There are many corpses in the ocean, but nobody has any corpse-related qualms about swimming in the ocean. But most people would not swim in a pool with a corpse in it.
- THIS IS SUCH A GOOD QUESTION. Using real life examples, the ocean definitely has thousands/millions? or human corpses, and maybe some really big, Ancient lakes/Rivers, have ten-hundreds of dead bodies (maybe thousands? if they’re really old) not that I’ve really thought about corpses in bodies of water before, but I feel comfortable after the fact, and would swim in oceans and lakes again, knowing there corpses. - Any body of water where I can see, smell or feel, or have seen smelt or felt a corpse, meaning any corpse I can distinguish as a corpse, to the horizon would be a body of water I could not swim in. - But in this circumstance, it’s a pool, and I know of the corpse in the pool. The pool would be shallow, and the corpse, on the other end of a pool. I could probably swim in a pool, quite uncomfortably, as long as I couldn’t see it when looking around all sides. It would also have to be really shallow, so I could stand up, assuming the corpse drifts over for a quick leaving protocal. 
- How dead is the body? 
- Is there incentive to swim in a smaller pool? Otherwise far enough not to smell it. 
- Lake Erie. I’ve swam in it plenty of times, and I’m sure there are corpses in there. - Kinda Eerie ngl 
 
- Large enough I am not faced with the reality of a corpse. - I don’t see any corpses when I’m at the beach. I know they’re out there in theory, but they’re a distant enough concept I don’t worry. - Great Lake sized lake with body on other side? Same. - A small lake/pond where I can see the area in which the corpse is floating? Perhaps even smell it? Or speak with a person who saw it? Hard pass. - Olympic sized pool? I can see the corpse. Hard pass. - What if you put on a blindfold before entering the pool area? - I would not get into a pool blindfolded. There might be corpses in there. 
 
 
- at least large enough for the corpse and me 
- Fresh or rotting? 
- You’ve already swam in a pool with a corpse (rodent, bird, insect, etc.) that’s what the filters are for. - Maybe the real question is, “How large would a corpse have to be to stop you from swimming in the pool?” - It’s likely a ratio of water area to corpse volume. With a multiplier on presence (visibility, smell, people talking about it, and hell, if the corpse is making noise that I hear, there’s no chance I’m getting in that water) - I’m sure there’s some external influence, too. My corpse tolerance would be a lot different if it’s extremely hot outside than if it’s chilly. If I’m at risk of heat stroke, I’d maybe even swim with a corpse making audible noise. If I’m physically on fire, I definitely would. - But then if it’s chilly the corpses don’t get nasty nearly so quickly… 
 
 
- This could be a What if? Horror Edition for xkcd. 
- Small bird or larger 
 
- I would think a human corpse will be more harmful to other humans, since the bacteria are already adapted to our species. 
- If I have to swim with a corpse I think I’d rather something large than a bird. No chance of it floating up to me by surprise. 
 
- Depends a lot on how long the corpse had been there, and what state it’s in. My local 25 m x 6 Lane pool, I’d get in it with someone who just had a heart attack. Fresh corpse but shot, I’d have to play it by ear. Some post-apocalyptic scenario where the filtration system and everything has been offline for months and the whole place has turned into John Doe broth… probably pass…I mean there’d have to be a pretty good reason and a way to rinse off afterwards. 
- Jacuzzi size. - I see you like to party with Bernie. 
 
- For fun? Uhh, kilometers. It needs to be far enough away to become abstract. And I do find the ocean slightly gross and pest-ridden already. - For a good reason, like someone is paying me? A bathtub if fresh, typical public pool size if not, and I’m showering right after. 
- Why on earth would I do that? - For a huge pot of money, to escape a rabid musk ox? 











