tlb wrote:Although we only see it applied to men, ugly is not extinct. The passage with Helen and Paulo points to the fact that bio-sculpting can do anything than gene editing can do. Specifically you have no evidence that bio-sculpting is as limited as you say it is.
As I said, some things are implied. However, in this case, we also have textev to accompany said implication. See below.*
Jonathan_S wrote:And we know, from Elaine/Georgia that biosculpt can include gene modifications; because of this line "I found your first biosculpt technician," Zilwicki told her very, very softly. "The one who rekeyed the genetic sequence on your tongue."" (And Anton is usually very precise; if he said "first biosculpt technician" that almost certainly means he'd found that she'd used at least one more (no reason to say "first" if there isn't at least a "second)
Let me reiterate that rekeying the genetic marker for the tongue should be child's play. It probably isn't embedded deeply into the gene sequence, and it certainly does not cross the line drawn by the Beowulf Code. IMO.
Jonathan_S wrote:Also, there's this line in FoD, when Sakristos "her lovely face (the best biosculpt money could buy)" is thinking about how she how she arranged Pavil hiring the duelest Denver. So we don't have to speculate that (some of?) her beauty came from biosculpt rather than genetics.
Um...
I was never speculating. I am certain. Her "stunning beauty" came from divine intervention. The god is the MA.
Her plain old common everyday beauty came from biosculpting. She
had to change her appearance. She may have gotten a nose job. That is the one thing that will change ones appearance quite a bit. You cannot improve upon perfection, you can change it, but not improve upon it.
When she arrived at the biosculptor's office she was bringing quite a bit for him to work with. The biosculptor in this case was probably perplexed. I imagine the conversation went a little along these lines.
"I can't improve upon this!"
"I just need you to make me more anonymous. This face sticks out like a sore thumb."
"That I can do, if you are sure. You won't be so drop dead gorgeous though. You sure about this?"
Again, Michael Jackson could afford the best surgeon money could buy, yet he ended up looking alien, almost hideous. His was a botched job.
Jonathan_S wrote:Now, what biosculpt can't do is adjust skeletal structure (height, etc.). However nanotech body transformation can change even that. (See Berry and Ruth in CoS).
So, taken together, it seems that if you've got the money and the desire (and access to a first world medical establishment) you can change most anything; from your skeletal structure, to your looks, to retro-gene therapy to alter/rekey your original genetics (not sure what the limits on that last are)
This passage proves what I suggested upstream that nanites are in common use throughout the galaxy. The MA simply injected the critters with steroids and let them loose upon the galaxy. But I digress.
Now for that proof I promised. Contained in this passage supplied by tlb himself.
tlb wrote:I would have been inclined to consider nanotech transformation as part of bioscutpt, but as you say there is this passage in Crown of Slaves, chapter 2:
*
Queen Elizabeth chuckled. "A nanotech transformation? You're certainly free with the royal purse, Captain Zilwicki!"
Anton made no reply beyond a thin smile. That seemed like a better response than: sure, it'll cost a small fortune—but for you, that's pocket change.
Elizabeth studied the two girls herself. She seemed a bit uncertain, although Anton was quite sure the hesitation was not because of the expense involved. Biosculpt would have been cheaper, but biosculpt was—literally—only skin deep, and they needed more than that in this case. Although Berry and Ruth were very similar physical types, aside from Berry's dark brown hair and Ruth's golden blond, they weren't quite the same height. And while neither of them would ever be called stocky, Ruth was noticeably finer-boned than Berry. It wasn't anything which would be hugely apparent to a casual observer, but it would show up instantly if anyone decided to run a side-by-side comparison of their HD images.
Unless, of course, the differences were reversed before the HD cameras ever saw them.
So, there
is a very distinct limitation of what can be accomplished with biosculpting. Biosculpting is no more than cosmetic surgery. Today it is limited by the possible need and availability of skin grafts which are usually taken from other areas of the body. The buttocks, thighs, stomach, etc.
Oftentimes simple bone restructuring is needed but
that may require another completely different specialist. A specialist who is paid the biggest of the big bucks. That is why nanite transformations cost as much as a Queen's ramsom. I also suspect different specialists are needed. I wouldn't be surprised if the average biosculptor is not licensed to practice gene therapy or nanotech transformation. But a gene therapist can probably do it all. All of this gels with a post I made upstream about bone restructuring.
So, in summary, there is a very real limitation of what biosculpting can do. I will go out on a limb and say there is an implied limitation of what nanotech transformation can do as well.
What is that limitation? I'm glad you asked. The limitation is that neither can reproduce what God, or the MA can do.
If they could, there would be a lot of Honor Harrington twins, and a lot of Queen Elizabeths -- etc., etc., etc., -- running around the Galaxy impostering their way into a galactic mess. The MA would have changed the appearance of Harahap himself to look exactly like who he was impostering.
Tlb, I would imagine that nanotech transformation and biosculting is two very different professions requiring very different qualifications. Even today, if someone gets into a serious injury and needs serious reconstructive surgery he needs several specialists. Cosmetic surgeon, bone surgeon, suture specialist... if one wants to get the best results.