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فسيلة - transplant
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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:02And you, doctor, tell me what will happen again, please?
00:07Ugh, for the millionth time, I'm going to freeze you up with the feeling that you'll wake up after a hundred years and be immortal.
00:12Okay, but why Khalid? I don't like the name of a militant.
00:14And then I didn't like the hesitation and laughter
00:16Didn't we agree and you took your money?
00:17Does he mean, Pasha, that the money that will be deposited from you can be valued at a price?
00:20Oh, of course, and very cheap too.
00:21So, my armed men, why did you volunteer for this experiment?
00:24I'm not going to run away from my wife, but wouldn't it have been easier to divorce her?
00:28Of course, I don't understand. It's not right, of course. I love her. Do you love her?
00:30Why would you want to freeze and escape between them?
00:32We won't sleep, I'm telling you, I'll cut her off, man, murdered
00:34Either you love her but can't stand her face, or I'll kill her, what is this?
00:38This is weathering, Doctor
00:39Come on, come on, Student comments are for God
00:41not.
00:43Yalla Qaf, get ready
00:45No, this slave scene is unacceptable, and you should seek free medical care.
00:48Oh God, please fix your place
00:49one two three
00:57Haaaaaaa.salam
00:59Hello, Doctor.
01:01Fatki Hajjah is still frozen
01:02The people of Khalrad have frozen me
01:04He stayed with him
01:04As we agreed, so that when he moves, he'll find me.
01:06Forehead along the length of our sahoulna, male from my steps
01:08One, two, three, oh yeah
01:11The two children when they don't know how to freeze
01:12Do something nice to change our mood
01:17It activates
01:18three
01:24What a disgusting sight!
01:27O patient servant
01:27Their tourists and bring others
01:38Dear viewers, peace, mercy and blessings of God be upon you. Welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program.
01:42In one of the legends relating to Alexander the Great
01:44She says that during his conquests he was not only seeking glory and expanding his empire
01:48When on the river
01:49Is it reasonable, Abu Ahmed, that all the trouble they caused in this world
01:51Was it because he was thirsty?
01:52No, my dear
01:52According to legend, Alexander was searching for the river
01:54Drinking from it restores youth and prolongs life.
01:57When he found him, and before he could reach out his hand, he surprised him
01:59an old, wrinkled man
02:00What's the point of eating?
02:01He warns him that he has been standing in the same spot for years.
02:04Winter, joy, and that's it
02:06No, the spring of youth after a long search
02:08But after he drank and lived a long life
02:10He suffered from old age
02:11He had illnesses that made him wish for death.
02:13Or he goes back in time and is never seen again
02:15From the wellspring of youth
02:16When Alexander saw this
02:18He was scared and cursed the place and never went back again
02:20The legend of the river that finds youth
02:21It wasn't just found at Alexander's
02:23But it has a presence in almost all decisions.
02:25It has a presence in Europe where the legend of the king
02:27Leicester John, who ruled in the twelfth century
02:29It featured a river of gold and a spring of something that rejuvenates the youth.
02:32This legend also has a presence in China.
02:34In the form of a fountain or youth
02:36Youthful Fountain
02:36Why does it have a youthful glow?
02:38And it has traditional medicines developed by the tribes
02:40To achieve the same effect
02:41And in America, when the Spanish colonizer
02:43Huan Ponce Delion proposed in the sixteenth century
02:45The fountain already exists.
02:47Hey everyone, it's in Florida.
02:49Human beings have existed since time immemorial, my dear.
02:51He's looking for a lifetime
02:52On a solution that keeps him young forever
02:53Oh, the old age!
02:54Shakespeare described her as Hédias Winter
02:56What's up with the writer Mark Twain?
02:58I wish we lived in reverse
02:59We are born at the age of eighty
03:00We die at the age of eighteen.
03:01So that we may survive at the end of our lives
03:03Old age and its horrors
03:04Why is it written that we, as humans, are destined to be like this?
03:06We always die in a state of sadness and weakness.
03:08What's the problem with what one actually does?
03:10And the best notes in the study
03:11Panwan science of aging not anti-aging
03:14It says the person cut a large stone in a dream
03:16Longevity or prolongation of life
03:17Ready, my dear? Don't be shy about it.
03:18But at the beginning of the twentieth century
03:20The average age was less than fifty.
03:22At the beginning of the twenty-first century
03:23The average age exceeded 75
03:2550% increase
03:26Thanks to the medicines and treatment of the vagina
03:28It provides clean water
03:29Slow and cumulative inventions and solutions over a century
03:32But of course, these developments have added decades to our lives.
03:35In his book
03:38Gruman GG says that despite this great leap
03:42However, humans preferred to cling to the ancient myth.
03:45Dreaming of a radical solution
03:46Advancing myth or science will allow us to live longer.
03:49Without waiting a whole century
03:50We do not expect slow and cumulative discoveries.
03:52Maybe it will serve generations we won't see.
03:54Instead of serving us
03:55That's why, my dear, he'll spend all his time there, with two directions.
03:57A scientific approach to lengthening life is slow.
03:59Medicine is developing in it
04:00And a popular movement captivated by the legend of the forgiving youth
04:03My dear friend, I especially love this particular wall.
04:05They die in shortcuts
04:07For example, in the 19th century
04:08The so-called gerentology emerged
04:10This is the science that leads to the inevitable transformations of the body.
04:12And the weakening of cell division that occurs over time
04:14Reaching old age
04:15But at the same time, folk remedies emerged
04:18The one who tells you to forget all this nonsense
04:20My situation
04:20Old age is not inevitable
04:22And the torment is not gray
04:23Everything has a cure
04:24French researcher Charles-Edouard
04:26The one who claimed that the powder was made from crushed dog testicles
04:29He is able to restore the men's strength and youth.
04:32I don't want
04:33And the role involves years of training.
04:34But my dear friend, what if I told you that there are already attempts being made?
04:36And also scientific attempts
04:38Which is popular and not mythical?
04:40It's not like the ads that appear on the movie channel.
04:43These scientific attempts could lead us to longevity
04:45And in a flash, I didn't need it for centuries or decades.
04:49You speak with effort, Abu Hamid
04:50Dear goodness, I'm coming, I'll be heavy
04:52They just need money
04:53The traditional approach that dominated the...
04:56It was called
04:59disease range pressure
05:01Research that doesn't focus on extending lifespan
05:04But on the
05:05On the rigidity of the life you live
05:07Oh, how happy I am that my life will be long, but mutual!
05:09I want to live in the 1080 of it
05:11The aim of this research was to treat chronic diseases.
05:13Or a delay in the appearance of our person
05:16Live a healthy life
05:18As long as possible
05:19Imagine, for example, if you were to live for one hundred years
05:20Oh, my joy, my dear, when you lived for two years and didn't die for two years
05:23But by the age of seventy or eighty, it's over.
05:25Aging-related diseases, high blood pressure, cancer, diabetes, and all that.
05:29No, I want to live as long as possible.
05:31Without diseases and without old age
05:33This method, my dear, is for combating aging.
05:35It will make you live your hundred years in the best possible condition.
05:38But two types of research emerged
05:40As it is called
05:41If we cut the aging process itself that occurs in the cells
05:45How, Abu Hamad? By resisting gradual changes.
05:49Which leads to the collapse of the human body
05:51Finally, the most exciting research
05:54Which is very similar to the myths of the youthful aversion
05:57This research, my dear
05:58She believes that aging is not a natural development of the body.
06:01We can surround him or cut him down
06:02Damar Al-Dakhil from the beginning
06:04It can be treated and its effects reversed.
06:06The result is youth and a longer lifespan.
06:08Of course, someone would say to Abu Hamad, "What is this nonsense?"
06:10Love, my dear, may be the words of a fool.
06:12But behind this nonsense
06:14Very important people and a great deal in the world of engineering
06:17Money and business
06:18Whose look? Jeff Bezos's.
06:19Amazon founder billionaire
06:22The one who invested billions in the company
06:23Altos Labs costume for a reverse attempt
06:26Aging money in human cells
06:28Or, in Mars, the head of investments
06:30At Google, which stated in 2015
06:31The human reaching the age of
06:33500 years and it's still possible
06:35Oh Abu Hamad, I'm going to work all this time!
06:37And I will remain connected to this year for 500 years.
06:39Madri Clinic, this is just talk and we're not inviting anyone in.
06:41All of this is through the Calico project.
06:43Why would he tell you that this isn't Google's first investment?
06:45In prolonging human life, which is a crime
06:47Lee started this in 2009
06:48In fact, it's a huge concern, like Banco in America.
06:51You expect the longevity market
06:52Henmel, the sum of $600 billion
06:55By the year Kam
06:572025
06:57I'm going to shake you, my dear. This is how nature works, and I'll confirm that life is very strange indeed.
07:01Old age is not an inevitable fate
07:03For all creatures
07:04For example, you have the Empty Sea
07:06This organism's body is made up of a type of cell called
07:13He left it in case he didn't meet
07:15A larger creature preys on it, meaning accidents.
07:17He will live young forever
07:19Oh God, Muhammad, I want to be a "Andil" (a term of endearment), don't make me a "Taqandil" (another term of endearment).
07:21Come here, my dear, I'll tell you the truth, my dear.
07:23According to Daniel Martinez
07:25Mohammed, I saw six of them in the World Cup
07:27No, my dear, it's not Ghaleba because that's a professor.
07:29Biology at Pumuna College
07:31We looked for creatures like this that might inspire her
07:33To improve the efficiency of the arterial cells
07:43You are complicated in every way.
07:45Okay, be careful, my dear, be careful of God.
07:47Thinking about every contract
07:48Oh, my dear, the indelible cells are very simple
07:50He doesn't have organs or complex systems like ours.
07:53And while the endolymph is able to regenerate all the cells in its body
07:55After that, the cells cannot regenerate.
07:57Like brain cells, who knows?
07:59Huh? You're a king, you've been really shaken up.
08:01Indeed, my dear, brain cells and nerve cells
08:03It doesn't necessarily renew
08:04New brain cells
08:06All the sadness we felt in it will be erased.
08:08The sea has miraculous cells, but they prevent
08:11simple physical constitution
08:12Oh Muhammad, I want it simple now.
08:15This creature, with all its miracles
08:17For example, it is easily preyed upon by larger creatures.
08:19Human beings, with the complexity of their constitution
08:20He can survive the creatures' nest
08:22Creatures a thousand times stronger than him, but
08:24He pays the price for this with aging cells.
08:27It serves to build my body
08:28But it's simple if our sweet guy
08:31With this beautiful intelligence, believe it
08:32A guard guards every cell
08:35In his body and protects this cell
08:37With aging, there's a need for something like nanorobots.
08:38Its size is one billionth of a meter.
08:41Very small
08:42These nanorobots are lurking in your bloodstream
08:44And first thing, fix any cell.
08:46Anything inside you proves it
08:48Thus, aging remains a slow process.
08:50Dear friend, these robots already exist.
08:53They were used to deliver drugs to cancer cells.
08:56In March 2023
08:57Adele Mail published a statement by Ray Kurzweil
09:00AI scientist and head of engineering at Google
09:02Starting from 2030
09:03This technology will be available
09:06life expectancy
09:07It will increase at a rate greater than one year
09:09With each passing year
09:10That means if you have 50 years left
09:12Next year you'll have 51
09:15The rate is increasing, not decreasing.
09:17But, my dear, other friend
09:19You're going to buy robots, not Shredder.
09:21Its accuracy is miraculous and it will inject it
09:23In a very expensive technical cell
09:25Maybe the dream of extending life will come true
09:27But, my dear, she might have expected it.
09:29That would make it a dream only for the rich.
09:31Okay, Abu Hamid, where are you from?
09:33I assumed my social class
09:34My dear, I know things about you that you yourself don't know.
09:37Honestly, you're right, Abu Hamid, I really am.
09:39I want a medicine for longing, a capsule to swallow.
09:41The truth, my dear, is that there are medicines
09:43Its function is not to treat a specific disease
09:45But it's possible for a person to live longer.
09:47Metformin is a common medication.
09:49It is prescribed for diabetic patients and is the fourth medication.
09:51The order described for patients in general
09:53In America, it may be in every
09:55Contrasts between the fifties until today
09:57According to Harvard Health magazine
09:58Metformin doesn't just treat diabetes
10:00This is also said to cause illnesses such as dam cancer
10:03colon and prostate
10:04It is said to increase the risk of dementia and stroke.
10:07It also reveals signs of aging and related diseases.
10:10By improving the body's response to insulin
10:13Antioxidant effects
10:15And also improving blood vessel health
10:17It's also a reliable medication in terms of side effects.
10:20Because it has been in use for years
10:22Despite metformin's effect on prolonging life
10:24Unconfirmed according to a study in a journal
10:26Metabolism 22
10:27However, it is an excellent solution for all classes.
10:30And its cost is much lower than the cost
10:33Which is driving the world towards dementia.
10:35The one that will reach the year 2030
10:36$2 trillion
10:39This trillion, my dear
10:40a trillion
10:41Can you imagine?
10:42My dear, he might ask a lot of questions.
10:44For example
10:44Will we work forever with the inactivity of life?
10:47And he thought about it, my dear
10:48Then retirement at seventy
10:50Not that it's crazy, meaning
10:50You, my dear, when you have these countries
10:52It will solve many problems
10:53It will save the economy trillions
10:55This could open the door to a world without retirement.
10:57And without a pension
10:58But my dear
10:59What if we did without the human body altogether?
11:01With his old age cells and all his equipment?
11:04In the Open Norm project
11:05Researchers have succeeded in simulating neural connections
11:08Estrogenic worm brain using a computer program
11:10And they put this program in place
11:11They put a Lego robot inside it.
11:13According to the licensed Smithsonian
11:15This robot started acting like a real stoat worm.
11:18This question
11:19Is it possible to transfer human consciousness in the same way?
11:22It means making a copy of everything that makes you who you are.
11:25And put this copy on your flash drive
11:27Or we upload it to the internet
11:28People will find you, my dear, and they'll put up with you.
11:29They click on ad links so they can download you
11:33Abu Hamad, don't kill me, please.
11:34Let me tell you, my dear, that the brain of the eustachian worm
11:36In 302 nerve cells
11:38As for the human brain, God bless it.
11:4186 billion nerve cells
11:44Not only that
11:45There are more than 100 trillion neurons between these nerve cells, and that's about it.
11:49And that's a thousand times more than just our stars.
11:52The only solution, my dear, to simulate the human mind
11:54It is AI
11:55That's at least theoretically.
11:56Because the issue will likely take decades
11:58So that it can be sufficiently developed
12:00This is according to my opinion, Louis Rosenberg, CEO of Leonhams AI
12:04But if we go back in time twenty years
12:06The women of the mission were still there. Will this digital version we're going to make really be you?
12:10And if it's going to be a new memory, will you upload a new copy of it at the beginning of each month, for example?
12:14What are the legal and ethical implications of having more than one copy of a living person?
12:17And there remains one important fact, my dear
12:19Why would we be sure exactly what a person's feelings will be like in the state of consciousness transfer?
12:24What does it mean to transform from a tangible entity to a completely digital entity?
12:26Will this entity be able to communicate with others?
12:29And will he be able to press the power button to end his existence?
12:31What if he discovers that he is unable to communicate with others?
12:34But what if the treatment comes from within the cell itself?
12:36Like the theory of telomeres
12:37The telomere, my dear, is a part at the end of the chromosome.
12:39Do you know, my dear, the chromosomes that contain the genes inside your cells?
12:42The part at the end is called the telomere. Every time the cell divides, the length of the telomere shortens.
12:47Up to a certain stage where the empty space reaches the concrete stage
12:50Known as Sensence
12:51Or a programmed cell death
12:53The cell stops dividing and dies.
12:56My dear, the cell also contains a enzyme called telomerase.
13:00He employed him to create new telomeres
13:03This lack of telemetry is evident in the experiments we conduct on the rats.
13:06It causes her to age prematurely
13:08My dear, the idea is that this enzyme is only found in a very limited number of cells in humans.
13:14Like the cells of the penicillin
13:16Responsible for cell renewal in the body
13:17This is the completion of the scholars' question.
13:19If this enzyme were secreted in all the cells of the body, would we stay healthy for a longer period?
13:23And in doing so, he tested the hypothesis on the baker too.
13:25The result was unlimited cell shrinkage.
13:28We are cancer
13:29Not only that, there are several other theories about aging.
13:32Like the inflammation theory and the hormonal theory
13:34The theory of sleep deprivation and the epigenetic theory
13:37Epigenetics
13:37The theory of changing communication between cells
13:40And others and others and others and others
13:42In a second experiment, it was found that implanting four genes under the name Yamnaka factors
13:46Yamanaka is the Japanese scientist who discovered these four genes in adult cells.
13:50These cells can potentially be transformed into stem cells.
13:53The type found in embryos
13:54But this same process has the same effect.
13:57The tenomerus exactly
13:58It has been proven that it can also cause cancers
14:00Abu Hamid is in it
14:02This is cancer and other things like it
14:03He understands, my dear, but the cancer won't go away just because you yell at him.
14:06Tabasc
14:07In a famous story by Oscar Wilde
14:10Titled: The Picture of Dorian Gray
14:12It tells the story of a person who prefers youth.
14:14But damn, he's failing at a hidden painting.
14:16According to a study
14:18Many scientists view scientific solutions with suspicion.
14:21The one who tries to dream, solve the myth of the youth fountain
14:24And lifespans are drastically increased
14:26And because every permissible solution promises a longer life, ah
14:28But it could be creating a terrifying future.
14:31Dorian Grey herb
14:32Life-extension technology could divide the world into frighteningly class-based groups.
14:35Between the song, he lives longer in the decades
14:38And the fame of Bebutwa in speed
14:39Or, in the world of cancer, it's not just a painful disease.
14:42It is an epidemic disease.
14:43Because our cells, thank God, are in their prime.
14:45Her work is divided for me, divided for me, divided for me
14:47This world is where we will work until the last day of our lives.
14:49No retirement, no rest
14:50In an article in The Guardian entitled
14:52Who wants to live forever
14:53The study mentions
14:54The youth asked about it at two different times.
14:55Who wants to reach 100 years old?
14:56And the percentage, my dear, who liked something like that was 35%
14:59But people don't want to live longer.
15:01Man is more inclined to wish for a long life.
15:04Mayboula, you're a disgrace, Muhammad
15:05It's not that I'm being unfair, my dear, but this world has frightening secrets.
15:07Imagine if you could live longer in this world
15:09A world where global warming will kill
15:11Crops will dry up, oceans will wither, and polar ridges will be lost.
15:14And we can celebrate a holiday with our hundred
15:15And in 100 years, it will really be true.
15:17But maybe then we'll be fighting to find a habitable planet.
15:20Like the heroes of the movie You'll Turn
15:22Here, my dear, we arrive at the most important question in this episode.
15:24The one who finishes studying
15:26science of aging and anti-aging
15:28Why is it that humans are always looking for a magic solution to make them live longer?
15:31And Midorch is working to create better conditions for our world.
15:34He'll let his life be perfect when he reaches fifty or seventy years old
15:37Or as the study puts it
15:38adding days to life rather than life to days
15:40Why do we want to increase the number of days in life instead of increasing life in the number of days?
15:48For the uncle, load fast
15:49share share
15:51Is it a strong and urgent desire?
15:53In the prime of life
15:54It hides a hidden obsession or a different kind of fear.
15:57According to the philosopher Samuel Shifler
15:58Humans are imaginary, time-bound creatures
16:00temporarily bounded beings
16:02Tormented creatures cursed by deadline
16:04And she knows that there is an average of accused
16:06And the life expectancy, if you are at most strong
16:09You will live for 2005 years.
16:10Dame Burrows' Deadline concept
16:11And in her hands, a previous promise
16:12According to human studies up to the age of twenty
16:14They feel older than their age
16:16They are in a hurry, they are bigger and more numerous
16:17While in their thirties they feel they look older than their age
16:19A defensive tactic because they sense death is near.
16:21or the deadline
16:22Deadline Da Jaman thinks about each person individually
16:25He has goals he lives for
16:26He has to make it happen
16:27It also reminds us collectively
16:29There is a planet we must protect.
16:31And life needs to be made easier
16:32For the generations that will come after us
16:33Humans usually fall short of any deadline.
16:35She wishes she could keep him away
16:37If it's a day, an hour, a minute
16:38The greater the distance between us and our responsibilities, the longer the distance.
16:41All our ability to postpone our goals and responsibilities
16:43Instead of confronting it, it increases.
16:45It is a human right to use science to prolong life.
16:47And perhaps that, my dear, is the ultimate goal of medicine.
16:50In all its forms and shapes
16:51What put humanity in front of Corona
16:53He developed his treatment in an impressive record time.
16:55My dear usurer
16:56If a person fears death
16:57Or his desire to postpone this deadline
16:59He heard that there is a medicine that treats aging.
17:01It could create a scary world
17:03Our lives will be long.
17:05Our lives are miserable
17:06In contrast to House, extending the expected lifespan
17:09In studies from the 1970s
17:11We'll make a different kind.
17:12He is
17:12Subjective Age
17:14The idea, in short, is that
17:19Our age is the age we feel inside.
17:21It means the age of the card number
17:23But the tooth in the heart is real.
17:24According to studies from the 1970s
17:26According to an extensive study of the world
17:27Yannick Stephen at MAMBA
17:29On 17,000 middle-aged people
17:31I believe that everything a person feels is smaller
17:34Five or eight years of his actual age
17:36This is because the person practices
17:38All the activities he loves
17:40And the goals he lives for
17:42Oh Abu Ahmed, and I say that Hosni is very big, why?
17:44Show me
17:45I don't do the activities I like.
17:46Come on, I want to go to Mars
17:47This reduces depression rates.
17:49And it lengthens the average lifespan
17:51In contrast, human months
17:53He is five or eight years older than his actual age.
17:55This is because he is not careful about practicing
17:58Activities and goals I live for
18:00Which increases depression rates
18:02The risk of fulfilling the requirement is 25%.
18:04The studies, my dear, tell you
18:06Your age can predict your health better than your birth date.
18:09Most importantly, they are scientists from the University of Virginia.
18:10When they measured the visitor with the edge
18:12Or the age that a person wishes for
18:14They found him walking with the March Time
18:15Martian time
18:17What's with this Martian time, Abu Hamidi?
18:18Why is Umm Shaft scratching?
18:19Khalil Al-Shahla
18:20Ten years, my dear, on planet Earth
18:21They are five and three on the planet Mars
18:24Meaning the age that is desirable to the public
18:26One hundred and two hundred years
18:27It's just that they feel they are smaller
18:30Perhaps five years older than their actual age
18:32Perhaps the most beautiful legend
18:34It is where the ancient dream of humankind meets
18:35Youthful aversion
18:36Or it means they delayed the deadline.
18:38Or the meaning of their death
18:39With the idea of sublime writing, Edge
18:40Which is the idea that we live a life with a specific purpose.
18:43And we simplify even the short life's legacy
18:45It was a myth that he was bad
18:46For the fighter by his name
18:47The one who had superhuman strength
18:49It is
18:49He can only die when he is in need.
18:53But during a powerful battle between the fighter and the fearsome goddess
18:57Arjuna or Ariona or Atifer
18:58You will be subjected to torture that will make him wish for death.
19:01But he remained dear to me
19:02He will keep fighting
19:03Until he passes on his experience and knowledge to the emperor
19:06The most prominent figure in the Hindu epic
19:08The majestic Harta
19:09The first thing a fighter feels when he has achieved his life's goal
19:11At that moment, he will face death.
19:13And he says, "Come in, please."
19:14Without fear or wish, he needs a longer time.
19:16Because he finally achieved the goal he lived for
19:19In the end, my dear
19:20The dream of prolonging life
19:21Dream Project
19:22The goal of medicine in all its activities
19:23The patient will not die
19:24And he lives
19:25Even if it's just one extra day
19:26But my dear
19:27It doesn't have to cost anything to determine the quality of our future humanity.
19:30maybe
19:30He is a progenitor and focused; he is living life.
19:32The one he wishes for himself
19:33And the world he lives in
19:34A life focused on his inner age
19:36The
19:37related to life
19:39He achieves his goals in it
19:40He engages in the activities he loves there.
19:41Instead of living a longer life
19:43It increases its lifespan.
19:44At a high price, he might pay
19:46And it creates a scary future world
19:48It adds years to his hypothetical lifespan
19:50It was all for nothing.
19:50Maybe the best is here
19:51Shifting the focus from the wife
19:52This wife
19:53Instead of giving me a year, why don't you give me a human life?
19:55And what does this life entail?
19:56How does its level remain?
19:58Make me happy with the little life I have.
20:00He swallowed me up in the little bit of life I have left
20:01This ultimately creates a more beautiful world for us.
20:03Here and now
20:04A very ordinary world
20:06Life in it is seventy or ninety years
20:08But very peppery and filling
20:09More beautiful than a year's life
20:11In a world with a nightmarish future
20:13Because this could be a scary world
20:15A world that remains like an old woman
20:16The one before Alexander at the beginning of our story
20:18What I wish he would focus on is the question
20:20What will he do with his life?
20:21More than one question: How long will it last?
20:23I hope, my dear, that science will lead us to technology.
20:25You can make her live for 100 or 200 years
20:27We're unlucky, you still have time
20:28Watch the previous episodes
20:29Watch the new episodes
20:30You are looking for sources
20:31We're on YouTube, so subscribe to the channel.
20:32And also, my dear
20:33If you are 200 years old
20:33I know the episodes will pile up on you