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アナザーストーリーズ 2025年3月3日
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00:00On that day, everyone was suspicious of the scene.
00:05Hey, get out of the way!
00:07It's dangerous, there's gas coming out!
00:10A non-discrimination terrorist attack in the middle of Tokyo.
00:14A subway car accident.
00:17The morning rush hour was late.
00:20About 6,300 people were injured, including passengers and staff.
00:2614 people lost their lives.
00:31The scene was covered with poisonous gas, sarin.
00:37It was later discovered that it was caused by a religious group, the Aum Shinrikyo.
00:44It was clearly a religious group.
00:47Rather than that, it was to destroy the Aum Shinrikyo.
00:50The people who confronted the incident began to speak over time.
00:57While the cause was unknown, the decision of the doctors saved many lives.
01:06The commander of the Self-Defense Force, who received the order and departed,
01:13was prepared to confront the Aum Shinrikyo.
01:18What changed in my mind was that this was not a game, not a training, not a casualty.
01:27Among the executioners who wrapped sarin,
01:32there were not a few so-called elites who graduated from an excellent university.
01:39The man who was in the same laboratory as one of the executioners
01:44wanted to know what was going on in his mind,
01:49so he continued to meet with them and talked to them.
01:55What I was most afraid of was that if so many people were involved in such a thing,
02:02no one could escape.
02:09Underground Sarin Incident
02:12The Truth of the Unknown Battle
02:17The Truth of the Unknown Battle
02:36On that day, people all over Japan were terrified of the incident that attacked the capital, Tokyo.
02:47The turning point of fate was March 20, 1995, past 8 a.m.
03:07Subway passengers suddenly complained of eye pain and nausea,
03:13and ambulances rushed to the scene.
03:21The first point of view was
03:27Shinichi Ishimatsu, who was an ambulance doctor at a hospital near the scene.
03:34As more and more seriously injured patients were brought in,
03:38Ishimatsu, who was 35 years old at the time, was in a state of confusion.
03:45While there was little reliable information,
03:48a young doctor faced the incident.
03:51This is another story of his decision.
03:54The Truth of the Unknown Battle
04:02On that day, he took three hours from the incident to find out that Sarin,
04:07a deadly neurotoxin used for crime, was the cause of the incident.
04:16The Seiruka International Hospital was the place where the most injured people were brought in.
04:25Shinichi Ishimatsu is now the director of this hospital.
04:31He was the leader of the ambulance team at the time.
04:36He fought on the front line, not knowing what was going on.
04:41You get on the stretcher on the ambulance and get inside the ambulance.
04:47You don't know what's going to happen.
04:50You don't know what's going to happen.
05:03On that day, when Ishimatsu went to work,
05:06there was no patient in the emergency room.
05:12It was a peaceful morning.
05:19At 8.16 a.m., the phone suddenly rang.
05:24It was an emergency call from the fire department.
05:29There was an explosion at a subway station in Kayaba-cho.
05:33I asked how many patients would be brought in by the Seiruka Hospital.
05:38Kayaba-cho was the closest hospital to us.
05:41I remember telling them,
05:43don't worry, four or five people will be fine.
05:48At a station about a kilometer from the hospital,
05:51there was a report of an explosion.
06:00About 20 minutes later, the ambulance arrived one after another.
06:06The cameras had already started rolling.
06:11In fact, to make a video for the nurse's education,
06:15they had been filming at this hospital since this morning.
06:21But suddenly,
06:23they decided to record a part of the situation right after the incident.
06:36Ishimatsu was also in the video.
06:39He was surprised to see a woman who had stopped her heart rate.
06:46At first, we only had information about the explosion.
06:49I wondered why my heart would stop.
06:52I couldn't think of many things,
06:55and I didn't have much information.
06:59Ishimatsu hurriedly began CPR.
07:08But even after 20 minutes,
07:11his heart did not recover.
07:16I couldn't take it anymore.
07:18I said, let's stop.
07:21But I couldn't stop.
07:24I was young,
07:26so if I did a little more,
07:29I thought the result would change.
07:32It was just a possibility.
07:36After nine o'clock,
07:38Ishimatsu confirmed the woman's death.
07:46The incident happened at the same time on the subway in the city.
07:52Not only the Kayaba-cho Station on the Hibiya Line,
07:57but also the Chiyoda Line and the Marunouchi Line,
08:01there were casualties in about 10 places one after another.
08:05It was a subway that passed through Kasumigaseki, the center of Japan.
08:11The nearest emergency hospital to the scene of the accident
08:16was Seiruka International Hospital.
08:22There were no more than four or five casualties,
08:26and they were brought without interruption.
08:30Ishimatsu continued to be chased by their response.
08:36He began to think that something was wrong.
08:43If it was a victim of an explosion,
08:46they would have been burned or injured,
08:49but that was not the case.
08:52On the other hand...
09:02Many of the patients complained of eye problems.
09:09Ishimatsu looked into the eyes of one patient.
09:13And then...
09:17I noticed that my pupils were getting smaller.
09:22They were so small that I could barely see.
09:28Pupils.
09:30It was a symptom of extremely small pupils,
09:34and it was common to the patients on that day.
09:39There was a pesticide called eucalyptus in the kitchen.
09:44It was similar to the symptom of drinking it.
09:49It was abnormal.
09:51But I don't know why it was like that.
09:56Ishimatsu and his team could not find an effective treatment
10:01for the unknown symptom.
10:04Meanwhile, a doctor from the Central Hospital of the Self-Defense Force was dispatched.
10:15Akira Aoki, a member of the Self-Defense Force.
10:19This symptom occurred to him.
10:25About two weeks ago,
10:29at the training ground in Fuji,
10:32a large number of injured people were being trained
10:35as members of the Self-Defense Force.
10:38One of the members had symptoms similar to those of the pesticide.
10:44We had to give him the right initial treatment.
10:48This symptom was caused by the nerve agent in the textbook.
10:57Aoki had been watching the news of the incident since the morning.
11:02He rushed to the training ground with the textbook he had used for training.
11:12There may have been an attack by a nerve agent, that is, a chemical weapon.
11:19The textbook Aoki submitted was copied and distributed to the hospital.
11:25It was also delivered to Ishimatsu.
11:29Why did they do this?
11:31There is no way that a chemical weapon like a nerve agent could be used in a subway.
11:37I felt that there was a sense of denial.
11:44According to Aoki's information,
11:47a drug called PAM is effective if it is digested by a nerve agent.
11:55PAM is a drug that can be used as a detoxifier for pesticides,
12:01but it has a strong side effect.
12:05It was necessary to use it carefully.
12:10In my experience,
12:12I learned that if you apply PAM to anything that is pesticide-poisonous,
12:16there is a possibility that it will get worse.
12:19So I decided to apply PAM to the nerve agent.
12:29At that time, in the intensive care unit,
12:32five seriously injured patients were connected to an artificial respirator
12:37and were in a situation where they had to fight for every second.
12:42Tetsu Okumura, a junior doctor at Ishimatsu in the intensive care unit,
12:48had high expectations of PAM.
12:53I felt that it was okay even if it was empty.
12:57But I felt that the disadvantage was greater
13:01because it was not a detoxifier.
13:05So I decided to use PAM as soon as possible.
13:14I had a lot of questions with Dr. Okumura.
13:17He called me many times and said,
13:19let's use PAM.
13:21I said, wait a minute.
13:24While Ishimatsu hesitated,
13:26the patient's symptoms began to appear.
13:31Dr. Tetsu Okumura, a junior doctor at Ishimatsu in the intensive care unit
13:34When I was in the intensive care unit,
13:38I was shaking and I felt like my hands were shaking.
13:44When it got worse, I couldn't breathe,
13:47and I was in a state of panic.
13:51What should I do?
13:54Ishimatsu, who was 35 years old, was overwhelmed with pressure.
14:00When I was in the intensive care unit,
14:02I was taking care of a patient.
14:04When I used PAM in the intensive care unit,
14:07my heart and breathing stopped.
14:10I thought that if I were to die,
14:13I wouldn't be able to continue being a doctor.
14:1910.30 am
14:21Ishimatsu finally made a decision.
14:27He was determined to use PAM.
14:32Okumura carefully proceeded with the treatment,
14:36making sure that there would be no side effects.
14:42When 11 o'clock passed,
14:44the patient's hands stopped shaking.
14:52I was relieved.
14:53It was effective.
14:55Okumura-sensei called me.
14:57He looked very happy.
15:00His voice was a little hoarse.
15:02He said,
15:03PAM worked.
15:04The shock stopped.
15:07At that time,
15:09the cause of the shock was finally determined.
15:15It was discovered that it was saline.
15:20Ishimatsu was shocked.
15:24I thought,
15:25who is doing this for what?
15:27There are so many patients suffering,
15:30and some have already lost their lives.
15:33I felt that I had to do everything I could
15:36for the patients in front of me.
15:42On the day of the incident,
15:44more than 600 victims were brought to Seiruka International Hospital.
15:50One person died,
15:52and the doctors and hospital staff
15:56worked hard to save many lives,
16:00including a doctor who identified the cause of the symptom.
16:05However,
16:06at that time,
16:08the cause of the incident was not yet known.
16:12Toshin-no-Chikatetsu
16:17On that day,
16:18Toshin-no-Chikatetsu, which became a site of indiscriminate terrorism by saline,
16:25The members of the Ground Self-Defense Force
16:28boarded there for a while.
16:31Their mission was to remove vehicles and homes.
16:36Toshin-no-Chikatetsu
16:39The second point of view was
16:44Takashi Fukuyama, the company commander who commanded them.
16:49He was still afraid of the executioners.
16:55At this time,
16:56Fukuyama learned of a plan that was being carried out secretly
17:00by the top brass of the Ground Self-Defense Force.
17:06The Self-Defense Force faces an invisible enemy.
17:10It's another story of determination.
17:18It became clear that the saline incident in Chikatetsu
17:22was a crime committed by the Shinri-kyo,
17:25two months after the incident occurred,
17:28in May.
17:31Toshin-no-Chikatetsu
17:33On the day of the incident,
17:35Takashi Fukuyama commanded the removal of saline.
17:42In fact, at that time,
17:44Fukuyama was secretly preparing for missions other than removal.
17:51I was the first member of the Self-Defense Force
17:58and the first commander to kill his subordinates.
18:03This was not a game.
18:05It was not a training.
18:06It was not a casual thing.
18:09It was a story that involved the lives of the members.
18:12It was a solemn feeling.
18:15Toshin-no-Chikatetsu
18:23This is a video of the ground Self-Defense Force
18:27at Ichigaya, Chuton-chi on that day.
18:30At 12.50 am,
18:32Fukuyama gave an order to the 32nd Futsu-ka Company
18:37to dispatch the disaster.
18:42And to Hibiya, Sakamachi-ichi.
18:48At this time, Fukuyama ordered his subordinates to record it on video,
18:54and a precious video was taken.
18:58Finally, the 30th Futsu-ka Company has arrived.
19:02As you know,
19:03there was a great disaster in the Tokugawa region
19:06at the request of each subway company.
19:10Our mission is to get rid of the disaster.
19:16The first mission was to get rid of the disaster in the subway
19:23But Fukuyama did not think it would end there.
19:30I thought it would not be that easy.
19:36I was wondering what to do
19:42if there was a group that would kill people.
19:47At 3 pm,
19:49Fukuyama sent his subordinates to the subway
19:53where the disaster had occurred.
19:56The cameras were following the work at Tsukiji Station.
20:01The one who was in charge of this site was
20:05Katsumi Nakamura, who was dispatched from the Faculty of Science
20:10to Fukuyama.
20:14She got off the train wearing a protective mask.
20:20That was disgusting.
20:24It was disgusting.
20:27Normally, there would be a lot of people,
20:31but there was not a single person.
20:33Shoes were falling,
20:35and newspapers were falling.
20:39At 5 pm, the decontamination began.
20:44The decontamination began.
20:51She sprayed the decontamination solution
20:54mixed with hydrogenated sodium into the water
20:57and then injected the saline solution.
21:03The detectives measured the concentration of the saline solution
21:07and proceeded with caution.
21:11When the decontamination began and the work was completed,
21:16Nakamura was asked by the station staff
21:21when he would be able to use the station.
21:26At this time, more than 9 hours had passed since the incident,
21:31and most of the saline had been decomposed,
21:34but there was no time to measure it at the time.
21:40Nakamura stopped breathing.
21:44I opened a small gap in the mask
21:47and took a deep breath.
21:49The first symptom of the disease
21:52is a shortness of breath.
21:54It is a self-diagnosis symptom,
21:56and it makes you feel dark.
21:58So whether you feel dark or not
22:00is one of the triggers.
22:03Nakamura took a deep breath and measured the time.
22:08One minute.
22:10Two minutes.
22:12And...
22:14Five minutes.
22:17The firefighters were looking at me with concern,
22:20but I didn't feel any abnormalities in my body.
22:23After I reported that I had done this,
22:27the senior member of our fire brigade told me
22:33not to shake my body.
22:36He told me not to do such dangerous things,
22:38and I got angry.
22:41It was 10 p.m. when the decomposing work was finished.
22:47Who had sprinkled saline on the subway?
22:51At this time, the enemy was still invisible.
22:59Nine months had passed since the subway saline incident.
23:04In a residential area in Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture,
23:07there was an incident in which saline was sprinkled.
23:11It was the Matsumoto Saline Incident,
23:14which killed eight people.
23:20The police had already suspected a crime committed by Oumu Shinrikyo,
23:25and were preparing to forcibly operate the Kyodan headquarters
23:30in Kamiku Ishiki Village, Yamanashi Prefecture.
23:34Oumu had an old Soviet attack helicopter,
23:39and in the worst case,
23:41it was dangerous to counterattack with scientific weapons such as saline.
23:49On March 20, the day of the subway saline incident,
23:54Aoki Akira was dispatched from the Self-Defense Force to Seiruka International Hospital.
24:02The following day, on March 21,
24:06he was summoned to the Kitafuji Training Ground,
24:09which was near Kamiku Ishiki Village,
24:12and was ordered to treat him when the police attacked him with saline.
24:18When we arrived at the training ground,
24:21we were taken to the briefing room.
24:24There were a lot of maps on the wall,
24:28as well as weather forecasts and wind directions.
24:32In the current situation,
24:34even in the worst-case scenario,
24:38we were told that the damage would be reduced by this much.
24:42However, if the direction of the wind changes,
24:47we were told that this area would be contaminated.
24:49It was like a war.
24:53It was not an ordinary incident.
24:59On the same day, the Self-Defense Force in Fukuyama
25:02was waiting in the kitchen of Ichigaya.
25:07There is a rumor that the person who did it was Oumu.
25:11But what kind of equipment they had,
25:14and what they were going to do next,
25:17we don't know at the level of comedy.
25:21According to Fukuyama,
25:23one day in the evening,
25:25a letter arrived from the headquarters.
25:30Next to the address,
25:32there was a letter that said,
25:34do not open until there is a separate name.
25:39Why didn't they tell us the contents of the mission?
25:43Fukuyama said he felt like he was alive.
25:48I don't know what happened to the police and the Self-Defense Force,
25:54but the company was disbanded.
26:00I have the right to know what they are thinking now.
26:05I don't care if I get fired.
26:10Fukuyama put out the fire and opened the envelope.
26:15Then, on the next day, March 22,
26:21there was information that the police would be forced to investigate the cult facilities.
26:28And there was a secret order for Fukuyama.
26:38When the police entered,
26:40the Self-Defense Force was dispatched there
26:45according to the reaction of the Ministry of Justice.
26:49If the Self-Defense Force is not able to respond,
26:55the Self-Defense Force will come out as the next stage.
26:59If the police who have been forced to investigate
27:04are attacked by the Ministry of Justice,
27:08the Self-Defense Force will support the police.
27:13Fukuyama, who thought that the worst could happen,
27:17selected members of the Elisguri who were suspected of sniping and fighting.
27:23As a commander, he told the members of the Self-Defense Force that he was prepared.
27:30When there was a close-knit situation,
27:33he told the members of the Self-Defense Force to stand up and be prepared.
27:44This is not a game, not a training, not a casual thing.
27:50It's about the lives of the members of the Self-Defense Force.
27:57Then, two days after the incident at Sarin subway station,
28:02on March 22,
28:05the police broke into the Kyodan headquarters in Kamiku Ishikimura.
28:11At the same time, the Kyodan facilities in Tokyo also began forced investigation.
28:18The charge was that the head of the Meguro negotiator's office was kidnapped and imprisoned.
28:29Fukuyama, who was in the middle of Ichigaya,
28:32waited for an order to open the envelope while watching over the situation.
28:38However,
28:42there was no counterattack from the police.
28:46The Kyodan officials had already escaped.
28:53In fact, the incident at Sarin subway station
28:56was an incident that was caused by Shinrikyo Ohmu,
29:01who had received information about the forced investigation in advance,
29:06and was later revealed.
29:10The order to Fukuyama was finally not issued.
29:18In the end, it was all over.
29:21The next day, there was nothing.
29:24There was no order from the next step-up disaster dispatch.
29:31But I was the only one who knew about the MIP order.
29:36I was the only one who knew about the MIP order.
29:39I wouldn't say I issued it.
29:41No one would say anything.
29:44The secret order of the Rikujo Self-Defense Force, which ended in an illusion.
29:50However, people began to deepen their suspicions about Ohmu
29:55after the forced investigation.
30:01The Sarin subway incident that shook Japan.
30:07After that, the perpetrators of the Sarin incident were arrested one after another.
30:14One of them was Toru Toyoda.
30:17He was studying physics at Tokyo University until his mid-twenties.
30:23The only people who were able to meet Toyoda were his family and some close friends.
30:33The third point of view.
30:37Kishida Ittaka, who continued to meet Toyoda for nearly 20 years.
30:43Kishida was a researcher at Tokyo University.
30:49Kishida was in the laboratory where Toyoda was working.
30:56Why did a promising student, who was always by his side,
31:01end up committing a heinous crime?
31:05Kishida abandoned the path of physics and decided to fight the question.
31:12This is another story of a student who changed the life of a researcher.
31:24That man is now a professor at Aoyama University.
31:29He studies how science should be related to society.
31:35I was originally specialized in atomic physics.
31:42Kishida Ittaka, who was originally a physicist,
31:47decided to take a completely different path through a conversation with Toyoda.
31:56Kishida Ittaka, who was originally a physicist, decided to take a completely different path through a conversation with Toyoda.
32:01What I was most afraid of was that
32:05if so many people were involved in something like this,
32:10no one would be able to escape.
32:15What did Kishida think when he met Toyoda?
32:21Kishida met Toyoda five years before the subway accident.
32:29At the time, Toyoda was in the laboratory where Kishida was working as an assistant.
32:41Kishida's first impression of Toyoda was that he was a sportsman.
32:44Toyoda's first impression of Toyoda was that he was a sportsman.
32:49Toyoda's first impression of Toyoda was that he was a sportsman.
32:52Toyoda's first impression of Toyoda was that he was a sportsman.
32:57Ken Ito, a classmate of Toyoda, studied in the same laboratory as Toyoda.
33:04He said that Toyoda, who was three years younger than him, was impressive.
33:09Ken Ito, a classmate of Toyoda, studied in the same laboratory as Toyoda.
33:13Ken Ito, a classmate of Toyoda, studied in the same laboratory as Toyoda.
33:18but Toyoda asked Toyota if he had taken the Nobel Prize.
33:21Toyoda looked at Kishida.
33:23Toyoda looked at Kishida.
33:25Toyoda studied chemistry, listening to a lecture about electronics and computer science at the University of Tokyo.
33:32It was to study the theory about solid-light relations.
33:35After graduating from university, Toyoda continued to study physics passionately.
33:42However, one day he forgot to say that he was going to take a leave of absence and disappeared.
33:51In fact, Toyoda had been going to the yoga class at AUM since he entered university, and gradually became deeply involved in it.
34:05Asahara Shoko, Asahara Shoko, Shoko, Shoko, Asahara Shoko
34:12When Asahara Shoko was elected to the general election today, he also served as an athlete who wore a mask and danced.
34:21After that, he was given the position of director as a physicist, such as involved in the development of nuclear weapons under the guidance of the church.
34:36Two years later, Toyoda disappeared from the university.
34:42He appeared as the perpetrator of the subway siren incident and surprised Kishida.
34:52The first trial he faced.
34:55Kishida read the trial documents to find out how Toyoda felt about the crime.
35:06No matter how I think about it, I can only think that what Kishida is saying is true.
35:16In other words, there is a moment when I think that Kishida is saying the truth and what he is doing is the truth.
35:26It's not like a boiled frog, but as I was sucking it up little by little, I couldn't help but fall in love with it.
35:36Kishida stood on the witness stand at the request of a lawyer who was looking for evidence.
35:43He looked at Toyoda, the defendant, and thought.
35:49Toyoda is very good at jokes and jokes.
35:54He is good at jokes and jokes because he has the ability to look at things critically.
36:00If such a critical person falls in love with the church incident, there is no way for ordinary people to escape from there.
36:12This is an extremely thin wall.
36:16In some cases, it's not surprising that Toyoda and I are on the opposite sides of the defendant and the witness stand.
36:27That's how weak the wall is.
36:31And then...
36:34Toyoda was sentenced to death at the Supreme Court 14 years after the Sarin subway incident.
36:43Kishida had been visiting Toyoda since the trial, but after he was sentenced to death, he continued to talk to Toyoda.
36:57What he saw there was Toyoda's firmness, not trying to talk about the incident at all.
37:08Of course, he regretted it.
37:10But he hated the fact that the excuse of regret was to hurt the victim, to lighten his view of the world.
37:18This is impossible, but to lighten the burden.
37:21He hated that.
37:26His classmate Ito also visited the court and continued to think about the reason why Toyoda was convicted.
37:35He said there was a possibility that a serious trial would have hit the wall in his research.
37:44I think it's the emptiness of the mind.
37:48For example, I went to Tokyo University.
37:50I studied hard in Tokyo University, went to the Faculty of Physics, and got good grades.
37:55I did all the studies that I already had.
37:58There was a preliminary study, so I played a trial.
38:02I realized that I had no choice but to play a trial.
38:06I realized that I had no choice but to play a trial.
38:08I realized that I had no choice but to play a trial.
38:13Kishida continued to communicate with Toyoda through letters and words.
38:22After a while, a thick envelope arrived from Toyoda.
38:27After a while, a thick envelope arrived from Toyoda.
38:36This is a manuscript called Ordinary Advice on Study.
38:42It's about 66 pages long.
38:45It's about 66 pages long.
38:49It was written about how to learn from young people.
39:04It's about how to learn from young people.
39:15In the case of climbing a mountain, you can see the entire route you have walked so far when you reach the top.
39:25In the case of studying, the only time you can really understand the whole content is after you have finished studying.
39:39The importance of looking at your own current position.
39:49I wonder what kind of thoughts Toyoda had when he wrote this.
39:57July 2018
40:03The execution of Asahara, the leader of the Kyoso clan, and the six Kyodan leaders took place.
40:09The execution of Asahara, the leader of the Kyoso clan, and the six Kyodan leaders took place.
40:14Ito, who felt that the execution of Toyoda was near, hurried to the meeting.
40:22I asked Toyoda if he had anything to say.
40:27I asked him twice on the day of the execution.
40:30At that time, Toyoda said,
40:33Japan is like this.
40:36Japan is like this.
40:39Japan is like this.
40:42Japan is like this.
40:44Japan is like this.
40:47Japan is like this.
40:50That's what he said.
40:53That's what Toyoda said.
41:02A few days later, Toyoda was executed.
41:08Kishida studied physics with Toyoda at university.
41:13He has been in dialogue with Toyoda in prison for nearly 20 years.
41:19He has a thought.
41:23Physics is a subject that has to do with the history of the universe from 13.8 billion years ago until the end of the universe.
41:34It has nothing to do with the existence of humans.
41:37In that sense, it is a wide, far, and free world.
41:43For example, if you want to know all the theories and the truth of the world,
41:51do you think you can understand everything in the universe with the ability of the human brain?
41:59I think there is always a biological limit.
42:02In other words, there is always a limit to human logic.
42:05So what should you do when you want to see beyond that limit?
42:09If a mystic person approaches you and tells you that there is a way to see the outside world,
42:17you may be addicted to it.
42:23Kishida continued to think about what science was.
42:27As a result, Kishida jumped out of the research of physics and began to study science communication.
42:41Instead of seeking knowledge in the dark,
42:45I think it is important to distinguish between logic and mystery.
42:52Kishida was trying to convey his feelings from the conversation with Toyoda to the students.
43:01I say that I am addicted to the dark side of physics.
43:06I don't need any special knowledge about science.
43:10In other words, I want to be able to make a correct judgment.
43:15If you believe in knowledge itself, it is actually not science, but religion.
43:21However, in that sense, we have to recognize that there is a risk of being trapped in such a world.
43:30There is a risk of being trapped in such a world.
43:34There is a risk of being trapped in such a world.
43:38There is a risk of being trapped in such a world.
43:45What was the subway siren incident?
43:50That question is still being asked to us.
44:16The era of 5-minute series, the choice of heroes.
44:21We are approaching the local nobility who have obtained power with horses and iron.
44:26From 9 o'clock tonight on BS.
44:32The goddess of falsehood who sang the song of medical revolution.
44:37Can scientists stop the outburst?
44:40Tonight at 10.45.
44:42Science seduces.

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