Last experience
Warning: This post is on a dark topic. Not for everyone. Don't read it, weak hearted people.
Antoine Lavoisier is one of the most famous scientists. He laid the foundation of modern chemistry. From the role of oxygen to the matriculation system, from the law of mass conservation to the discovery of many elements, to the chemistry of respiration and water, they have played a very important role in the history of science. He used to spend his free time doing science for his hobby. He could do so because he was one of the richest men in France. The richest people were because they had the responsibility to collect taxes in the country. Because of this he was obsessed with numbers and measurements. The result of this obsession was the discovery of science, which made France the center of measurement, and the cause of the end of his own life. Being rich and being part of the government was his crime. After the French Revolution, he was executed and beheaded during the Revolutionary regime. He was accused of adulterating tobacco.
Twenty-eight people were beheaded in thirty-five minutes on the day Laos was executed. Another thought came to Laoise's mind at that moment. Another measurement, another experiment. He had heard that when a head is cut off, life does not end immediately but takes some time. Impressions are gained in a fluid, global, diffused way. He told someone that when my head became detached, I would keep my eyes closed for as long as possible. Count how long and how often I manage to do this. This was the last experience of Laotian life.
Some say he blinked eleven times, some fifteen times, some say he was not noticed because his head fell off the audience. But we know that his consciousness was not extinguished as soon as he was beheaded.
Gluten was considered the most civilized form of execution. The whole story in one fell swoop rather than being burned, crucified. Rich people used to bribe their executioners to sharpen their blades. In a year of terror after the French Revolution, thousands of people were beheaded, including the King and Queen of France. This method remained in use until 1977, when the last sentence in France was used to kill a 22-year-old woman by means of gluten.
Dr. Beau performed an experiment on it in 1905 on the death sentence of Henry Langwell. It may not be appropriate to write the full details, from the link below, to one of the sentences, "I called him, his eyes met mine and kept meeting me." I was looking into the eyes of a living person. It was not an unconscious move. " It takes thirty seconds for the head to be extinguished.
So as far as we know today, how were the last thirty seconds of Laos?
After feeling the cold metal on the neck, the head moved towards the ground. It went down two feet and collided. The nose is full of blood that cannot be cleaned. The earth revolves and is now stationary. Nothing else makes sense. I don't know about the blood coming out of the ears. Now waiting Time is running out. It looks like a sack that encloses with a drawstring. The brain first closes its outer cortex. Then the sensory and motor cortex. Last but not least, the cortex of memories. During this time, his life seems to pass before his eyes again. This is not a state of falling asleep. It's a fast-paced journey from your whole life, to the last memory and then everything is off.
The Laotians also left this world as if billions had gone before them, have gone and will continue to go. A year and a half later, the French government wrote a short letter to his widow, apologizing for the wrongdoing. According to Lagrange, "it took a moment to cut off this head, but such a head could not be produced for a hundred years." Laos is one of the 72 great names on the Eiffel Tower today.

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