aairfccha wrote:Slaves can't be cheap to buy as their price has to include the cost of raising them for usually at least about 16 years, so most buyers should want them to keep them useful for as long as possible.
Joat42 wrote:Hmm... That wasn't the passage I was thinking about, but it kind of fits except that I have a clear picture of Du Havel, slaves and prolong being connected somehow. I'll see if I can find the reference.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:Maybe the slaves get the opposite of prolong: something that causes accelerated growth, so they are market-ready within 8 years or less, but as a consequence shorten the lifetime and make them incompatible with the prolong treatments.
Please note that the text quoted says that an escaped slave CAN take prolong, provided that their age is appropriate.
We have an example of a degenerative disease that attacks despite prolong and some of the slaves do have built-in genetic disorders that will shorten their lives, even with prolong; but that was not done deliberately to counteract prolong, but as a side effect.