Episode 22 imagines a world where humans suddenly lose their fear of death — not through immortality or technology, but through a profound psychological shift. People still understand that death ends life, yet the emotional terror attached to it disappears completely. Death becomes a fact rather than a threat. At first, the change feels like relief. Anxiety drops, panic fades, and terminal patients face the end calmly. Fear-based systems begin to weaken. Religions built around punishment and salvation lose urgency, transforming faith into a philosophical search for meaning rather than a response to fear. Society reorganizes itself. People leave unfulfilling jobs and unhealthy relationships without hesitation. Love becomes lighter but more honest, no longer driven by fear of loss. Economic behavior shifts as wealth accumulation and fear-based industries lose relevance. Careers are chosen for meaning rather than security. As fear of death fades, ambition changes. The desire for legacy, fame, and monument-building weakens, slowing large-scale progress and historical momentum. War becomes nearly impossible, as propaganda and glory lose their power when death no longer frightens. Violence declines, not through morality, but through emotional irrelevance. Over generations, humanity survives in a calmer, slower world — less cruel, less frantic, but also less driven. The episode concludes by asking a haunting question: if fear of death has always given life urgency and purpose, what happens when that fear disappears? Would humanity live more freely — or slowly forget why life mattered at all?