robertamgottlieb wrote:cthia wrote:Another excellent stance. IMHO. I see prolong as the one muddy area. The fulcrum. The pivot point. The crux. And prolong very well may represent Beowulf's first cautious step since their original posture.
Ok, here's a morality question: suppose that the Mesan work on genetics from their slave lines exposed a fix for the inability of the Heyerdahl mod to regenerate. Does Allison treat Honor with it?
-- Bob G
I am not quite so sure that this is a question of morality. Or at least if it were, that ship has sailed.
My personal slant on regeneration. If I were a high-powered high falutin lawyer like, SWM, I would argue that regen does not, in any way compromise Beowulf's stance. Regen does not replace anything in or on the body that isn't already there. In fact, regen is nothing more than a highly skilled surgeon in a bottle, with bandaids.
If I lose a finger today, as long as I put that finger on ice and get it to a proper surgeon, it can be reattached. Giving me no more than I had before said accident. Regen, arguably, is just a high-tech scalpel and sutures. IMHO.
However, if that cure for the Meyerdahl mod exists outside the approved gene sequence, then that presents a problem. If you make a stance then you must be aware that if you step outside of your own parameters then you establish a precedent, eliminating your argument against, thereby opening the door. In that case Beowulf would have transformed their nonarbitrary limit to an arbitrary one, thus killing all that they stood for, by providing an exploitable legal and logical loophole.
It's akin to the SLN saying 'do as I say, not as I do.'
.