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According to the tenets of Vodun (voodoo), a dead person can be revived by a houngan or mambo . After resurrection, it has no will of its own, but remains under the control of the person who performed the ritual. Such resurrected dead are "zombies".
A more skeptical take is that a zombie is a living person who has never died, but is under the influence of powerful drugs. Wade Davis , an American botanist, was the main person to present a pharmacological case for zombies in two books - The Serpent and the Rainbow (1985) and Passage of Darkness: The Ethnobiology of the Haitian Zombie (1988). Davis travelled to Haiti in 1982 and as a result of his investigations claimed that zombies could be made by the ingestion of two special powders. The first, coupe poudre , induced a 'death-like' state, the key ingredient of which was the pufferfish ( Tetraodontiformes ) toxin tetrodotoxin (TTX). The second powder of dissociative hallucinogens held the person in a will-less zombie state. There was considerable skepticism to Davis's claims; he was widely accused of fraud and there has been no final statement as to the veracity of his findings.
Others claim zombies are sufferers of various psychiatric disorders such as catatonic schizophrenia whose symptoms are misinterpreted as a return from the dead.
Zombies are regularly encountered in horror - and fantasy -themed fiction , films , video games and role-playing games . They are typically depicted as mindless, shambling, decaying corpses with a hunger for human flesh, most famously in Night of the Living Dead . However, some films (such as 28 Days Later) feature living but otherwise zombie-like humans, usually as the result of disease .
In fiction zombies can generally be disabled by either dismemberment or the destruction of the brain. In a few cases the entire body of the zombie must be destroyed as individual limbs or even fingers continue to move after being severed from the body.
The Resident Evil series of video games makes particular use of zombies.
Other causes of zombies in fiction include radiation acting on the brains of the dead, evil magic or Vodun , extraterrestrials, the use of drugs or the substitution of the brain for some sinister artifact.
While zombies do not usually appear in lawbooks and few laws exist to regulate them, in some places, such as Haiti , they are considered a public nuisance. The fact that laws for the treatment of Zombies insists that in the past some experience with Zombies has made the populus wary of the beasts.
" Philosophical zombie " is a technical term to describe a hypothetical person who only appears to think and feel (technically, who doesn't have qualia ), as opposed to a "real" person who actually does think and feel. A philosohical zombie cannot be told apart from a real person in any way.
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