In contemplating the possibility of discerning the specific day and month of an individual's demise without knowing the year, we must first confront the constraints of our universe. Such a capability would necessitate an unprecedented violation of temporal mechanics, a bending, even breaking, of the space-time continuum as we understand it.
Our current scientific framework, rooted in Einstein's theory of relativity, assures us that time is a persistent continuum, one that flows inexorably forward. To unravel the mystery of death’s timing without breaching this fundamental flow, we would perhaps need to invoke a higher-dimensional perspective where all moments in time coexist uniquely. This might require a form of temporal clairvoyance that transcends our linear perception of time—a concept not only firmly beyond current scientific validation but also defiant of causal determinism.
The scientific method demands falsifiability, real and testable predictions. Unfortunately, the premise as stated would struggle under such scrutiny. Discovering a means to reliably predict the date of someone's death would challenge core principles of entropy and the inherent uncertainty in quantum mechanics, principles that underpin the probabilistic nature of our universe. This notion not just defies the logical structure of scientific inquiry, it skirts dangerously close to deterministic fatalism.
If we break these temporal and quantum laws to allow this knowledge, we find ourselves in territories less of discovery and more of the speculative—a mirage in the grand desert of scientific progress. In sum, while this thought experiment stretches our imagination, it remains a conjecture without substance in the evidence-based world we strive to understand and explain.