penny wrote:The mods are not necessary for the creation of another Salamander, no. But in all of the centuries of the HV there has never been anyone even close. White Haven, Theisman and many others are way above average. But still no Salamander.
So you're saying she's light-years ahead of Edward Saganami, Ellen D'Orville and Travis Long? She's clearly better, but are you really saying those don't even come close?
But not sufficient? What you talking 'bout Willis!?

I thought that was obvious. If the mods were
sufficient condition to create another Salamander, then
anyone who had the mods and had joined the Navy would have been a Salamander before Honor. As I've said before, the population of Sphinx is greatly made up of immigrants from other heavy-world planets, most of whom appear to have genetic mods. The Meyerdahl is one of many, but given that the Meyerdahl First Wave was probably the first heavy-grav mod and was successful, the subsequent colonies probably incorporated it. And since it's dominant, it must have spread through the Sphinx population, so a great fraction of them would have it or one of the related mods.
Therefore, I find it highly unlikely that Honor is the first Meyerdahl-or-similar genie from Sphinx to join the RMN. Let aline
any Navy out there - because clearly the
Meyerdahl System Defence Force is almost entirely made of Meyerdahl-mod genies.
The only Salamander we have has been modded, and she is head over heels above the rest. Not to mention that the MA's entire purpose, besides galactic domination, is to create a race of superior beings who are definitely intellectually superior as a starting point. With other options added of course. And the author has said that they have already achieved success in that area. All except galactic domination.
If A = B and B = C then A = C.
That's a
cum hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy. Correlation does not imply causation.
Yes, we've only known one Salamander and I'm going to grant you that there have been few others to even come close to her levels. But there are some who have, for example the three named above, two of whom are heroes of the RMN (we don't know what became of Travis). You're extrapolating from a sample of 1 to say that she is successful
because of the mods she has and any potential MAlign genetic gifts her family may have had 400 T-years ago.
Moreover, you're twisting the author's words into a pretzel. He did not say that the MAlign has been successful, in particular not in their objective of creating a genetically superior being. What he did say was that Leonard Detweiler's objectives - undistorted by the MAlign - have been. Those objectives were not to create genetically superior beings, but to improve the general life of humanity as a whole through genetics.
If we take
that as a starting point, then there are billions of people (if not trillions just yet) who have genetic mods making their lives easier. Why only one Salamander? The logical conclusion is that genetic mods are not
sufficient condition to produce Salamanders.
On that note. Because of the spider drive, the MA could have studied a lot of battles in the HV, while simultaneously testing the stealth of their drive. Also, there is always an after battle analysis. And all data is recorded on computers. How difficult would it be for the MA to gain access to all after action reports of all naval battles in every navy?
No, they could and would not have.
They could not have done it because the spider drive wasn't perfected until a short while ago. We know the Sharks were barely out of testing phase in 1921 when Operation Oyster Bay was launched. Smaller ships like the Ghosts must have existed for a little while longer, but not so long before. I know I am speculating here on when the spider drive became practical, but I'm fairly certain it couldn't have been much earlier than 1915.
There's also a practical problem to consider: the MAN and MAlign couldn't have sent spy boats to observe battles without knowing where they would have occurred. To have observed even a handful of them would mean they had a very tight control loop with observers at the highest levels of both the Alliance and Haven's Navy (before or after Theisman), and that's something we know not to be true. The alternative to have such high-placed spies would be to have flooded the battlefield with lots of small spider ships that could sit there for a while waiting for a battle to occur, which is also impractical. Small ships the size of a Ghost do not have the endurance to sit as a hole in space for months on end waiting for a battle to happen so they could observe. Nor did the MAN/MAlign have nearly enough of those at the time the battles were happening to guarantee sufficient coverage.
And they
would not have risked the spider drive at that time. That would mean exposing them to accidental detection, either due to the hyperspace emergence flash or because they were close to the battle they were going to observe so they
could observe and got accidentally picked up by the swarm of recon drones (sitting half a light-hour away won't give you a lot of detail, so you may as well stay home).
Besides, if they wanted after-action reports of the battles, they did have some spies embedded who could download those. The reports were not highly classified - as shown by Honor using some of them with her students at the Island.