• Chloë (she/her)
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    125 months ago

    I don’t know, if such a thing existed it would imply that free will doesn’t exist, if you knew you would die in 10 hours of dehydration, what happens if you drank a bunch of water regularly?

    In that scenario you can’t die of dehydration but you’re going to die of dehydration forcibly. So what’s going to happen?

    I can’t process if I would do it or not because I don’t know what it would imply!

    • @yngmnwntr@lemmy.ml
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      105 months ago

      You can dehydrate yourself by drinking too much water. You flush the salts out of your system and get water poisoning and die of dehydration anyway.

        • @Dasus@lemmy.world
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          25 months ago

          It is dehydration, just a different type.

          Losing mainly fluid is known as hypertonic dehydration – or hypernatremia. Losing mainly sodium is known as hypotonic dehydration – or hyponatremia

      • Chloë (she/her)
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        15 months ago

        Yeah but my point was not drinking a huge amount, just enough not to have too much water or too little, like a glass of water every hour or something.

    • @Dasus@lemmy.world
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      25 months ago

      In that scenario you can’t die of dehydration but you’re going to die of dehydration forcibly. So what’s going to happen?

      Youre going to die of dehydration, because you we’re simply unaware that drinking too much flushes the sodium out of your body which is what makes you able to retain enough water to function.

      Ironically people in hot environments and drinking a ton of water can end up severely dehydrated (mainly if they don’t eat anything, as food has a sodium and other electrolytes).

      Now if you drank mineral water (or sports drinks but they’re rather sugary nowadays) or just added a tiny bit of salt to the water you drink, then it would break the prophecy.

      Similarly ironic is that a lot of people who aren’t used to cold environments and get lost in the woods or something usually end up suffering heat stroke, as they’ve only a massively thick puffy jacket and walking still generates heat, which the jacket traps and your body can’t cool down and overheats. (Layers and breathing materials underneath the top layers is good, as then you can open or remove a layer as needed to regulate your body temp.)

      For the sake of the topic of the thread, I’d like to know what happens if I’m told I die in 50 years from a heart attack while running a marathon, and after hearing that I jump out of a window, try to blow my brains out or shove a block of C4 up my bowels and blow myself up? I should survive, yes? And in condition to (attempt to) run a marathon?

      Because if it’s not locked like that and can be changed then it’s more of a guess than accurate foreknowledge.