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== | {{Infobox phenomenon | ||
| name = Death Date Revelation | |||
| date = 23 years ago | |||
| discoverer = 李唯 / Lǐ Wéi | |||
| institution = [undisclosed biotech company], China | |||
| status = Global adoption | |||
| key_term_1 = Death date | |||
| key_term_2 = Dat la · Jou reto · 기일 · La fecha | |||
}} | |||
'''The death date''' (also referred to by its many cultural names; see regional articles) is the day and month on which a person will die, exclusive of the year of death. Knowledge of this date became globally available following the publication of a scientific paper by Chinese researcher 李唯 / Lǐ Wéi approximately 23 years ago, describing a reproducible biological method for its determination. [[Li Wei paper|The paper]] did not disclose the underlying mechanism in full, and no subsequent study has independently derived it. | |||
== Discovery and dissemination == | |||
The finding was published by 李唯 / Lǐ Wéi, a researcher working within a Chinese biotech company whose identity has not been officially disclosed. The paper described a method by which the death date — the calendar day and month of an individual's death, not the year — could be determined from biological data available at or before birth. Lǐ Wéi has given no interviews and made no public statements beyond the paper itself. | |||
Following publication, the Chinese government established a centralised server through which registered medical practitioners can access the death date of any newborn, calculated from the precise moment of first breath. This system has since been adopted, in varying institutional forms, by the majority of national governments. | |||
== Parental disclosure == | |||
In all participating countries, parental consent frameworks govern whether a newborn's death date is disclosed to the family. Parents may opt out of receiving this information at the time of birth. Opt-out rates vary significantly by country, region, religious affiliation, and cultural context. | |||
The death date, once generated, is retained in the relevant national registry regardless of whether it is disclosed to the family. | |||
== Cultural responses == | |||
The availability of the death date has produced significant and varied cultural responses across the world. Almost all societies have developed rituals, ceremonies, and social customs oriented around the annual recurrence of an individual's death date, broadly analogous in social function to the observance of birth dates, though differing substantially in theological interpretation, emotional register, and community practice. | |||
For country- and culture-specific ritual traditions, see: | |||
* [[Haiti ritual tradition]] | |||
* ''[further entries to be linked]'' | |||
== See also == | |||
* [[Li Wei paper]] | |||
* [[Death date opt-out rates by country]] | |||
* [[List of death date ritual traditions]] | |||
[[ South Korean ritual tradition ]] | [[ South Korean ritual tradition ]] | ||
Revision as of 15:54, 16 May 2026
| Global phenomenon | |
|---|---|
| Name | Death Date Revelation |
| Date | 23 years ago |
| Discoverer | 李唯 / Lǐ Wéi |
| Institution | [undisclosed biotech company], China |
| Status | Global adoption |
| Key terms | Death date · Dat la · Jou reto · 기일 · La fecha |
The death date (also referred to by its many cultural names; see regional articles) is the day and month on which a person will die, exclusive of the year of death. Knowledge of this date became globally available following the publication of a scientific paper by Chinese researcher 李唯 / Lǐ Wéi approximately 23 years ago, describing a reproducible biological method for its determination. The paper did not disclose the underlying mechanism in full, and no subsequent study has independently derived it.
Discovery and dissemination
The finding was published by 李唯 / Lǐ Wéi, a researcher working within a Chinese biotech company whose identity has not been officially disclosed. The paper described a method by which the death date — the calendar day and month of an individual's death, not the year — could be determined from biological data available at or before birth. Lǐ Wéi has given no interviews and made no public statements beyond the paper itself.
Following publication, the Chinese government established a centralised server through which registered medical practitioners can access the death date of any newborn, calculated from the precise moment of first breath. This system has since been adopted, in varying institutional forms, by the majority of national governments.
Parental disclosure
In all participating countries, parental consent frameworks govern whether a newborn's death date is disclosed to the family. Parents may opt out of receiving this information at the time of birth. Opt-out rates vary significantly by country, region, religious affiliation, and cultural context.
The death date, once generated, is retained in the relevant national registry regardless of whether it is disclosed to the family.
Cultural responses
The availability of the death date has produced significant and varied cultural responses across the world. Almost all societies have developed rituals, ceremonies, and social customs oriented around the annual recurrence of an individual's death date, broadly analogous in social function to the observance of birth dates, though differing substantially in theological interpretation, emotional register, and community practice.
For country- and culture-specific ritual traditions, see:
- Haiti ritual tradition
- [further entries to be linked]