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Comments on What's the least traumatic way to integrate resurrected historical humans into modern society?

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What's the least traumatic way to integrate resurrected historical humans into modern society? Question

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In a fictional alternate version of present-day Earth, scientists have found a way to resurrect people from the past en masse. The resurrected will have bodies that resemble their original ones but reset to a viable state (not about to die from whatever killed them, and they won't carry communicable diseases from the past into the present). They will have their memories except for the last few weeks of their original lives, so they won't remember dying.

Society's leaders want to bring back as many past people as will fit, probably several billion.[1] Ultimately, they could bring back everyone from the stone age to people who died yesterday. The project is planned as a one-time event -- bring everyone back once, not make everyone effectively immortal.

How should the leaders of this project ease all those people's integration into modern society?

This is an adaptation of a question that was asked and closed on Worldbuilding SE.


  1. Does the reason they want to bring people back to life matter for this question? ↩︎

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5 comment threads

Magic World? (3 comments)
How much control is there about "who" comes back? (1 comment)
Batches (2 comments)
Are recent deaths excluded? (2 comments)
A broader version of this question was closed on SE, though I thought it was answerable and I answere... (1 comment)
Magic World?
Antares‭ wrote about 1 month ago

Maybe you should consider to frame this scenario in a magical setting. Because resurrecting someone from the stone ages is highly unlikely due to the condition the remains are. Mostly bone. If lucky some teeth. This would make DNA extraction possible. Later you have mummies, having no inner organs like the brain. Only the recently deceased are "mostly" intact. Now the question is: Is DNA sufficient to restore memories that are considered to be stored in the brain? I think it is not possible. So the "ancient" resurrected would be in a totally "pristine" body. Like a baby in an adult body. Therefore they could just learn everything from the beginning, but are also not that prepared to be integrated into an existing society. They need treatment, nursery, schools etc. The more recently deceased on the other hand would not have that much of a memory loss maybe and can just "resume" their known life. -- Can you provide clarification about memory restoration, please?

Olin Lathrop‭ wrote about 1 month ago

The way I read it, this resurrection technology can bring anyone back from any time, having nothing to do with the physical state of any remains.

Antares‭ wrote about 1 month ago

Olin Lathrop‭ This would be another indicator for some magical explanation or "frame", although the text states "scientists".