Feynman Explains What Physics Says About Dying
Your body is made of atoms that were here long before you, and they don’t vanish when you’re gone. They scatter, recombine, and continue the universe’s story in new forms. And while “energy” is real enough to be conserved with uncanny precision, Feynman reminds us it’s also a strangely abstract bookkeeping idea—powerful, but not a comforting fairy tale. In this video, we follow Feynman’s physics-first way of looking at dying: Atoms don’t disappear — matter rearranges. Energy doesn’t “die” — it changes form and moves through the world. What does end is the pattern — the organized processes that keep a living system running (and why entropy makes that order costly to maintain). This isn’t a promise of immortality. It’s something sharper—and maybe more honest: you are a temporary, astonishing arrangement of ancient parts… and physics can describe exactly how those parts continue when the arrangement stops. If you want more science-rooted stories like this, subscribe—and tell me in the comments: does this view feel comforting… or unsettling?
Vol. I, Ch. 1: “Atoms in Motion” (Caltech). Richard Feynman, The Feynman Lectures on Physics,
Vol. I, Ch. 4: “Conservation of Energy” (Caltech). Caltech: The Feynman Lectures on Physics (table of contents / chapter index).
How this was made
Altered or synthetic content
Sound or visuals were significantly edited or digitally generated.