When I said that, I was thinking of how the healers seem to tap into magic energy to force healing. Basic physics says that the larger the injury and the more serious (two significant factors that are sort of related), the more energy it takes to heal it in absolute terms. A proportionally serious injury might have similar natural healing times, no matter the size of the creature, because of how much any creature's body can handle is based on
their size, as is the energy.
But if the healer in both cases is human, it would still take a lot more effort to heal a huge wound than a medium one, no matter how
proportionally bad it was to the injured animal. That would seem to explain why a healer could forcibly heal even the most badly wounded human quickly, while they can't heal a dragon's torn wing nearly as fast.
Did that make my point more clear or more confusing?
n7axw wrote:bkwormlisa wrote:
And that implies that whatever dragon healers can do, it isn't near as miraculous as what they can do to humans. Granted, in HHNF it could take several days for the Healers to release a wounded prisoner as well enough, but with dragons it seems to take weeks to return them to duty (such as the dragon injured off camera at the beginning of HG). Maybe it's a size issue? The amount of flesh needing healing in the most badly injured human is probably a lot less than the flesh needing healing in a mildly injured dragon.
One would suspect that the worse the injury, the longer the healing takes for both dragons and humans...although some of what we've seen Arcanan healers accompkish is pretty impressive.
Don