death, but does that
make a person “alive”?
An expanding number of
hospitals and organ procurement organizations (OPOs), which work with donor
families, support this novel category of donations, and the number performed in
the U.S. is growing. Yet professional groups have expressed dueling
views about the organ donation strategy, and a paper in press urges more
research. Some countries are holding off on these organ donations, whereas
others embrace them. One OPO says families who welcome donation do so without
regard for the organ recovery technique, as such gifts can bring comfort after
a terrible loss; another worries that without more research and greater
attention to legal and ethical questions, there’s a risk fewer people may
volunteer to be organ donors.
ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION has
evolved and flourished from its first success in 1954, when a 23-year-old in
Boston donated a kidney to his identical twin. In the years since, the number
of transplants has surged, but demand invariably outstrips
supply. The transplant system relies on public trust and the
generosity of these families at an excruciating and disorienting
time. In the 1990s, doctors grew interested in another
potential category of donors: people who retained some brain activity after a
serious illness or accident but who died when their circulation ceased—normally
because, like the heart donor at NYU, their families had opted to withdraw life
support when there was no hope of meaningful recovery. The lungs, liver, and
kidneys, surgeons learned, could be recovered and function after transplant.
This became known as “donation after circulatory death,” or DCD
donation. The heart was another story. Circulatory death could
severely injure the organ. To address the problem, companies experimented with
machinery that would run blood through a heart after it was removed from the
body and stimulate its electrical activity.
ஸ்ரீவைஷ்ணவனுக்கு துயரங்கள் இல்லை. என் செய்வது என்ற குழப்பமில்லை. விஷய ஞானப்பற்றறுத்து - எம்பெருமான் ஸ்ரீமன் நாரணனின்
திருவடி தாள்களில் வீழ்ந்து அவனுக்கும், அவன்தம் அடியார்களுக்கும் கைங்கர்யங்கள் செய்து
அவனையே அடைவதே வாழ்வின் அர்த்தம், முடிவு எல்லாம்.
Here are
some photos of Emperuman Sri Parthasarathi taken during pathi ula on day 3 of
Chithirai Brhmothsavam on 6.5.2023.
Mamandur Veeravalli Srinivasan Sampathkumar
17.5.2023
With inputs extracted from article – when does life end from : https://www.science.org/
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