this post was submitted on 20 Jun 2025
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Unpopular Opinion

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We do not need our bodies once we leave this world regardless of what you think happens after we die. We should be focused on curing diseases and extending the life of living humans. Science would go so far if we used human bodies after death instead of requiring people to give consent to something they don't need.

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[–] JoshuaFalken@lemmy.world 0 points 14 hours ago (2 children)

In fairness, pretty much any subject will have some negatives that could be pointed to and touted as an excuse for not doing something.

If there's even a 1% chance of your body being properly useful to science in some way, and therefore humanity at large, it's worth the odds.

Though I'd bet good money that the amount of mutilation and whatnot isn't particularly common for science bound bodies. Much easier to steal some organs from the morgue bodies marked for non collection.

[–] GreenKnight23@lemmy.world 1 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago) (1 children)

If there's even a 1% chance of your body being properly useful to science in some way, and therefore humanity at large, it's worth the odds.

my body, my choice. if body donation was mandatory I'd self-immolate so there's nothing left after.

I don't know why body autonomy is such a hard concept to grasp for people. literally the only thing you can "own" is yourself. this ownership doesn't end after death, you just can't make decisions known after your death. this is why it's always been taboo to perform anything but last rites to the dead.

just to note, I'm not religious at all. I believe that after death you cease to exist. that said, the image of my body being slaughtered like a pig for some corporate gains makes me sick and honestly might turn me into an extremist faction and compel me to take action against corporate interests.

[–] JoshuaFalken@lemmy.world 3 points 1 hour ago

I was only meaning that 1% chance bit in reference to someone that had chosen to donate their body to science.

I am for opt out instead of opt in, but making it mandatory would be a step too far. At the same time I find the two opinions of 'my body my choice' and 'after death you cease to exist' to be a bit counter posed.

I would instead suggest what already occurs in today's reality: write your wishes down, and hope your wishes are followed by your descendants, or your family, or your executor, or your attorney.

Unfortunately for anyone's wishes, that's all they are - wishes. Unless one go to rather significant lengths to erect checks and balances to the following of your desires, whichever individual remains after our demise can simply do away with whatever they please and have an auction to the rich for extra parts while taking sponsorships from big oil.

Forgive this awful joke, I wrote it and can't bring myself to erase it.

Even setting yourself ablaze would leave some ashes for big tobacco to purchase the rights for and derive a new Flamin' Hot Cheeto cigarette designed specifically for the female low income high school student market to help stave off those pregnancy cravings and keep that rockin' bod.

[–] FireRetardant@lemmy.world 3 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

The morgue bodies may not have as high quality of organs or may not match genetically. If a billionaire puts a bounty on a liver that fits them genetically and has barely been abused, someone is going to be looking to cash in.

[–] JoshuaFalken@lemmy.world 2 points 11 hours ago

I wish I could live in that timeline where all morgue attendants got a page when the world's 1% needs a good looking kidney hahaha.