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You weigh the same the instant after death as the instant before. Not a fraction of an ounce leaves the room. So if something changed — and something obviously did — where exactly did it go? In this video, we explore what physics actually says about consciousness, identity, and death — drawing from Feynman's lectures on conservation laws, thermodynamics, atomic theory, and the nature of information. What you find isn't comforting in the way you'd expect. It's something stranger. 📚 SOURCES: Richard Feynman, The Feynman Lectures on Physics, Vol. I, Chapters 3–4 ("The Relation of Physics to Other Sciences," "Conservation of Energy"), 1963 Richard Feynman, The Character of Physical Law, Chapter 3 ("The Great Conservation Principles"), 1965 Richard Feynman, The Meaning of It All: Thoughts of a Citizen-Scientist, 1998 Richard Feynman, "The Value of Science" (essay), 1955 Erwin Schrödinger, What Is Life?, Chapter 6 ("Order, Disorder, and Entropy"), 1944 🕐 TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 — The scale doesn't lie — nothing leaves the room 2:48 — Your atoms were borrowed from a dead star 5:35 — Why conservation of energy doesn't save you 8:20 — The candle flame problem: patterns vs. stuff 11:42 — Information, entropy, and the quantum shredder 15:10 — You were the verb, not the noun 🎙️ CREDITS: Script & Research: AI-generated, inspired by the works of Richard P. Feynman Voice: AI-synthesized narration Visuals: AI-generated imagery If physics says you're a pattern and not a substance — what does your one-sentence answer to the soul question look like? ⚠️ WARNING: [This video is AI-generated (synthetic voice and visuals). It is an original, fictional lecture inspired by Richard Feynman's teaching style and public ideas, and is not an authentic recording, endorsement, or statement by Richard Feynman or his estate. Any resemblance is for educational/creative purposes]