Death of an Organism: Event or Series of Events?

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Death can be viewed as both an event and a series of events, influenced by the proximate cause of death. While diseases may take years to culminate in death, traumatic incidents can result in instantaneous death. Medical definitions often hinge on the cessation of brain activity, with brain death being a common legal standard. However, the complexity of biological systems means that some organs may remain functional even after the organism is considered dead. The discussion highlights the intricate relationship between biological processes and the philosophical implications of defining death.
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Is death an event or a series of events?
 
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Depends on the proximate cause of death.

Disease can linger in the body for years before causing death. An infection can cause death in a matter of days, or even hours. Running head-on into a cement mixer truck or a freight train is pretty much an instantaneous 'event'.
 
wiki said:
Death is defined as cessation of all biological processes......
...Today, where a definition of the moment of death is required, doctors and coroners usually turn to "brain death" or "biological death" to define a person as being dead; people are considered dead when the electrical activity in their brain ceases. It is presumed that an end of electrical activity indicates the end of consciousness. However, suspension of consciousness must be permanent, and not transient, as occurs during certain sleep stages, and especially a coma. In the case of sleep, EEGs can easily tell the difference.
So it stands to reason that death is an event in which electrical activity of brain permanently ceases...but I am no expert so I may be wrong.
 
SteamKing said:
Depends on the proximate cause of death.

Disease can linger in the body for years before causing death. An infection can cause death in a matter of days, or even hours. Running head-on into a cement mixer truck or a freight train is pretty much an instantaneous 'event'.

That would be cause of death, what about death itself?
 
It is cells that die, which lead to the death of the organism. Obviously, in complex organisms, which cells die, and how many determine the fate of the organism.
The topic of death is also a philosophical one. Consider "grafting", where trees have their limbs removed and grafted onto other trees, commonly done with cultivated fruit trees. In a sense, the parent tree never dies.
 
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aleemudasir said:
That would be cause of death, what about death itself?

The medical definition is the cessation of all vital functions. To that I might add the word "irreversible". This in fact is not easily determined so a common legal definition for human death is brain death as indicated on an electroencephalogram (EEG). However, the EEG is not a perfect instrument and in some countries patients or their families are allowed to choose from a set of legal criteria which includes a "do not resuscitate" instruction in the case of a cardiac arrest. So the technology may exist to restore vital functions, but may not be applied even in the absence of documented brain death.

In a complex organism, the organism itself may be irreversibly "dead" but some organs are still "alive" and can continue to be capable of functioning for a while. This is why we can transplant vital organs.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2598255/

EDIT: Note even mitochondria can be transplanted.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23080556
 
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