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  • Hey Vsauce, Michael here. Since this video began

  • more than a million of your cells have

  • died its natural don't worry

  • but you are literally covered with death

  • dead stuff. Fingernails, your hair

  • the outermost layer of your skin all made out of dead things

  • and you are losing this dead stuff constantly every week

  • about five and a half grams of dead skin sheds off of your body

  • Ohio State University found that eighty percent

  • of that material you see indoors beautifully dancing across sunbeams

  • is dead human skin

  • but for the most part you are made out of

  • living stuff. You are a biological

  • furnace, burning food energy to move and breath and

  • think and stay warm. As you can see on Grand illusions the heat from your own

  • hand while you sit still

  • is enough to run a Stirling engine

  • Your cells are busy and active and dividing

  • millions and millions of times every day in fact because of that you shouldn't even

  • really be called a person

  • you should be called a persOn

  • and on and on and on and on and on and on and on but here's the really

  • mind-blowing

  • thing about the mind sustaining process of cell division

  • the replication of instructions DNA for each daughter cell

  • requires copying an exact sequence

  • of three billion nucleotides. That's a lot

  • luckily our bodies are perfect-ly happy to do it but they're not perfect

  • every time a single cell in your body divides the enzymes that synthesize

  • your DNA

  • make 120 thousand mistakes

  • some of these mistakes

  • wind up being beneficial some of these mistakes wind up being harmful, and

  • some are just neutral,

  • they don't make a difference, but if a mistake,

  • a mutation in a cell's DNA, causes the cell to behave abnormal

  • and stimulate its own growth, ignore signals to stop,

  • stimulate the body to give it its own blood supply, potentially

  • multiply forever, and unstick from where it began to spread throughout the body,

  • it becomes a special type of cell.

  • We have found 200 diseases with various origins and nature's that

  • fit this description despite being different, they often go by the same name:

  • cancer. DNA mutations occur randomly in your body,

  • but they can also be inherited or caused by the environment

  • for example exposure to ultraviolet radiation from the Sun

  • can cause all kinds of damage including genetic damage

  • if little or no skin protection is used the accumulation of all these types of damage

  • can be quite dramatic this man drove a truck

  • for years exposing one side of his face to more sunlight

  • than the other and for 15 years this woman worked in a room

  • that had the same window. A window to her left

  • environmental damage to the body

  • whether cancer-causing or not is serious business

  • in fact giraffes have black tongs because the dark pigmentation protects

  • their tongues

  • from solar radiation while there hanging out all day

  • go back far enough beyond where sunshine hits and their tongues are pink

  • given the sheer number of environmental dangers to our DNA

  • and the sheer number of mistakes our own bodies make with our DNA every day

  • it is incredible that we all aren't developing cancers constantly

  • and immediately after being born one of the things we have to think

  • is our body's own version of autocorrect

  • biological mechanisms like proofreading and mismatch repair

  • catch and correct or stop more than 99 percent of errors

  • we grow old and pass away for many

  • many reasons but when it comes to cancers our bodies

  • own internal autocorrect is like the autocorrect

  • on your phone it's pretty good but it's not perfect. Cancers

  • still develop, especially after the accumulation of mistakes and mutations

  • over time. I'm incredibly grateful to cancer research UK

  • they helped me a lot with this episode and thanks to work by groups like them

  • we are at an accelerating rate finding ways to prevent and control cancer

  • beyond what our bodies can do alone I mean after all natural selection can

  • only see so much

  • because of the selection shadow

  • we aren't all the same and if your genetic variations make you and your children

  • more successful at reproducing

  • well what do you know your characteristics become more common

  • but this phenomenon has a weak influence

  • here. Later in life after your role in reproduction and raising offspring to

  • independence

  • has passed. We have found evidence of the selection shadow

  • at work with mice and bats

  • raised under perfect conditions with vetinary medicine and safe lives

  • mice only live about two to three years

  • whereas bats with similar sizes and metabolisms can live for

  • thirty years or more. The significant difference here is that

  • unlike mice, bats have had in the wild for millions of years

  • fewer predators a smaller chance of dying early

  • due to extrinsic mortality. They've on average had more days for natural selection

  • to influence. This could be a very good explanation for why diseases that affect

  • our complex multi cellular selves

  • late in life are still with us

  • but wait, why are humans living so long today?

  • I mean in the past but genetically recently weren't

  • teenagers considered middle aged?

  • not really. Well it's true that in the past life expectancies were quite

  • a bit lower, a life expectancy is merely an

  • average number of years a person was expected to live as soon as they were born

  • and in the past infant mortality was so high

  • the average was brought down significantly it's true that in the

  • early 1600's here

  • in England life expectancy was only thirty-five years

  • but if you made the age of 21 well

  • you could easily expect to live well into your 60's

  • lifespans that go beyond the age of reproduction have

  • always made sense for humans because we are intelligent

  • and social useful to one another and our children

  • take a lot of time and guidance to gain independence

  • but that just moves the selection shadow ahead it's still there

  • suggesting that in the end our bodies might just be

  • tools are sex cells used to reproduce

  • and grow up to do it again. Nature and time haven't helped our bodies battle

  • late acting diseases because a chicken

  • is just an eggs way of making another egg

  • but maybe not for long our minds and modern science technology engineering

  • and mathematics are making progress

  • against late acting diseases and when it comes to cancers

  • Cancer Research UK points out that 40 years ago

  • only one in four people lived ten years or longer

  • after being diagnosed. Today that number is 2 in 4

  • and they believe that in only twenty years that statistic could be as high as 3 in 4

  • refrigeration and sanitation are tackling stomach cancers caused by infection

  • vaccines are preventing cervical cancer anti-smoking campaigns and reductions

  • of obesity and diabetes and the elimination

  • of cancer-causing chemicals from our everyday lives are giving us an edge

  • we learn more every single day. The process

  • is slow but steady because cancer is not just

  • one thing its unlikely there will ever be a single cure for cancer because

  • there are two hundred different types

  • of cancers. But there will be cures and better methods of prevention

  • and detection. Advances are coming from all over

  • for example what we have learned about controlling proton beams because at the

  • Large Hadron Collider

  • has reduced the need for special shields during the removal of eye tuners

  • the statistical surprise that cancers aren't more common in our bodies

  • is a sign that we're involved in a relay race

  • natural selection already did some of the work now it's our turn

  • when we talk about cancer we often use the language of war

  • its a battle it's a fight but the challenge

  • isn't so much a war with winners and losers and surrender

  • as it is a mutiny. We can't help the fact that we are all at sea

  • natural selection at least gave us boats

  • but now we are making where those boats go

  • our decision.

  • and as always, thanks for watching

Hey Vsauce, Michael here. Since this video began

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