cthia wrote:You may be underthinking it. The limitation leading to the necessity of the design may be in the limitation of the "malleability" of the material, gravity. If the bases of the shape are augmented with planes of "unbendable" gravity then it would make the shape indestructible. Any other shape may be impossible to use with their application of gravity. Or, and/or, any other shape may be suboptimal to the planes of forces applied to it.
IOW, the limitation may be in the inability to bend the planes of fortuitous gravity around the more traditional cylinder. As is, the design may be completely encapsulated.
We're in agreement, just expressing things differently. The shape is not because of the material, it's something intrinsic to the spider drive's working.
I can't follow it to the conclusion that it's indestructible. Even if you could show compelling textev that it has to be, they won't be. RFC will introduce something that makes them vulnerable to something else. So that point is moot.
cthia wrote:By its very name and nature, it is inferred that it is the LRPB that made the decision to allow the clones. I would assume that long range planning has to have free rein. However, I admit that the hierarchy between the LRPB and the BoD is unclear. But the point is moot, as it is clear that they both outrank the Detweilers. One by design, one by necessity. Supremely interesting.
At any rate, if it is built on the traditional business model, one wouldn't think a BoD would allow clones. Clones, which may automatically inherit stock, thus some controlling interest. A BoD would want less mouths to feed financially and politically.
Actually, no, it's not clear that they outrank the Detweilers. In my view, the Detweilers are the foremost members of both structures, even assuming they are separate entities. Yes, I find it unlikely that a pre-clones board would vote to create 6 clones of Albrecht who would later supplant them. Knowing their nature and their strategic thinking (q.v. influence on the Mandarins), they aren't likely to vote themselves out of office.
And yet, aside from The Shadow of Saganami itself, every single time we've been privy to long-term, strategic decisions being made in the MAlign, it's been the Detweilers, with one exception (Francesca Simões). Even in SI1, Albrecht was present, but that was a setting that did not correspond to the Inner Onion, as Anisimovna wasn't yet a part of that. I think it's also the only time we've seen the Board setting.
So, the only explanation I can come to is that the board voted to have the clones because Albrecht told them so. They didn't have an option.