kzt wrote:They have literally thousands of other planets worth of alien life forms to work with that they have played with over the last several thousand years. And DNA is composed of large proteins, it’s trivial to fabricate for someone who builds molecular or atomic scale electronics.
ldwechsler wrote:
And the DNA may be totally foreign to those of humans and other live forms that developed on Earth.
JohnRoth wrote:A couple of points. First, the trivial one: DNA is made of a long string of four kinds of bases, there are no proteins involved. And it's trivial to build strings of DNA today - you can order custom stretches of DNA of up to a dozen or so base-pairs right off the internet. It may even be more today. Just keep your checkbook handy.
Second, and more important, from the viewpoint of someone who knows how genetics works, the prohibition against non-human DNA is somewhere between absurd, silly and rolling-on-the-floor hilarious.
The DNA in a cell is a freaking program for building all the different cell types in a body. Nothing more and nothing less. This program has a huge number of interactions among the sub-programs for different cell types - it's not nice and neat like a well-designed and maintainable computer program. The idea that it's even possible to transfer the DNA required for a significant new structure - like, say, a prehensile tail or wings or the stuff a gecko uses to stick to a wall or ceiling - and expect it to work simply shows a breath-taking lack of understanding of how the entire system works.
The prohibition is completely irrelevant, because it won't work.
That doesn't mean that those things can't be done - only that they'd have to be done by good old design and trying prototypes until it works properly. It's not going to be done by finding an interesting looking piece of DNA and transferring it into a human genome.
cthia wrote:Again, I commend you on your knowledge of genetics. I concur, but I get my info from a group of doctors and a neurosurgeon.
Something I've avoided saying before, but is now unavoidable. The very first thing you need to do in determining the credibility of an information source is this: how far out of their area of expertise are they talking.
Now, I wouldn't dream of talking about neurosurgery. It's not a subject I've studied, it's not a subject I'm even interested in studying. Everything I've seen in many years of browsing is very low quality.
However, genetics is only loosely related to neurosurgery. I would not expect someone who is a neurosurgeon to know enough about genetics to have an informed opinion as compared to people who actually work in the field. I'd want to see that person's credentials
as a geneticist.This is a huge problem: "experts" who talk confidently about subjects that are outside of their field of expertise. Here's a story I heard some time ago from a member of an inter-disciplinary team assembled to study something or other. This person said that the other members of the team were woefully undereducated about his specialty. Some of them had a knowledge base acquired in an undergraduate survey course 20 years previously. And, of course, that applied transitively - he was just as badly out of touch with what the other specialties were about. They had to bring each other up to a level where they could actually talk to each other without humongous communication gaps and long-outdated assumptions.
cthia wrote:One nitpick. Prohibition is not irrelevant. Because of the extreme end of won't work. There are mad scientists who are actually mad, as in insane, who will go to any length to prove themselves correct (Detweilers). And there are lots of sewers to step in. The trouble with tribbles is the shit stepped into during the Final Wars.
"You simply cannot have any morally bankrupt Johnny Frankensteins playing inside genetics any more than you can have any kid or unqualified adult playing inside a nuclear power plant." —One of my friends. Neurosurgeon.
To be blunt, he doesn't know what he's talking about. He may have his moral compass pointing in more or less the right direction, but the situations are not, in any sense of the term, comparable. Nuclear power stations exist. Frankenstein is horror fiction. Using that as an example is using an emotionally loaded term to shut down rational discourse.
In counterpoint, you've got the Chinese idiot from a couple of months ago who announced several genetically modified babies. There was so much backlash that the key item gets lost: what he did didn't work, and couldn't have worked even if he'd had the technical ability to actually do what he said he did. The last I heard, the Chinese government seemed to be looking for an excuse to execute him.
cthia wrote:On the other end of that spectrum is always going to be the purists who insist that human DNA remain 100% pure. Racism is the only thing that will outlive the roaches. Oh, and in the Honorverse, I'm willing to bet that that mindset is "densely" populated about Sol.
Essentialism is one of the things I'm trying to point out, and racism is simply one form of essentialism. Human beings have a tendency to think in categories, hence essentialism. Breaking out of that box takes work, and it's work that most people won't do.
What I'm trying to do here is get a couple of points across. The first is that learning science from reading science fiction is a guaranteed way to seed your brain with a lot of misinformation that may make learning the subject later more difficult than it need be.
The other point is equally simple: if you want to learn something, go to credible, up-to-date sources. And learn how to filter good data from the tidal wave of irrelevancies, out-of-date pronouncements and deliberate disinformation that seems to constitute most discourse today.
cthia wrote:Btw, I'm told that horizontal asexual genetic transfer was once thought impossible.
There are lots of things that people once thought impossible that turn out to work if you tackle the problem properly. There are other things that people once thought possible that we're pretty sure are impossible. The guy who coined the term "junk DNA" has a lot to answer for.