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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:04,533 --> 00:00:06,473 and may contain mature subject matter. 2 00:00:06,467 --> 00:00:15,067 Viewer discretion is advised. 3 00:00:15,200 --> 00:00:17,400 WILLIAM SHATNER: You know, I've been around for a while. 4 00:00:17,533 --> 00:00:21,673 Met some interesting people, done some crazy things. 5 00:00:21,800 --> 00:00:24,230 So you just might think that there's not much that 6 00:00:24,367 --> 00:00:27,867 can take me by surprise. 7 00:00:28,000 --> 00:00:30,330 You'd be wrong. 8 00:00:34,900 --> 00:00:38,230 The world is full of stories and science and 9 00:00:38,367 --> 00:00:41,797 things that amaze and confound me every single day, 10 00:00:41,934 --> 00:00:43,734 incredible mysteries that keep me awake at night. 11 00:00:43,867 --> 00:00:49,527 Some I can answer. Others just defy logic. 12 00:00:49,667 --> 00:00:51,267 [♪] 13 00:00:51,400 --> 00:00:54,730 NARRATOR: Is there life after death? 14 00:00:54,867 --> 00:00:58,867 In Connecticut, a man visits a Civil War battlefield 15 00:00:59,000 --> 00:01:02,030 where he is suddenly overcome with emotion. 16 00:01:02,166 --> 00:01:03,366 JEFFREY KEENE: To this day I don't understand what 17 00:01:03,500 --> 00:01:05,400 exactly happened. 18 00:01:05,533 --> 00:01:08,103 NARRATOR: Is he the reincarnation 19 00:01:08,233 --> 00:01:11,503 of a dead general? 20 00:01:11,633 --> 00:01:15,673 In Haiti, eighteen years after his death, 21 00:01:15,800 --> 00:01:17,830 a man returns from the grave. 22 00:01:17,967 --> 00:01:19,327 WADE DAVIS: This individual had clearly 23 00:01:19,467 --> 00:01:22,567 been pronounced dead by the doctors. 24 00:01:22,700 --> 00:01:26,900 NARRATOR: Do zombies really exist? 25 00:01:27,033 --> 00:01:29,673 And in a remarkable experiment, scientists in 26 00:01:29,800 --> 00:01:34,970 England conduct a series of groundbreaking séances. 27 00:01:35,100 --> 00:01:40,400 Is it our first genuine proof of the afterlife? 28 00:01:40,533 --> 00:01:44,273 WILLIAM SHATNER: Yeah, it's a weird world. 29 00:01:44,400 --> 00:01:45,700 And I love it. 30 00:01:45,834 --> 00:01:55,804 [♪] 31 00:02:04,266 --> 00:02:07,466 WILLIAM SHATNER: Death. Not exactly pretty, 32 00:02:07,600 --> 00:02:09,130 especially when you consider that one day 33 00:02:09,266 --> 00:02:14,466 all of us could end up looking like this. 34 00:02:16,033 --> 00:02:18,173 But should we simply accept this as our fate 35 00:02:18,300 --> 00:02:22,570 or is there something else that awaits us? 36 00:02:22,700 --> 00:02:25,070 Since the dawn of time, humans have been obsessed 37 00:02:25,200 --> 00:02:29,970 with the idea that there's something more than - 38 00:02:30,100 --> 00:02:31,700 this. 39 00:02:31,834 --> 00:02:35,034 Well, is there? 40 00:02:35,166 --> 00:02:38,796 Do our lives go on, even if we die? 41 00:02:38,934 --> 00:02:41,234 Can we return and communicate with our 42 00:02:41,367 --> 00:02:45,427 loved ones here on earth? 43 00:02:48,433 --> 00:02:53,003 Is there life after life and, perhaps the most 44 00:02:53,133 --> 00:02:58,433 important question of all, can we prove it? 45 00:03:00,700 --> 00:03:03,130 Well just maybe we can. 46 00:03:03,266 --> 00:03:07,066 [♪] 47 00:03:07,200 --> 00:03:11,430 NARRATOR: Jeffrey Keene is a retired firefighter. 48 00:03:11,567 --> 00:03:13,727 In 1990, he decided to visit the site of the 49 00:03:13,867 --> 00:03:17,667 famous battle of Antietam, one of the bloodiest 50 00:03:17,800 --> 00:03:21,200 encounters of the Civil War... 51 00:03:21,333 --> 00:03:25,033 and a place where thousands died in just one day. 52 00:03:26,900 --> 00:03:28,130 JEFFREY KEENE: I was traveling down through 53 00:03:28,266 --> 00:03:30,696 Pennsylvania with my wife, antique hunting, 54 00:03:30,834 --> 00:03:32,674 and I asked my wife if it was okay if we took a little 55 00:03:32,800 --> 00:03:36,870 side trip over to Antietam to see the battlefield. 56 00:03:37,000 --> 00:03:40,270 NARRATOR: But what begins as a fun day out will soon 57 00:03:40,400 --> 00:03:43,230 turn into a nightmare. 58 00:03:43,367 --> 00:03:45,167 JEFFREY KEENE: My wife wasn't very much into 59 00:03:45,300 --> 00:03:47,800 history so she remained in the car and I walked over to 60 00:03:47,934 --> 00:03:51,904 where the battle had taken place at the Sunken Road, 61 00:03:52,033 --> 00:03:53,433 gone about fifty feet when it became very 62 00:03:53,567 --> 00:03:55,027 hard to breathe. 63 00:03:55,166 --> 00:03:58,566 I started crying, I was very angry, I was very sad. 64 00:03:58,700 --> 00:04:02,330 If you take the saddest you've ever been and magnify 65 00:04:02,467 --> 00:04:06,027 that by about a thousand times, that gets close. 66 00:04:06,166 --> 00:04:07,626 I was exhausted. 67 00:04:07,767 --> 00:04:10,527 I couldn't tell exactly what was going on. 68 00:04:10,667 --> 00:04:12,297 I thought I was maybe having a heart attack but 69 00:04:12,433 --> 00:04:15,273 I didn't have any pain. 70 00:04:15,400 --> 00:04:18,000 NARRATOR: Overcome by a wave of violent emotions, 71 00:04:18,133 --> 00:04:23,103 Jeffrey then has a powerful urge to visit the gift shop. 72 00:04:24,800 --> 00:04:26,570 JEFFREY KEENE: I felt compelled to go there. 73 00:04:26,700 --> 00:04:28,300 I threw a magazine on the counter. 74 00:04:28,433 --> 00:04:31,133 I said I want this and it was a Civil War quarterly 75 00:04:31,266 --> 00:04:32,866 magazine on Antietam. 76 00:04:33,000 --> 00:04:35,570 To this day I don't understand what exactly happened. 77 00:04:37,834 --> 00:04:40,704 NARRATOR: For the next eighteen months, Jeffrey's 78 00:04:40,834 --> 00:04:45,104 life returns to normal - until one night when he 79 00:04:45,233 --> 00:04:47,473 attends a Halloween party. 80 00:04:47,600 --> 00:04:49,470 JEFFREY KEENE: It was a really nice party. 81 00:04:49,600 --> 00:04:51,870 They had spent a lot of money on the decorations. 82 00:04:52,000 --> 00:04:54,130 They had hired a, a palm reader. 83 00:04:54,266 --> 00:04:57,226 And I sat down in front of this woman and she took my 84 00:04:57,367 --> 00:05:01,897 hands and I told her the story of what happened at Antietam. 85 00:05:02,033 --> 00:05:05,233 NARRATOR: As Jeff tells his story, the palm reader 86 00:05:05,367 --> 00:05:08,067 suddenly becomes uneasy. 87 00:05:08,200 --> 00:05:09,330 JEFFREY KEENE: And she's sitting there shaking her 88 00:05:09,467 --> 00:05:12,027 head and she dropped my hands a few times. 89 00:05:12,166 --> 00:05:14,996 NARRATOR: And then she drops a bombshell. 90 00:05:15,133 --> 00:05:20,003 She believes Jeffrey was at Antietam in a previous life. 91 00:05:20,133 --> 00:05:23,133 JEFFREY KEENE: She said you died there but you 92 00:05:23,266 --> 00:05:27,026 hung around for a long time. 93 00:05:27,166 --> 00:05:28,696 I said just let me ask you one question. 94 00:05:28,834 --> 00:05:32,004 Are you sure he was dead? 95 00:05:32,133 --> 00:05:33,873 She said he was full of holes. 96 00:05:34,000 --> 00:05:37,370 That's one thing I'll, I'll never forget. 97 00:05:37,500 --> 00:05:38,900 NARRATOR: The bizarre encounter will lead 98 00:05:39,033 --> 00:05:42,803 Jeffrey on a journey in search of the truth. 99 00:05:44,200 --> 00:05:45,470 JEFFREY KEENE: The next day I took my wife to work 100 00:05:45,600 --> 00:05:47,270 and I remembered the magazine that I had to have. 101 00:05:47,400 --> 00:05:51,470 I had it for a year and a half and hadn't read it. 102 00:05:51,600 --> 00:05:54,670 I opened it up to the section on Antietam, where 103 00:05:54,800 --> 00:05:57,100 I'd had the experience and my eyes skimmed down the 104 00:05:57,233 --> 00:06:02,503 page and I see a, a photograph of a general. 105 00:06:02,633 --> 00:06:04,603 NARRATOR: As Jeffrey stares at the photo he is 106 00:06:04,734 --> 00:06:06,834 stunned by what he sees. 107 00:06:06,967 --> 00:06:08,367 JEFFREY KEENE: I look over and this picture says 108 00:06:08,500 --> 00:06:09,700 General John B. Gordon 109 00:06:09,834 --> 00:06:13,334 and when I see the face uh I tell people 110 00:06:13,467 --> 00:06:14,597 I know the face very well. 111 00:06:14,734 --> 00:06:17,834 I shave it every morning. 112 00:06:20,867 --> 00:06:22,967 And unless you're unfeeling, unthinking, 113 00:06:23,100 --> 00:06:25,300 completely drained of any type of emotion, 114 00:06:25,433 --> 00:06:27,603 it's gonna have a bit of an effect on you, even if 115 00:06:27,734 --> 00:06:30,504 it's just awe and wonder. 116 00:06:30,633 --> 00:06:33,403 NARRATOR: Remarkably, Jeffrey is a double for 117 00:06:33,533 --> 00:06:35,873 General John B. Gordon. 118 00:06:36,000 --> 00:06:39,570 But as he reads on, things get even weirder. 119 00:06:39,700 --> 00:06:40,870 JEFFREY KEENE: I read in the story he'd been 120 00:06:41,000 --> 00:06:42,230 wounded five times that day, was shot through the 121 00:06:42,367 --> 00:06:46,397 face and I figured he had probably been killed there. 122 00:06:46,533 --> 00:06:47,733 NARRATOR: John B. Gordon was 123 00:06:47,867 --> 00:06:51,067 a general of the Sixth Alabama Regiment - 124 00:06:51,200 --> 00:06:55,700 a hero who was shot in the bloody battle of Antietam. 125 00:06:57,600 --> 00:06:59,130 Could there be a link between Jeffrey and a 126 00:06:59,266 --> 00:07:03,766 general who had died nearly two hundred years before him? 127 00:07:05,300 --> 00:07:08,530 Suddenly, Jeffrey makes another startling connection. 128 00:07:08,667 --> 00:07:11,097 JEFFREY KEENE: It was on my thirtieth birthday. 129 00:07:11,233 --> 00:07:15,433 At twelve midnight I got such a horrendous pain in my jaw. 130 00:07:15,567 --> 00:07:17,667 It radiated down into my neck. 131 00:07:17,800 --> 00:07:19,470 I know what it feels like to be shot through the face. 132 00:07:19,600 --> 00:07:20,900 That's how bad it hurt. 133 00:07:21,033 --> 00:07:24,073 NARRATOR: Was Jeffrey's mysterious pain somehow 134 00:07:24,200 --> 00:07:27,230 related to General Gordon's injuries? 135 00:07:27,367 --> 00:07:28,527 JEFFREY KEENE: Gordon was thirty years old when he 136 00:07:28,667 --> 00:07:33,127 was shot through the face, same age. 137 00:07:33,266 --> 00:07:34,696 NARRATOR: Could all these remarkable similarities be 138 00:07:34,834 --> 00:07:38,604 explained by coincidence? 139 00:07:40,066 --> 00:07:43,726 Jeffrey believes there is only one answer. 140 00:07:43,867 --> 00:07:45,827 JEFFREY KEENE: I don't need any more proof that 141 00:07:45,967 --> 00:07:48,297 there's reincarnation because of all the things 142 00:07:48,433 --> 00:07:49,533 that happened to me. 143 00:07:49,667 --> 00:07:52,727 We never die. We're continuous. 144 00:07:52,867 --> 00:07:55,697 We always have been, we always will be. 145 00:07:55,834 --> 00:07:59,074 That's how Gordon found me, at Antietam. 146 00:07:59,200 --> 00:08:01,970 WILLIAM SHATNER: What an extraordinary story. 147 00:08:02,100 --> 00:08:04,930 Did a Civil War general who died over a century 148 00:08:05,066 --> 00:08:15,026 ago reincarnate, jump into Jeffrey Keene's body and 149 00:08:15,967 --> 00:08:19,197 continue his life through Jeffrey's eyes? 150 00:08:20,667 --> 00:08:24,797 Are we all in a continuous cycle of birth and rebirth, 151 00:08:24,934 --> 00:08:27,174 simply interchanging bodies as we go? 152 00:08:27,300 --> 00:08:31,100 And if so, this raises yet another question - 153 00:08:31,233 --> 00:08:33,303 do we get to choose? 154 00:08:33,433 --> 00:08:35,773 I mean who was I before I was who I am now? 155 00:08:35,900 --> 00:08:38,770 And who will I be next? Could I be you? 156 00:08:38,900 --> 00:08:43,230 Now that is definitely weird - or what? 157 00:08:44,700 --> 00:08:46,430 NARRATOR: Dr. Cynthia Meyersburg is 158 00:08:46,567 --> 00:08:49,297 a Harvard psychologist. 159 00:08:49,433 --> 00:08:52,273 She believes reincarnation is simply a function of 160 00:08:52,400 --> 00:08:55,070 how we deal with memories. 161 00:08:55,200 --> 00:08:57,230 CYNTHIA MEYERSBURG: Something odd happens and people 162 00:08:57,367 --> 00:09:00,497 go looking, as we all do, to make sense of their lives. 163 00:09:00,633 --> 00:09:02,673 If you have a rich imaginative ability it 164 00:09:02,800 --> 00:09:04,470 becomes very difficult to distinguish between 165 00:09:04,600 --> 00:09:06,630 something that's a record of perception and a record 166 00:09:06,767 --> 00:09:07,867 of imagination. 167 00:09:08,000 --> 00:09:10,170 Did I dream that or did it happen? 168 00:09:10,300 --> 00:09:13,700 Did I hear about that or did I actually experience that? 169 00:09:13,834 --> 00:09:16,234 It can be very difficult. 170 00:09:16,367 --> 00:09:18,297 NARRATOR: Cynthia believes that one way we do this is 171 00:09:18,433 --> 00:09:21,833 by creating false memories. 172 00:09:21,967 --> 00:09:22,797 CYNTHIA MEYERSBURG: False memories are 173 00:09:22,934 --> 00:09:24,074 what they sound like. 174 00:09:24,200 --> 00:09:26,030 They're recollections for either events that didn't 175 00:09:26,166 --> 00:09:27,896 take place or didn't take place in the way in which 176 00:09:28,033 --> 00:09:30,133 they're remembered. 177 00:09:30,266 --> 00:09:32,296 NARRATOR: Are people like Jeffrey just making 178 00:09:32,433 --> 00:09:34,803 their stories up? 179 00:09:34,934 --> 00:09:37,474 If so, why? 180 00:09:37,600 --> 00:09:38,730 CYNTHIA MEYERSBURG: Memory, although it feels 181 00:09:38,867 --> 00:09:40,767 a lot of times like we're watching a film in our 182 00:09:40,900 --> 00:09:43,830 mind's eye, that's not what's really happening. 183 00:09:43,967 --> 00:09:45,227 We're always reconstructing it from 184 00:09:45,367 --> 00:09:46,797 little pieces that we have saved in a sense and we 185 00:09:46,934 --> 00:09:48,474 put it back together. 186 00:09:48,600 --> 00:09:51,900 And our brain fills in for us the missing parts. 187 00:09:53,400 --> 00:09:55,200 NARRATOR: Researchers have been able to study 188 00:09:55,333 --> 00:09:56,903 this phenomenon. 189 00:09:57,033 --> 00:09:58,303 CYNTHIA MEYERSBURG: It's possible to induce false 190 00:09:58,433 --> 00:10:01,203 memories, in a matter of moments. 191 00:10:01,333 --> 00:10:04,933 For instance, if someone sees a doctored photograph 192 00:10:05,066 --> 00:10:08,126 showing him or her as a child in a hot air balloon 193 00:10:08,266 --> 00:10:12,866 people can very quickly form memories for it. 194 00:10:13,000 --> 00:10:14,470 NARRATOR: Can Jeffrey Keene's claim of 195 00:10:14,600 --> 00:10:19,670 reincarnation be dismissed as a series of false memories? 196 00:10:19,800 --> 00:10:23,100 Does it explain what struck him down? 197 00:10:24,500 --> 00:10:25,530 CYNTHIA MEYERSBURG: People come to believe they have 198 00:10:25,667 --> 00:10:27,197 past lives because something weird happens, 199 00:10:27,333 --> 00:10:29,903 something that's outside of the norm in some way 200 00:10:30,033 --> 00:10:33,503 for them, that they need an explanation for. 201 00:10:33,633 --> 00:10:36,733 NARRATOR: Is reincarnation real or simply a product 202 00:10:36,867 --> 00:10:38,197 of our minds? 203 00:10:38,333 --> 00:10:43,433 Do we all have past, present and future lives? 204 00:10:43,567 --> 00:10:44,927 STUART HAMEROFF: We know so little about the nature 205 00:10:45,066 --> 00:10:47,866 of reality that I think it would be very, very 206 00:10:48,033 --> 00:10:49,973 foolish to say that this cannot happen. 207 00:10:59,767 --> 00:11:01,427 NARRATOR: An emotional collapse at a Civil War 208 00:11:01,567 --> 00:11:04,067 battleground leads a man to believe he is the 209 00:11:04,200 --> 00:11:08,330 reincarnation of a dead general. 210 00:11:08,467 --> 00:11:11,897 Is it possible we all have past lives? 211 00:11:13,400 --> 00:11:15,130 Tariq Sattaur is a facilitator at the 212 00:11:15,266 --> 00:11:18,926 Ontario Hypnosis Centre. 213 00:11:19,066 --> 00:11:21,996 He not only believes reincarnation is real, he can 214 00:11:22,133 --> 00:11:26,103 demonstrate it using a process called past life regression. 215 00:11:27,400 --> 00:11:28,930 TARIQ SATTAUR: Past-life regression is a series of 216 00:11:29,066 --> 00:11:31,896 steps that you go through in order to access 217 00:11:32,033 --> 00:11:34,303 memories from previous lifetimes. 218 00:11:34,433 --> 00:11:38,133 It is allowing the conscious mind to be put 219 00:11:38,266 --> 00:11:41,966 aside for a while as you access the subconscious mind. 220 00:11:42,100 --> 00:11:45,030 TARIQ: Begin by just lightly closing your eyes now. 221 00:11:45,166 --> 00:11:47,096 NARRATOR: Tariq is preparing a patient, Karen, 222 00:11:47,233 --> 00:11:49,473 to travel back - not only deep into her own 223 00:11:49,600 --> 00:11:53,670 past but to lives she may have lived before, 224 00:11:53,800 --> 00:11:58,100 and from where he can access her memories. 225 00:11:58,233 --> 00:12:02,233 TARIQ: Imagine if you will above your head is a point 226 00:12:02,367 --> 00:12:06,327 of absolutely pure white light. 227 00:12:06,467 --> 00:12:08,097 TARIQ SATTAUR: It starts by first taking the client 228 00:12:08,233 --> 00:12:11,003 back through age regression and typically 229 00:12:11,133 --> 00:12:13,973 it's about fourteen or fifteen years old and then 230 00:12:14,100 --> 00:12:15,770 to three or four years old. 231 00:12:15,900 --> 00:12:17,770 KAREN: I'm on my mum's lap and I'm getting 232 00:12:17,900 --> 00:12:19,570 all of her attention. 233 00:12:19,700 --> 00:12:23,430 NARRATOR: Karen has now gone back over thirty years. 234 00:12:23,567 --> 00:12:26,867 The next step will take her into what is known as 235 00:12:27,000 --> 00:12:30,470 blue mist, a space in between her current life 236 00:12:30,600 --> 00:12:33,030 and the one she lived before. 237 00:12:33,166 --> 00:12:37,626 TARIQ: Take a deep breath now and go beyond the blue mist, 238 00:12:37,767 --> 00:12:42,027 finding yourself at a still earlier time. 239 00:12:42,166 --> 00:12:44,896 NARRATOR: Incredibly, it appears Karen has now 240 00:12:45,033 --> 00:12:47,273 entered a former life. 241 00:12:47,400 --> 00:12:54,200 KAREN: I'm climbing rocks and there's the forest nearby. 242 00:12:54,333 --> 00:12:55,833 TARIQ: Are you male or female? 243 00:12:55,967 --> 00:12:59,697 KAREN: I'm male. I think I'm hunting. 244 00:12:59,834 --> 00:13:01,574 TARIQ: Okay. 245 00:13:01,700 --> 00:13:05,670 NARRATOR: Tariq believes what Karen is seeing is real. 246 00:13:05,800 --> 00:13:06,870 TARIQ SATTAUR: They're interacting. 247 00:13:07,000 --> 00:13:08,600 They're in the body of that past life. 248 00:13:08,734 --> 00:13:10,474 They can see out of that person's eyes. 249 00:13:10,600 --> 00:13:12,930 It's very, very personal. 250 00:13:14,533 --> 00:13:16,173 NARRATOR: To complete the session, Tariq must 251 00:13:16,300 --> 00:13:18,630 reverse the process and bring Karen back into her 252 00:13:18,767 --> 00:13:23,097 current life and present age. 253 00:13:23,233 --> 00:13:28,273 TARIQ: And one. Eyes open. You're back. 254 00:13:32,800 --> 00:13:36,670 NARRATOR: Did Karen actually visit her former life? 255 00:13:36,800 --> 00:13:39,070 Is past life regression evidence that 256 00:13:39,200 --> 00:13:42,430 reincarnation is real? 257 00:13:42,567 --> 00:13:45,327 Dr. Stuart Hameroff is a scientist. 258 00:13:45,467 --> 00:13:47,397 He believes the only way to find real proof of 259 00:13:47,533 --> 00:13:51,073 reincarnation is by using science. 260 00:13:51,200 --> 00:13:53,330 STUART HAMEROFF: There's a lot of anecdotal evidence 261 00:13:53,467 --> 00:13:58,167 for apparent reincarnation but it's been dismissed 262 00:13:58,300 --> 00:14:00,100 because it seems irrational. 263 00:14:00,233 --> 00:14:03,273 Now we have a theory, a possible explanation, 264 00:14:03,400 --> 00:14:06,300 so I think all this evidence needs to be reevaluated 265 00:14:06,433 --> 00:14:09,033 and considered seriously. 266 00:14:09,166 --> 00:14:11,226 NARRATOR: Hameroff's theory concerns one of the greatest 267 00:14:11,367 --> 00:14:16,667 mysteries of both religion and science - the soul. 268 00:14:16,800 --> 00:14:18,070 STUART HAMEROFF: I think the soul is our 269 00:14:18,200 --> 00:14:20,430 consciousness, the sum total of our memories and 270 00:14:20,567 --> 00:14:23,767 conscious awareness and I think it can exist outside 271 00:14:23,900 --> 00:14:28,130 the body, after life and possibly in reincarnation. 272 00:14:28,266 --> 00:14:29,726 NARRATOR: But even more remarkable is that 273 00:14:29,867 --> 00:14:32,997 Hameroff thinks the soul exists as a series of 274 00:14:33,133 --> 00:14:37,703 information, quantifiable by physics. 275 00:14:37,834 --> 00:14:39,534 STUART HAMEROFF: I think a quantum version of 276 00:14:39,667 --> 00:14:41,667 consciousness can give rise to something like a 277 00:14:41,800 --> 00:14:44,430 quantum soul that can account for a lot of these 278 00:14:44,567 --> 00:14:48,267 anecdotal stories that we've been hearing for, for eons. 279 00:14:48,400 --> 00:14:50,970 NARRATOR: Many scientists believe consciousness 280 00:14:51,100 --> 00:14:54,400 exists with cells in the brain, but Hameroff thinks 281 00:14:54,533 --> 00:14:58,203 it exists on a subatomic level in quantum particles 282 00:14:58,333 --> 00:15:02,403 that can stay connected and survive death. 283 00:15:02,533 --> 00:15:04,003 STUART HAMEROFF: When a patient has a cardiac 284 00:15:04,133 --> 00:15:07,133 arrest and is resuscitated, they often 285 00:15:07,266 --> 00:15:09,896 tell a story of a white light, a tunnel and in 286 00:15:10,033 --> 00:15:12,133 many cases floating above their body looking down on 287 00:15:12,266 --> 00:15:14,826 what's going on. 288 00:15:14,967 --> 00:15:16,267 This could b consciousness as quantum 289 00:15:16,400 --> 00:15:18,570 information dissipating. 290 00:15:18,700 --> 00:15:20,570 When the patient's resuscitated the quantum 291 00:15:20,700 --> 00:15:23,500 information goes back and the patient wakes up and 292 00:15:23,633 --> 00:15:25,273 reports having had a near-death experience 293 00:15:25,400 --> 00:15:28,170 and perhaps even an out-of-body experience. 294 00:15:28,300 --> 00:15:30,230 NARRATOR: It's an incredible theory, 295 00:15:30,367 --> 00:15:33,667 but if our souls do exist in quantum form 296 00:15:33,800 --> 00:15:36,000 how are they reincarnated? 297 00:15:36,133 --> 00:15:37,273 STUART HAMEROFF: It's conceivable that this 298 00:15:37,400 --> 00:15:39,070 quantum information, the quantum soul if you will, 299 00:15:39,200 --> 00:15:44,170 could reenter an embryo, which would be reincarnation. 300 00:15:44,300 --> 00:15:46,130 NARRATOR: Do our souls consist of information 301 00:15:46,266 --> 00:15:50,326 that can travel, even into an embryo? 302 00:15:50,467 --> 00:15:52,427 Have we solved one of the greatest mysteries 303 00:15:52,567 --> 00:15:55,427 in the universe? 304 00:15:55,567 --> 00:15:57,197 STUART HAMEROFF: We know so little about the nature 305 00:15:57,333 --> 00:15:59,073 of reality that I think it would be very, very 306 00:15:59,200 --> 00:16:02,870 foolish to say that this cannot happen. 307 00:16:03,000 --> 00:16:04,730 NARRATOR: Was Jeffrey Keene the reincarnation of 308 00:16:04,867 --> 00:16:06,767 a long-dead general? 309 00:16:06,900 --> 00:16:11,400 Or did false memories convince him it was true? 310 00:16:11,533 --> 00:16:15,933 Does the soul exist independent of our bodies? 311 00:16:16,066 --> 00:16:21,996 Can we visit past lives and if we can, what will we find? 312 00:16:22,133 --> 00:16:25,103 Weird or what? 313 00:16:25,233 --> 00:16:32,633 [♪] 314 00:16:32,767 --> 00:16:34,627 NARRATOR: Scientists in England conduct a series 315 00:16:34,767 --> 00:16:37,397 of groundbreaking experiments. 316 00:16:37,533 --> 00:16:41,573 Did they find the first genuine proof of the afterlife? 317 00:16:55,667 --> 00:17:02,527 WILLIAM SHATNER: Hello? Hello? 318 00:17:02,667 --> 00:17:04,127 I don't know about you but I've always been scared of 319 00:17:04,266 --> 00:17:05,366 things that go bump in the night. 320 00:17:05,500 --> 00:17:07,700 [crash, meow] 321 00:17:07,834 --> 00:17:08,774 Fred! 322 00:17:08,900 --> 00:17:10,230 [meow] 323 00:17:10,367 --> 00:17:11,297 Most of them we can explain but what about 324 00:17:11,433 --> 00:17:13,803 those we can't? 325 00:17:13,934 --> 00:17:17,434 Are we surrounded by spiritual entities, 326 00:17:17,567 --> 00:17:21,227 the remains of those that passed from this life? 327 00:17:21,367 --> 00:17:26,967 Are they what we call ghosts? 328 00:17:27,100 --> 00:17:32,200 And, if they are there, are they friendly? 329 00:17:32,333 --> 00:17:38,533 And can we communicate with them? 330 00:17:38,667 --> 00:17:39,697 [crash, meow] 331 00:17:39,834 --> 00:17:42,434 Fred! 332 00:17:42,567 --> 00:17:44,197 [sigh] 333 00:17:45,900 --> 00:17:48,070 NARRATOR: In 1993, a team of researchers in the town 334 00:17:48,200 --> 00:17:51,170 of Scole, United Kingdom set out to find 335 00:17:51,300 --> 00:17:54,870 indisputable evidence of life after death. 336 00:17:55,000 --> 00:17:58,930 [♪] 337 00:17:59,066 --> 00:18:04,526 Conducting a series of extraordinary séances, they 338 00:18:04,667 --> 00:18:09,427 witnessed paranormal events that would mystify science. 339 00:18:09,567 --> 00:18:12,727 They called it the Scole Experiment. 340 00:18:12,867 --> 00:18:14,067 ROBIN FOY: What we didn't know was that it was going 341 00:18:14,200 --> 00:18:16,630 to become very, very special and work in a 342 00:18:16,767 --> 00:18:21,467 pioneering way to provide proof of life after death. 343 00:18:22,700 --> 00:18:25,730 NARRATOR: Robin Foy led the séances. 344 00:18:25,867 --> 00:18:28,667 He believes the experiment was unique because of 345 00:18:28,800 --> 00:18:32,400 their attempts to make sure it was credible. 346 00:18:32,533 --> 00:18:34,303 ROBIN FOY: It was important for us to show 347 00:18:34,433 --> 00:18:37,203 to the outside world that we'd taken every security 348 00:18:37,333 --> 00:18:40,303 precaution that we could to ensure that the work 349 00:18:40,433 --> 00:18:42,103 was fraud proof. 350 00:18:42,233 --> 00:18:44,173 NARRATOR: To conquer the skeptics, the séances were 351 00:18:44,300 --> 00:18:46,930 held in the supposedly impenetrable cellar of 352 00:18:47,066 --> 00:18:48,996 a suburban house. 353 00:18:49,133 --> 00:18:50,603 ROBIN FOY: The whole place was brick, there were no 354 00:18:50,734 --> 00:18:53,804 trapdoors and the only door into the cellar was 355 00:18:53,934 --> 00:18:57,304 locked internally. 356 00:18:57,433 --> 00:19:00,733 Each one of us would wear luminous armbands so that 357 00:19:00,867 --> 00:19:04,497 everybody who was present could see that no one moved. 358 00:19:04,633 --> 00:19:07,673 We were using a, a table which was actually 359 00:19:07,800 --> 00:19:09,930 fraud proof so that nobody could get under it and do 360 00:19:10,066 --> 00:19:11,126 anything at all. 361 00:19:11,266 --> 00:19:14,696 We were seeking to actually get viable proof 362 00:19:14,834 --> 00:19:17,674 that we live on after we die. 363 00:19:17,800 --> 00:19:19,430 NARRATOR: The Scole Experiment began in 364 00:19:19,567 --> 00:19:22,327 November 1993. 365 00:19:22,467 --> 00:19:25,897 As Robin Foy and his team assembled in their cellar, 366 00:19:26,033 --> 00:19:31,003 they had no idea what might happen. 367 00:19:31,133 --> 00:19:34,303 But it didn't take long to find out. 368 00:19:34,433 --> 00:19:36,733 ROBIN FOY: After a short while, the spirit lights come, 369 00:19:36,867 --> 00:19:39,427 little lights about the size of a pea or 370 00:19:39,567 --> 00:19:41,397 slightly larger, very bright. 371 00:19:41,533 --> 00:19:44,203 And they would sort of perform aerobatics. 372 00:19:44,333 --> 00:19:49,373 Later on there were spirit voices speaking from midair. 373 00:19:50,734 --> 00:19:53,534 We were able to hear on a one-to-one basis all of 374 00:19:53,667 --> 00:19:55,427 the spirit people. 375 00:19:55,567 --> 00:19:58,497 Everybody in that room would be regularly touched 376 00:19:58,633 --> 00:20:01,533 by spirit hands. 377 00:20:03,767 --> 00:20:05,727 NARRATOR: As the experiment continues, 378 00:20:05,867 --> 00:20:08,527 the team is amazed as the paranormal activity 379 00:20:08,667 --> 00:20:11,227 becomes more intense. 380 00:20:11,367 --> 00:20:12,627 ROBIN FOY: All sorts of different things would 381 00:20:12,767 --> 00:20:15,027 materialize in midair and then fall down onto the 382 00:20:15,166 --> 00:20:19,366 table and we would hear the bang as that hit the table. 383 00:20:19,500 --> 00:20:22,830 We may actually have solid spirit personalities 384 00:20:22,967 --> 00:20:25,197 moving around in the room. 385 00:20:25,333 --> 00:20:27,503 We were pushing the bounds of psychic research 386 00:20:27,633 --> 00:20:29,933 further forward than anyone had been able to 387 00:20:30,066 --> 00:20:32,826 produce or witness anywhere in the past. 388 00:20:34,500 --> 00:20:36,170 NARRATOR: Encouraged by the success, Foy decided to 389 00:20:36,300 --> 00:20:39,830 try something extraordinary, something that would 390 00:20:39,967 --> 00:20:44,967 prove they had made contact with the afterlife. 391 00:20:45,100 --> 00:20:47,570 ROBIN FOY: We were doing an experiment with a film 392 00:20:47,700 --> 00:20:50,200 that was still in its plastic container. 393 00:20:50,333 --> 00:20:53,233 We would have this locked into a security box to 394 00:20:53,367 --> 00:20:58,697 ensure that nothing was ever done by us to that film. 395 00:20:58,834 --> 00:21:01,774 NARRATOR: It was a remarkable and ambitious idea. 396 00:21:01,900 --> 00:21:04,430 The team hoped a spirit might somehow implant an 397 00:21:04,567 --> 00:21:07,567 image on the film inside the box. 398 00:21:07,700 --> 00:21:12,600 If so, it could be the proof they were looking for. 399 00:21:14,066 --> 00:21:16,496 When they finally checked the film, they couldn't 400 00:21:16,633 --> 00:21:18,533 believe their eyes. 401 00:21:18,667 --> 00:21:21,327 ROBIN FOY: That was quite amazing. 402 00:21:21,467 --> 00:21:22,997 We had hundreds of photographs that were 403 00:21:23,133 --> 00:21:26,133 produced to show us various aspects of the 404 00:21:26,266 --> 00:21:27,366 spirit world itself. 405 00:21:27,500 --> 00:21:29,400 Some of them were so fantastic they really 406 00:21:29,533 --> 00:21:32,703 would knock your socks off. 407 00:21:32,834 --> 00:21:34,134 NARRATOR: But there was one photograph that was 408 00:21:34,266 --> 00:21:39,896 different from the rest - a haunting image of 409 00:21:40,033 --> 00:21:42,873 what seemed to be a woman's face. 410 00:21:43,000 --> 00:21:44,570 ROBIN FOY: You actually see on this one areas 411 00:21:44,700 --> 00:21:47,530 of this person's face. 412 00:21:47,667 --> 00:21:49,767 NARRATOR: Who is the woman? 413 00:21:49,900 --> 00:21:52,700 And how did her image appear on the film? 414 00:21:52,834 --> 00:21:54,874 Foy believes this chilling incident makes the 415 00:21:55,000 --> 00:21:59,030 Scole Experiment the definitive exploration into 416 00:21:59,166 --> 00:22:01,596 the presence of the afterlife. 417 00:22:01,734 --> 00:22:03,074 ROBIN FOY: The Scole Experiment I think was 418 00:22:03,200 --> 00:22:05,770 very, very important because it went further 419 00:22:05,900 --> 00:22:09,000 than anybody had ever been able to go before in 420 00:22:09,133 --> 00:22:13,873 proving the real existence of life after death. 421 00:22:14,000 --> 00:22:16,170 NARRATOR: Despite his claims, many skeptics 422 00:22:16,300 --> 00:22:18,870 doubted the results. 423 00:22:19,000 --> 00:22:21,370 Did Robin Foy and his team of researchers make 424 00:22:21,500 --> 00:22:23,630 contact with the other side? 425 00:22:23,767 --> 00:22:26,697 Is the Scole experiment proof that there is 426 00:22:26,834 --> 00:22:28,904 life after death? 427 00:22:29,033 --> 00:22:31,903 Or could it have been an elaborate fake? 428 00:22:32,033 --> 00:22:36,573 One way to find out is to try it for ourselves. 429 00:22:36,700 --> 00:22:37,700 MAN: Ahhh! 430 00:22:48,367 --> 00:22:50,397 NARRATOR: A UK research team experiences 431 00:22:50,533 --> 00:22:53,573 a remarkable series of paranormal events during 432 00:22:53,700 --> 00:22:56,130 a series of séances. 433 00:22:56,266 --> 00:22:59,426 Did they find proof of life after death? 434 00:23:01,567 --> 00:23:04,267 Brian Dunning is a scientific journalist. 435 00:23:04,400 --> 00:23:07,230 He believes the events of Scole were nothing more 436 00:23:07,367 --> 00:23:09,127 than an illusion. 437 00:23:09,266 --> 00:23:10,926 BRIAN DUNNING: Here's the problem with séances is 438 00:23:11,066 --> 00:23:13,866 that séances have existed as a magic trick for 439 00:23:14,000 --> 00:23:16,230 two hundred years. 440 00:23:16,367 --> 00:23:18,967 They are an illusionist giving the impression that 441 00:23:19,100 --> 00:23:20,500 spirits are in the room. 442 00:23:20,633 --> 00:23:22,933 ILLUSIONIST: What we are trying to recreate are the 443 00:23:23,066 --> 00:23:27,066 famous Scole Experiments. 444 00:23:27,200 --> 00:23:30,070 NARRATOR: Was the Scole Experiment a magic trick? 445 00:23:30,200 --> 00:23:33,730 To test Dunning's theory, we've set up a fake séance 446 00:23:33,867 --> 00:23:36,497 using a professional illusionist. 447 00:23:36,633 --> 00:23:39,103 To create the conditions at Scole, the participants 448 00:23:39,233 --> 00:23:41,833 are sitting in pitch darkness. 449 00:23:41,967 --> 00:23:44,967 Using night vision cameras, we can see them 450 00:23:45,100 --> 00:23:47,500 but they can see nothing at all. 451 00:23:47,633 --> 00:23:50,533 The session begins with everyone holding hands. 452 00:23:50,667 --> 00:23:54,267 ILLUSIONIST: Give me your hand here and your hand here. 453 00:23:54,400 --> 00:23:58,200 Please do not break the psychic circle at any time 454 00:23:58,333 --> 00:24:00,503 during the séance. 455 00:24:00,633 --> 00:24:07,633 Spirits, are you with us tonight? 456 00:24:07,767 --> 00:24:09,027 NARRATOR: The Scole experiment claimed that 457 00:24:09,166 --> 00:24:12,126 spirit voices seemed to come from midair. 458 00:24:14,967 --> 00:24:16,527 The illusionist will attempt to recreate them 459 00:24:16,667 --> 00:24:22,297 with an assistant using a cardboard tube as a megaphone. 460 00:24:25,133 --> 00:24:27,173 ILLUSIONIST: Speak to us. 461 00:24:27,300 --> 00:24:28,700 VOICE: She will always love you. 462 00:24:28,834 --> 00:24:30,574 WOMAN: Whoa! 463 00:24:30,700 --> 00:24:35,130 NARRATOR: Faking disembodied voices seems simple. 464 00:24:35,266 --> 00:24:36,266 VOICE: Charles. 465 00:24:36,400 --> 00:24:37,930 ILLUSIONIST: Charles, the name Charles. 466 00:24:38,066 --> 00:24:39,326 NARRATOR: But can they convince these 467 00:24:39,467 --> 00:24:41,267 participants they are being physically touched 468 00:24:41,400 --> 00:24:45,300 by spirits as claimed by the people at Scole? 469 00:24:45,433 --> 00:24:49,803 ILLUSIONIST: I'm going to ask my spirit guide Francine, 470 00:24:49,934 --> 00:24:53,174 will you give us a physical manifestation? 471 00:24:53,300 --> 00:24:56,670 I want Francine to come towards the centre of the table. 472 00:24:56,800 --> 00:24:58,100 WOMAN: Whoa. 473 00:24:58,233 --> 00:24:59,403 ILLUSIONIST: Whoa what? What happened? 474 00:24:59,533 --> 00:25:02,033 WOMAN: I think someone touched me. 475 00:25:02,166 --> 00:25:03,326 Ahhh! 476 00:25:03,467 --> 00:25:05,167 ILLUSIONIST: Whoa, whoa, whoa. 477 00:25:06,834 --> 00:25:08,874 NARRATOR: The final trick centers around the claim 478 00:25:09,000 --> 00:25:11,970 that objects materialized out of thin air. 479 00:25:13,166 --> 00:25:17,096 Is this so easy to disprove? 480 00:25:17,233 --> 00:25:22,273 ILLUSIONIST: Leave us now! Leave us! 481 00:25:22,400 --> 00:25:23,730 GROUP: Ahhhh! 482 00:25:25,867 --> 00:25:27,467 NARRATOR: The experiment is over. 483 00:25:27,600 --> 00:25:29,900 Even though his séance was badly faked, 484 00:25:30,033 --> 00:25:33,403 the participants are left visibly shaken. 485 00:25:33,533 --> 00:25:34,633 BRIAN DUNNING: Nobody's laughing. 486 00:25:34,767 --> 00:25:35,967 Everybody took that completely seriously. 487 00:25:36,100 --> 00:25:38,830 That was a very powerful experience for these people. 488 00:25:38,967 --> 00:25:41,167 NARRATOR: Although the participants were fooled, 489 00:25:41,300 --> 00:25:45,630 Brain believes this proves the Scole experiment was a hoax. 490 00:25:45,767 --> 00:25:46,967 BRIAN DUNNING: We saw a few of the things today 491 00:25:47,100 --> 00:25:48,570 that were reported from the Scole Experiments. 492 00:25:48,700 --> 00:25:52,170 We've seen that those can be easily faked. 493 00:25:52,300 --> 00:25:54,030 Do we know that they faked them at Scole? 494 00:25:54,166 --> 00:25:55,996 No, of course not because no controls were applied. 495 00:25:56,133 --> 00:25:59,003 We don't know what actually happened. 496 00:25:59,133 --> 00:26:01,233 But when we see how easy it is to fake it, how can 497 00:26:01,367 --> 00:26:03,327 we know that these could have been real? 498 00:26:03,467 --> 00:26:05,297 WILLIAM SHATNER: Could the greatest experiment into 499 00:26:05,433 --> 00:26:07,573 the existence of the afterlife be just an 500 00:26:07,700 --> 00:26:08,830 illusionist's game? 501 00:26:08,967 --> 00:26:14,867 No doubt magic tricks are easy to perform and many 502 00:26:15,000 --> 00:26:17,630 of the claims made at Scole have been dismissed 503 00:26:17,767 --> 00:26:22,527 out of hand but the biggest mystery of all 504 00:26:22,667 --> 00:26:27,327 still remains unanswered. 505 00:26:27,467 --> 00:26:30,927 Who is this woman and how did her image appear on 506 00:26:31,066 --> 00:26:33,026 a roll of film that was locked inside a box? 507 00:26:33,166 --> 00:26:37,296 Even Houdini would have trouble with that one. 508 00:26:38,900 --> 00:26:42,630 NARRATOR: Peter Sramek is a photography expert. 509 00:26:42,767 --> 00:26:46,297 We asked him to examine images from the Scole experiment 510 00:26:46,433 --> 00:26:50,233 and try to unlock one of its biggest mysteries. 511 00:26:50,367 --> 00:26:53,827 PETER SRAMEK: As I understand it, the uh film 512 00:26:53,967 --> 00:26:57,327 was put into this box and locked away and the 513 00:26:57,467 --> 00:27:00,067 exposure, the effect on the film was supposed to 514 00:27:00,200 --> 00:27:05,430 have happened while the film was locked up in this box. 515 00:27:05,567 --> 00:27:07,897 My first reaction was this is an interesting 516 00:27:08,033 --> 00:27:09,273 manipulation. 517 00:27:09,400 --> 00:27:11,130 I assumed it was something that would have been done 518 00:27:11,266 --> 00:27:12,366 in the dark room. 519 00:27:12,500 --> 00:27:14,300 It looks very similar to the kinds of distortions, 520 00:27:14,433 --> 00:27:19,473 collages, manipulations that people have done in 521 00:27:19,600 --> 00:27:22,130 the darkroom because it's fun to do. 522 00:27:22,266 --> 00:27:23,326 NARRATOR: But there was no darkroom at Scole. 523 00:27:25,800 --> 00:27:29,730 Was this photograph created by the spirit of a woman? 524 00:27:29,867 --> 00:27:32,197 Peter believes the answer to the mystery lies in the 525 00:27:32,333 --> 00:27:34,303 type of film they used. 526 00:27:34,433 --> 00:27:35,703 PETER SRAMEK: With Polaroid you have the 527 00:27:35,834 --> 00:27:38,434 direct development so there's no darkroom involved. 528 00:27:38,567 --> 00:27:40,697 When you process it, you actually put it into a 529 00:27:40,834 --> 00:27:45,074 container that is full of a gelatinous chemical 530 00:27:45,200 --> 00:27:47,830 that gets spread on to the film evenly. 531 00:27:47,967 --> 00:27:51,397 And that, in my mind, is what's happened in these photographs. 532 00:27:51,533 --> 00:27:53,403 All you're seeing are the chemicals, the way that 533 00:27:53,533 --> 00:27:57,533 they've affected the film as it's gone through. 534 00:27:57,667 --> 00:27:59,167 PETER SRAMEK: What is harder to explain are the 535 00:27:59,300 --> 00:28:00,800 actual faces in the images. 536 00:28:00,934 --> 00:28:03,374 They're not light effects, they're not chemical effects. 537 00:28:03,500 --> 00:28:08,000 They actually are, you know, images of faces. 538 00:28:08,133 --> 00:28:11,333 NARRATOR: So how was this haunting image created? 539 00:28:11,467 --> 00:28:13,267 PETER SRAMEK: My explanation for that would 540 00:28:13,400 --> 00:28:16,570 be that the film has been tampered with and the film 541 00:28:16,700 --> 00:28:19,870 has been put through the camera and these faces have 542 00:28:20,000 --> 00:28:24,770 been exposed into it, prior to the supposed experiment. 543 00:28:24,900 --> 00:28:27,870 NARRATOR: Peter believes he has solved the mystery, but 544 00:28:28,000 --> 00:28:32,430 what if the Scole researchers were telling the truth? 545 00:28:32,567 --> 00:28:33,767 PETER SRAMEK: I don't think while the film was 546 00:28:33,900 --> 00:28:36,500 in the box that any of the effects that we're seeing 547 00:28:36,633 --> 00:28:40,803 could have been created unless one believes in 548 00:28:40,934 --> 00:28:43,834 some sort of supernatural explanation. 549 00:28:43,967 --> 00:28:47,227 NARRATOR: Is this a woman from the spirit world? 550 00:28:47,367 --> 00:28:51,097 Did Robin Foy and his research team find proof 551 00:28:51,233 --> 00:28:53,503 of life after death at Scole? 552 00:28:54,767 --> 00:28:56,997 Or was it an ingenious hoax? 553 00:29:00,767 --> 00:29:05,467 Whatever the truth is, this is - weird or what? 554 00:29:05,600 --> 00:29:12,800 [♪] 555 00:29:12,934 --> 00:29:15,374 In Haiti, a man dies after a sudden and 556 00:29:15,500 --> 00:29:18,570 mysterious illness. 557 00:29:18,700 --> 00:29:23,000 Eighteen years later, he returns from the grave. 558 00:29:23,133 --> 00:29:26,203 Could this prove that zombies exist? 559 00:29:36,333 --> 00:29:38,403 WILLIAM SHATNER: When it comes to the mysteries of 560 00:29:38,533 --> 00:29:42,933 the afterlife, perhaps there's nothing weirder 561 00:29:43,066 --> 00:29:45,326 than zombies. 562 00:29:45,467 --> 00:29:47,767 The dictionary describes a zombie like this: the body 563 00:29:47,900 --> 00:29:51,200 of a dead person given the semblance of life but made 564 00:29:51,333 --> 00:29:54,033 mute and will-less by a supernatural force, 565 00:29:54,166 --> 00:29:56,626 usually for some evil purpose. 566 00:29:56,767 --> 00:30:00,827 Sounds like my bank manager, but could it be true? 567 00:30:00,967 --> 00:30:06,167 Could mindless shuffling cannibals actually exist - 568 00:30:06,300 --> 00:30:08,270 outside of Hollywood? 569 00:30:10,033 --> 00:30:11,473 NARRATOR: The tiny nation of Haiti is home to many 570 00:30:11,600 --> 00:30:16,130 mysteries, but none weirder than the tale of 571 00:30:16,266 --> 00:30:19,896 a man named Clairvius Narcisse. 572 00:30:20,033 --> 00:30:23,733 Wade Davis is an explorer and author. 573 00:30:23,867 --> 00:30:26,997 He investigated the case, which began in 1962 when 574 00:30:27,133 --> 00:30:31,203 Narcisse suddenly became violently ill. 575 00:30:31,333 --> 00:30:33,233 WADE DAVIS: I mean the kind of the constellation 576 00:30:33,367 --> 00:30:36,097 of symptoms that he reported were so strange 577 00:30:36,233 --> 00:30:38,673 that you initially thought this had to be coming 578 00:30:38,800 --> 00:30:40,600 from the realm of science fiction. 579 00:30:40,734 --> 00:30:43,534 NARRATOR: Although doctors work feverishly, 580 00:30:43,667 --> 00:30:47,497 it's too late to save the stricken Narcisse. 581 00:30:49,133 --> 00:30:50,403 WADE DAVIS: The death was witnessed by both the 582 00:30:50,533 --> 00:30:53,473 physicians, the nurses and his own family members and 583 00:30:53,600 --> 00:30:54,870 his sister had actually affixed her, 584 00:30:55,000 --> 00:30:59,270 her thumbprint to the death certificate, verifying 585 00:30:59,400 --> 00:31:02,400 that this was her brother, her brother had died. 586 00:31:02,533 --> 00:31:05,073 NARRATOR: Devastated, family members say their 587 00:31:05,200 --> 00:31:11,300 final goodbyes and Clairvius is finally laid to rest. 588 00:31:11,433 --> 00:31:13,333 WADE DAVIS: You could go to his gravesite where the 589 00:31:13,467 --> 00:31:16,567 slab of cement had been placed upon his grave 590 00:31:16,700 --> 00:31:19,500 shortly after his demise. 591 00:31:21,033 --> 00:31:21,833 NARRATOR: It should have been the last anyone heard 592 00:31:21,967 --> 00:31:23,227 of Clairvius Narcisse. 593 00:31:24,800 --> 00:31:27,800 But eighteen years later, something incredible will 594 00:31:27,934 --> 00:31:32,574 happen that ensures no one forgets his name. 595 00:31:34,533 --> 00:31:36,803 NARRATOR: In 1980, Clairvius' sister is going 596 00:31:36,934 --> 00:31:41,004 about daily chores in her family's village. 597 00:31:41,133 --> 00:31:45,073 Suddenly, she sees something beyond comprehension. 598 00:31:45,200 --> 00:31:49,770 Standing before her is her deceased brother. 599 00:31:49,900 --> 00:31:54,070 Clairvius Narcisse has risen ... from the dead. 600 00:31:54,200 --> 00:31:55,600 WADE DAVIS: He claimed that he was buried. 601 00:31:55,734 --> 00:31:58,034 He claimed that he was magically resuscitated by 602 00:31:58,166 --> 00:32:00,366 a sorcerer and then led off to the north of the 603 00:32:00,500 --> 00:32:03,000 country where he'd been working as a sort of 604 00:32:03,133 --> 00:32:05,303 a zombie slave for eighteen years. 605 00:32:07,000 --> 00:32:10,500 NARRATOR: Did Clairvius Narcisse return from the dead - 606 00:32:10,633 --> 00:32:12,173 a zombie? 607 00:32:12,300 --> 00:32:14,270 WADE DAVIS: There was no question that this 608 00:32:14,400 --> 00:32:18,130 individual had clearly been pronounced dead by the doctors. 609 00:32:18,266 --> 00:32:20,166 And then the question became why? 610 00:32:20,300 --> 00:32:22,500 How? What happened to him? 611 00:32:22,633 --> 00:32:24,533 NARRATOR: This incredible story attracts the 612 00:32:24,667 --> 00:32:27,367 attention of a team of scientists who are keen to 613 00:32:27,500 --> 00:32:30,170 examine the case and uncover the truth. 614 00:32:30,300 --> 00:32:31,500 WADE DAVIS: They investigated all these 615 00:32:31,633 --> 00:32:33,333 lines of evidence, analysis of the 616 00:32:33,467 --> 00:32:36,097 fingerprints by forensic experts, the testimony of 617 00:32:36,233 --> 00:32:38,703 the family members and the doctors. 618 00:32:38,834 --> 00:32:40,974 NARRATOR: After months of searching, 619 00:32:41,100 --> 00:32:44,400 the investigators come to a remarkable conclusion. 620 00:32:44,533 --> 00:32:46,933 WADE DAVIS: It really led two very reputable 621 00:32:47,066 --> 00:32:49,226 scientists to go public saying they had found the 622 00:32:49,367 --> 00:32:52,267 first provable instance of a zombie. 623 00:32:52,400 --> 00:32:56,300 NARRATOR: What did the scientists find? 624 00:32:56,433 --> 00:32:59,333 Did Clairvius Narcisse rise from the dead? 625 00:32:59,467 --> 00:33:03,767 Do zombies exist? 626 00:33:03,900 --> 00:33:07,000 Steven Schlozman is a Harvard psychiatrist. 627 00:33:07,133 --> 00:33:12,873 Incredibly, he believes the answer could be yes. 628 00:33:13,000 --> 00:33:14,430 STEVEN SCHLOZMAN: When I started thinking about how 629 00:33:14,567 --> 00:33:17,467 I would explain zombies medically, it was kind of 630 00:33:17,600 --> 00:33:19,930 a lark and then it ended up getting a little creepy. 631 00:33:20,066 --> 00:33:25,196 The typical zombie, in my view, is slow, shambling, 632 00:33:25,333 --> 00:33:29,033 can't figure even the simplest of, of dilemmas out, 633 00:33:29,166 --> 00:33:31,096 wants to eat human flesh. 634 00:33:31,233 --> 00:33:36,033 There is ways you can medically explain the behaviour. 635 00:33:37,433 --> 00:33:39,473 NARRATOR: Remarkably, Schlozman believes just 636 00:33:39,600 --> 00:33:41,930 a few changes in the human brain could turn one of 637 00:33:42,066 --> 00:33:45,566 us into one of them. 638 00:33:45,700 --> 00:33:48,700 It starts with the cerebellum. 639 00:33:48,834 --> 00:33:50,474 STEVEN SCHLOZMAN: This is a sheep brain but imagine 640 00:33:50,600 --> 00:33:51,900 this is a human brain, which looks an 641 00:33:52,033 --> 00:33:53,533 awful lot like this, just, just bigger. 642 00:33:53,667 --> 00:33:55,427 The function of the cerebellum is to help 643 00:33:55,567 --> 00:33:56,697 us maintain balance. 644 00:33:56,834 --> 00:33:58,334 In zombies, we've got to think that there's 645 00:33:58,467 --> 00:34:00,597 something not right with their cerebellum because 646 00:34:00,734 --> 00:34:04,274 zombies are really not balanced well. 647 00:34:04,400 --> 00:34:05,670 There's a number of diseases that could affect 648 00:34:05,800 --> 00:34:07,030 the cerebellum. 649 00:34:07,166 --> 00:34:10,496 In those cases, you have exactly the shambling gait 650 00:34:10,633 --> 00:34:13,603 that you see in the zombie movies. 651 00:34:13,734 --> 00:34:16,874 NARRATOR: The shuffling is one thing, but what 652 00:34:17,000 --> 00:34:20,970 explains a zombie's mindless violence? 653 00:34:21,100 --> 00:34:22,770 STEVEN SCHLOZMAN: The amygdala is the most 654 00:34:22,900 --> 00:34:24,570 primitive part of the brain. 655 00:34:24,700 --> 00:34:29,600 It's the region of brain that has very base emotions. 656 00:34:29,734 --> 00:34:33,934 NARRATOR: Our amygdala is the source of all anger and rage. 657 00:34:34,066 --> 00:34:36,496 But it's kept in check by our frontal lobes, 658 00:34:36,633 --> 00:34:39,603 the most advanced part of our brain. 659 00:34:39,734 --> 00:34:40,904 STEVEN SCHLOZMAN: So we might have an impulse when 660 00:34:41,033 --> 00:34:43,303 somebody cuts us off on the road to yell at them, 661 00:34:43,433 --> 00:34:45,533 to tailgate them, to do something not nice. 662 00:34:45,667 --> 00:34:49,267 The frontal lobe jumps in and stops you from doing that. 663 00:34:49,400 --> 00:34:52,100 When we watch zombie movies, we can guess that 664 00:34:52,233 --> 00:34:54,373 zombie frontal lobes are pretty much gone. 665 00:34:54,500 --> 00:34:56,430 They can't hold back their impulses. 666 00:34:56,567 --> 00:34:58,167 NARRATOR: Could a unique combination of brain 667 00:34:58,300 --> 00:35:01,470 injuries somehow create a zombie? 668 00:35:01,600 --> 00:35:04,570 There's just one problem. 669 00:35:04,700 --> 00:35:05,870 STEVEN SCHLOZMAN: The zombie, by definition, 670 00:35:06,000 --> 00:35:08,070 has to die and be reanimated. 671 00:35:08,200 --> 00:35:09,700 There is no medical basis for something coming back 672 00:35:09,834 --> 00:35:11,974 from the dead, so far. 673 00:35:13,467 --> 00:35:14,727 NARRATOR: But how does Scholzman explain that 674 00:35:14,867 --> 00:35:19,327 Clairvius Narcisse was certified dead, buried, 675 00:35:19,467 --> 00:35:21,297 then returned from the grave? 676 00:35:21,433 --> 00:35:22,473 STEVEN SCHLOZMAN: Maybe he's not telling the 677 00:35:22,600 --> 00:35:24,230 truth, maybe he's undergone some kind of 678 00:35:24,367 --> 00:35:26,027 neurologic insult that prevents him from 679 00:35:26,166 --> 00:35:27,466 remembering what's just happened. 680 00:35:27,600 --> 00:35:29,670 But if we're talking about really rising from the dead, 681 00:35:29,800 --> 00:35:30,830 that doesn't happen. 682 00:35:41,834 --> 00:35:45,704 NARRATOR: A Haitian man dies from a mysterious illness, 683 00:35:45,834 --> 00:35:48,734 then returns from the grave eighteen years later. 684 00:35:48,867 --> 00:35:52,797 Is he proof that zombies exist? 685 00:35:52,934 --> 00:35:55,004 Wade Davis has investigated the case and 686 00:35:55,133 --> 00:35:57,933 has an incredible theory. 687 00:35:58,066 --> 00:36:02,366 He thinks Clairvius Narcisse didn't die at all, 688 00:36:02,500 --> 00:36:05,930 that something made him just seem to be dead. 689 00:36:06,066 --> 00:36:09,726 But who or what could have fooled the doctors? 690 00:36:09,867 --> 00:36:11,667 WADE DAVIS: There are lots of drugs that can kill. 691 00:36:11,800 --> 00:36:13,830 But to find a drug that brings you to the doorway 692 00:36:13,967 --> 00:36:16,727 of death and then brings you back into the realm of 693 00:36:16,867 --> 00:36:19,867 the living would be remarkable indeed. 694 00:36:20,000 --> 00:36:22,970 NARRATOR: In 1982, Davis made a breakthrough. 695 00:36:23,100 --> 00:36:25,200 He discovered that Haitian Voodoo Priests were 696 00:36:25,333 --> 00:36:28,233 rumoured to be using a special poison to turn 697 00:36:28,367 --> 00:36:30,497 people into zombies. 698 00:36:30,633 --> 00:36:34,003 Was this the drug he was looking for? 699 00:36:34,133 --> 00:36:36,733 He decided to visit Haiti and see for himself. 700 00:36:38,066 --> 00:36:40,566 WADE DAVIS: Through a series of negotiations 701 00:36:40,700 --> 00:36:43,330 I was able to get a local priest to make this poison 702 00:36:43,467 --> 00:36:44,667 for me. 703 00:36:44,800 --> 00:36:47,330 I collected all the raw ingredients, which ranged 704 00:36:47,467 --> 00:36:51,367 from, you know, dried toads to dried fish, dried 705 00:36:51,500 --> 00:36:55,800 snakes, plants, human remains. 706 00:36:55,934 --> 00:36:57,334 NARRATOR: Back in the US, Davis takes the poison to 707 00:36:57,467 --> 00:36:59,927 be tested in a lab. 708 00:37:00,133 --> 00:37:04,073 He finds something extraordinary. 709 00:37:04,200 --> 00:37:08,370 It contains a chemical more deadly than cyanide. 710 00:37:09,567 --> 00:37:12,267 WADE DAVIS: Tetrodotoxin acts by physically 711 00:37:12,400 --> 00:37:14,930 blocking nerves but it brings on a state of 712 00:37:15,066 --> 00:37:18,296 apparent death so profound that it has many times 713 00:37:18,433 --> 00:37:20,033 fooled physicians. 714 00:37:20,166 --> 00:37:22,026 NARRATOR: Had the Haitian priests discovered 715 00:37:22,166 --> 00:37:25,266 a drug that could replicate death? 716 00:37:25,400 --> 00:37:28,800 If so, where did they get it? 717 00:37:28,934 --> 00:37:30,234 WADE DAVIS: In Haiti there's this sort of 718 00:37:30,367 --> 00:37:34,667 famous puffer fish which inflates like a big porcupine. 719 00:37:34,800 --> 00:37:37,730 Without doubt, the Haitian sorcerers had identified 720 00:37:37,867 --> 00:37:41,127 a natural product that contained a toxin that 721 00:37:41,266 --> 00:37:43,526 could make someone appear to be dead. 722 00:37:43,667 --> 00:37:45,867 NARRAT: Could this powerful drug produce the 723 00:37:46,000 --> 00:37:49,670 symptoms Narcisse experienced? 724 00:37:49,800 --> 00:37:51,400 WADE DAVIS: He said he was paralyzed. 725 00:37:51,533 --> 00:37:53,833 He could hear himself pronounced dead. 726 00:37:53,967 --> 00:37:56,627 He could sense the sheet pulled over his eyes. 727 00:37:56,767 --> 00:38:01,367 He heard his sister begin to wail but he could not respond. 728 00:38:01,500 --> 00:38:07,070 NARRATOR: Was an innocent man turned into a zombie? 729 00:38:07,200 --> 00:38:12,870 The evidence seems undeniable, except for one thing. 730 00:38:13,000 --> 00:38:14,230 WADE DAVIS: No one knows if Narcisse was 731 00:38:14,367 --> 00:38:16,467 administered the poison. 732 00:38:16,600 --> 00:38:19,070 What we do know is that he was pronounced dead. 733 00:38:21,900 --> 00:38:23,030 WILLIAM SHATNER: All right. 734 00:38:23,166 --> 00:38:25,466 Let's, let's think about this for a second. 735 00:38:25,600 --> 00:38:31,000 We know that a certain set of brain alterations, 736 00:38:31,133 --> 00:38:34,003 diseases or injuries could cause the zombie-like 737 00:38:34,133 --> 00:38:36,633 symptoms you see in the movies, that a mysterious 738 00:38:36,767 --> 00:38:44,697 poison has the power to mimic death, but is there 739 00:38:44,834 --> 00:38:48,834 any real proof that we can return from the dead? 740 00:38:48,967 --> 00:38:50,727 Well let me tell you something. 741 00:38:50,867 --> 00:38:54,167 The living dead are living among us - 742 00:38:54,300 --> 00:38:57,870 and they're in Detroit. 743 00:39:00,100 --> 00:39:01,300 NARRATOR: At a warehouse in Detroit, something 744 00:39:01,433 --> 00:39:04,533 remarkable is happening. 745 00:39:04,667 --> 00:39:08,797 Inside these containers, a hundred and three people 746 00:39:08,934 --> 00:39:13,734 are waiting - to return from the dead. 747 00:39:13,867 --> 00:39:16,397 This is a cryonics centre. 748 00:39:16,533 --> 00:39:19,203 The people entombed here have made an incredible 749 00:39:19,333 --> 00:39:25,833 choice - to have their bodies frozen after death, 750 00:39:25,967 --> 00:39:29,297 with the hope that science will one day bring them 751 00:39:29,433 --> 00:39:31,603 back to life. 752 00:39:31,734 --> 00:39:33,534 NARRATOR: Ben Best is the president of the 753 00:39:33,667 --> 00:39:36,067 Cryonics Institute. 754 00:39:36,200 --> 00:39:40,100 He believes not only can we survive death 755 00:39:40,233 --> 00:39:43,103 but that the people here haven't actually died. 756 00:39:44,767 --> 00:39:46,567 BEN BEST: We do call them patients because we don't 757 00:39:46,700 --> 00:39:49,000 regard them as being dead in an ultimate sense. 758 00:39:49,133 --> 00:39:53,033 I think in practice be regarded as a hospital 759 00:39:53,166 --> 00:39:54,426 because I think that's what we're doing, we're 760 00:39:54,567 --> 00:39:57,927 holding these metabolically challenged patients. 761 00:39:58,066 --> 00:40:01,096 NARRATOR: But can cryogenics work? 762 00:40:02,967 --> 00:40:06,167 It's a remarkable and controversial process. 763 00:40:06,300 --> 00:40:08,870 BEN BEST: Behind me are our cryostats. 764 00:40:09,000 --> 00:40:12,230 They hold liquid nitrogen, which is at 765 00:40:12,367 --> 00:40:16,067 minus 196 degrees Celsius. 766 00:40:16,200 --> 00:40:19,600 Each of these cylindrical units holds six patients. 767 00:40:19,734 --> 00:40:22,434 NARRATOR: Best believes cryogenics has changed our 768 00:40:22,567 --> 00:40:25,197 definition of death. 769 00:40:25,333 --> 00:40:28,733 Only a few decades ago if your heart stopped - 770 00:40:28,867 --> 00:40:30,367 that was it. 771 00:40:30,500 --> 00:40:34,730 BEN BEST: But it's just not the way we see things anymore. 772 00:40:34,867 --> 00:40:37,797 NARRATOR: How do you keep someone who is dead alive? 773 00:40:40,834 --> 00:40:42,834 It begins by pumping oxygen-rich blood 774 00:40:42,967 --> 00:40:44,667 throughout the body. 775 00:40:44,800 --> 00:40:47,230 This keeps cells alive and avoids damage caused 776 00:40:47,367 --> 00:40:49,397 by rigor mortis. 777 00:40:49,533 --> 00:40:53,333 Then, the body must be cooled. 778 00:40:53,467 --> 00:40:55,497 BEN BEST: We don't just drop the patient in 779 00:40:55,633 --> 00:40:58,233 a liquid nitrogen. 780 00:40:58,367 --> 00:41:01,397 NARRATOR: The body temperature is slowly 781 00:41:01,533 --> 00:41:05,803 lowered, first by an ice bath and then in a cooling 782 00:41:05,934 --> 00:41:10,234 chamber where it will reach minus 196 degrees. 783 00:41:10,367 --> 00:41:13,467 Best believes this will preserve these bodies for 784 00:41:13,600 --> 00:41:19,700 hundreds or perhaps thousands of years. 785 00:41:19,834 --> 00:41:22,074 But why? 786 00:41:22,200 --> 00:41:23,330 BEN BEST: It seems to me, if you're preserving all 787 00:41:23,467 --> 00:41:26,667 the material there, that some future technology is 788 00:41:26,800 --> 00:41:30,400 going to be able to figure out a way to get that all 789 00:41:30,533 --> 00:41:34,073 fixed and going again. 790 00:41:34,200 --> 00:41:36,530 It's reasonable to think that nano machines can 791 00:41:36,667 --> 00:41:39,997 restore the person to their original condition. 792 00:41:40,133 --> 00:41:43,333 NARRATOR: Nano machines already exist - 793 00:41:43,467 --> 00:41:46,127 tiny machines smaller than a single cell. 794 00:41:46,266 --> 00:41:47,726 Scientists believe they could soon flow through 795 00:41:47,867 --> 00:41:51,597 our bloodstream, targeting viruses, repairing organs 796 00:41:51,734 --> 00:41:55,004 and destroying disease. 797 00:41:55,133 --> 00:41:58,233 Can cryogenics give us life after death? 798 00:41:58,367 --> 00:42:02,227 Could it even conquer death itself? 799 00:42:02,367 --> 00:42:04,167 Best believes it is our greatest hope for 800 00:42:04,300 --> 00:42:06,000 eternal living. 801 00:42:06,133 --> 00:42:08,673 BEN BEST: It doesn't seem so much more unreasonable 802 00:42:08,800 --> 00:42:13,070 than to speculate that people will someday live on Mars. 803 00:42:14,433 --> 00:42:17,503 NARRATOR: Can we die and wake up a thousand years 804 00:42:17,633 --> 00:42:20,673 later and resume our lives? 805 00:42:20,800 --> 00:42:24,870 And even if we can, would we really want to? 806 00:42:25,000 --> 00:42:28,500 Or do we return as zombies, doomed to 807 00:42:28,633 --> 00:42:30,833 a mindless existence? 808 00:42:30,967 --> 00:42:36,567 Is life after death really life at all? 809 00:42:36,700 --> 00:42:39,130 Weird or what? 810 00:42:39,266 --> 00:42:46,896 [♪] 811 00:42:51,066 --> 00:42:52,796 NARRATOR: So there we have it, 812 00:42:52,934 --> 00:42:57,074 stories of life after death from all over the world. 813 00:42:57,200 --> 00:42:59,400 In Connecticut, a man is overcome with emotion at 814 00:42:59,533 --> 00:43:02,273 a Civil War battlefield. 815 00:43:02,400 --> 00:43:07,470 Is he the reincarnation of a dead general? 816 00:43:07,600 --> 00:43:10,330 In England, scientists conduct a remarkable 817 00:43:10,467 --> 00:43:13,167 paranormal experiment. 818 00:43:13,300 --> 00:43:16,970 Did they find the first proof of the afterlife? 819 00:43:18,567 --> 00:43:21,297 And in Haiti, a man returns from the grave 820 00:43:21,433 --> 00:43:23,503 eighteen years after his death. 821 00:43:24,867 --> 00:43:27,827 Are the living dead walking amongst us? 822 00:43:27,967 --> 00:43:31,367 Do zombies exist? 823 00:43:31,500 --> 00:43:35,130 Are these stories evidence of life after death? 824 00:43:35,266 --> 00:43:39,326 Can we dismiss those who claim they are true? 825 00:43:39,467 --> 00:43:40,697 You decide. 826 00:43:40,834 --> 00:43:42,704 WILLIAM SHATNER: Join me next time for more stories 827 00:43:42,834 --> 00:43:46,234 that will undoubtedly be... 828 00:43:46,367 --> 00:43:48,867 weird or what? 829 00:43:52,166 --> 00:44:02,196 [♪] 830 00:44:05,533 --> 00:44:12,473 [♪] 831 00:44:12,600 --> 00:44:13,570 [♪] 63671

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