tlb wrote:cthia wrote:But the truth of the matter is that Allison will not be tackling mankind's biggest problems. There is no doubt that Allison is one of the galaxy's best geneticists, and for that reason alone I am not surprised in the very least that she solved Grayson's problem and that she was able to assure Emily a child that would regenerate. But at the risk of sharpened pitchforks again, I always felt those accomplishments should have been child's play for any good geneticist; which didn't need the big guns represented by Allison.tlb wrote:The text specifically said that the problem of regeneration in the bulk of Mayerdahl-B genies had NOT been solved by Beowulf.cthia wrote:See? They needed her.
You are trying to have it both ways. You probably were correct the first time and it could have been solved by any good geneticist. Which means that Beowulf is not looking at any list of mankind's greatest problems. The way it works at a big research establishment, is that the most important problems are the ones with the biggest funding; because big establishments require big bucks to keep to them running. You only need to look at the list of orphan and rare diseases to see what is being ignored today.
Problems like failure to regenerate among most Meyerdahl-B genies or sexual disparity among Grayson births don't get the funding, so do not get the attention.
The regen problem is limited to a small minority of humans, thus isn't exactly among mankind's biggest problems.
There is no reason Allison could not have also made it a pet project of hers while on Beowulf.
And you do realize the problem has not been solved, but simply sidestepped.