JiříJ.DyndaJiříJ., Rusalki: Anthropology of Time, Death, and Sexuality in Slavic Folklore<br>Rusalky: antropologie času, smrti a sexuality ve slovanském folkloru</br>, „Studia mythologica Slavica”, 20 (0), 2017, s. 87, DOI: 10.3986/sms.v20i0.6662, ISSN1581-128X [dostęp 2024-01-21].
PeterP.MetcalfPeterP., RichardR.HuntingtonRichardR., Celebrations of Death: The Anthropology of Mortuary Ritual, wyd. Cambridge Press, Nowy Jork 1991, JSTOR: 2778838. Brak numerów stron w książce
RalphR.MerkleRalphR., Information-Theoretic Death [online], merkle.com [dostęp 2016-06-22], Cytat: A person is dead according to the information-theoretic criterion if the structures that encode memory and personality have been so disrupted that it is no longer possible in principle to recover them. If inference of the state of memory and personality are feasible in principle, and therefore restoration to an appropriate functional state is likewise feasible in principle, then the person is not dead.(ang.).
JiříJ.DyndaJiříJ., Rusalki: Anthropology of Time, Death, and Sexuality in Slavic Folklore<br>Rusalky: antropologie času, smrti a sexuality ve slovanském folkloru</br>, „Studia mythologica Slavica”, 20 (0), 2017, s. 87, DOI: 10.3986/sms.v20i0.6662, ISSN1581-128X [dostęp 2024-01-21].
Robin Marantz Henig. Kiedy życie należy do żyjących?. „Świat Nauki”. 10 (230), s. 40–44, październik 2010. ISSN0867-6380.