T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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402.1 | Vitamin-Fortified, IgE-Free | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Tue Oct 14 1986 09:39 | 21 |
| I would engineer in the ability to make our own vitamins. If I
had to pick one vitamin, it would be vitamin C. Everything in the
world except primates synthesizes its own vitamin C, which is a
particularly volatile vitamin. But I'd really like to eliminate
vitamin needs generally. Ditto essential amino acids.
These alterations would allow humans to survive on much simpler
diets without danger of malnutrition.
Perhaps more important to folks with plenty of food would be to
CUT OUT the genes for one of the immunoglobins, I think IgE. This
is apparently a useless near-copy of one of the useful immunoglobins.
IgE is more than useless; it's harmful; it causes allergies. It
is not known to occur in any mammals except people and horses.
From a science-fictional angle, these mutations would be the ones
I'd wish to give colonists to other Earth-like planets, where they
would probably not find their vitamins unless they brought them,
and where they WOULD certainly find funny new biochemicals.
Earl Wajenberg
|
402.2 | heat | CGHUB::CONNELLY | Eye Dr3 - Regnad Kcin | Tue Oct 14 1986 23:28 | 5 |
|
How about a true estrus cycle like many animals have? It would
certainly be a change if males and females could only get REALLY
interested in you-know-what at certain times of the month. I'd
love to see what all the social ramifications of THAT would be!
|
402.3 | Cf. LeGuin | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Wed Oct 15 1986 10:14 | 29 |
| Hm. A monthly or annual breeding season sounds more like Human-Minus
than Human-Plus. Given that humans seem to have a pair-bonding
instinct (marriage is found in every culture) but that this instinct
seems rather weak (look at the divorce rate), I suspect that a breeding
season would tend to weaken the institution of marriage.
I would expect that these re-vamped humans would have households
composed of siblings plus the children of the sisters. Little boys
would look to their uncles as role models and have only a casual
interest in their fathers. Marriages might exist from time to time
but would be arranged rather than romantic.
A yearly cycle would make this much more emphatic than a monthly
cycle. If the cycle were as frequent as a month, there might not
be that much change to family structure.
If everyone goes into season at once, there would be profound social
impact -- a physically enforced holiday schedule, and probably social
rules about not mentioned out of season certain things that happened
in season. And who runs the all-night grocery and the police station
if EVERYONE is preoccupied? Some folk will have to staff the tiller,
so it would not do to make the urge overpowering.
LeGuin explores something like this in "The Left Hand of Darkness,"
where we meet a humanoid race that not only has a monthly breeding
cycle but is hermaphroditic. However, everyone does not come into
season at once.
Earl Wajenberg
|
402.4 | KHALIFEE! | EDEN::KLAES | Mostly harmless. | Wed Oct 15 1986 12:40 | 4 |
| How about once every seven years?
Larry
|
402.5 | Human + tailored bugs | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Wed Oct 15 1986 14:49 | 17 |
| Here's something we could probably do well before tinkering with
actual human genetics -- it would be both technically and politically
easier: genetic tinkering of our intestinal flora. After all, the
gene engineer's favorite guinea pig is our very own E. coli bacteria.
You could, for instance, take the bacteria and protozoa that live
in the guts of termites and enable them to digest cellulose and
either enable these creatures to live in the human gut or transfer
their digestive capacity to something we already carry. Result:
you could eat grass or bark or sawdust and at least get some calories
out of them.
Also, our intestinal flora already make some of our vitamins for
us. Perhaps they could be persuaded to make more. And maybe some
essential amino acids while we're at it.
Earl Wajenberg
|
402.6 | Lunching on the lawn | SEAMOS::REDFORD | DREADCO staff researcher | Fri Oct 17 1986 15:58 | 19 |
| re: improved intestinal flora
Isn't cellulose hard for even bacteria to break up? My vague
memories of biology tell me that herbivores need to work over the
material for a long time and in several different stomachs in order
to make use of it. Our digestive systems aren't so rugged, and might
have trouble carrying around a load of grass clippings for a week.
Wood fiber is so hard to digest that only termites do it.
Synthesis of vitamins and amino acids shouldn't be too hard, though,
and would eliminate major causes of malnutrition.
Now there's something that would make a difference. How much of human
history has been shaped by cultures running out of land (and by
extension, food)? When the
nomads can't raise any more cattle, they take to raiding the cities.
If they themselves are grazers, then the steppe can support city-type
populations. Down goes the incidence of barbarian invasions.
/jlr
|
402.7 | Oestrus twist | WHAT::FANEUF | | Thu Oct 23 1986 13:31 | 7 |
| Someone (name forgotten) did an amusing twist on the oestrus cycle
bit about 30 years ago. Discovered 'agent' which restored cycle
in humans, then broadcast it in the air. Turned out, with human
perversity, that men went on a cycle of helpless desire/indifference...
Ross Faneuf
|
402.8 | author! author! | VACCIN::ROUTLEY | | Mon Oct 27 1986 12:59 | 14 |
| < Note 402.7 by WHAT::FANEUF >
-< Oestrus twist >-
> Someone (name forgotten) did an amusing twist on the oestrus cycle
> bit about 30 years ago. Discovered 'agent' which restored cycle
> in humans, then broadcast it in the air. Turned out, with human
> perversity, that men went on a cycle of helpless desire/indifference...
>
> Ross Faneuf
Raymond Z. Gallun, I think, collected in "The Best of Raymond Z. Gallun".
I'll check when I get home.
kevin routley
|
402.9 | Playing with the porpoises | ALTHEA::ROSE | | Tue Oct 28 1986 14:20 | 14 |
|
GILLS!!!
Cmon, the earth's surface is 75% covered with water. Imagine the
possibilities...
I would bet that water soaks up nuclear radiation much slower than
air (and there's sooo much water), that if there were a nuclear
'exchange' the water may be somewhat habitable for longer than the
atmosphere.
I'm ready to jump into the sea!
|
402.10 | | ROCK::REDFORD | DREADCO staff researcher | Tue Oct 28 1986 17:07 | 17 |
| re: .-1
Yep, gills would not only open up more living area, but they open up
volume as well. A city could be ten miles across and a thousand feet
deep.
The sea is also a much milder environment in many ways,
e.g. the temperature never changes much and there's no weather.
It's hard to do a lot of
industrial operations underwater, but you can always use pressure
vessels just like we use vacuum chambers.
Dunno about water as bomb protection, though. Setting off a nuclear
bomb underwater would cause a devastating shock wave. The fallout
would circulate through the oceans just as it circulates through the air.
/jlr
|
402.11 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Wed Oct 29 1986 09:13 | 21 |
| How many warm blooded animals have gills?
How many animals with big brains have gills?
How much oxygen do you think we would need to extract (that is,
take out of solution) from sea water (or fresh water, if you prefer)?
We'll need an awful lot of concomittent body changes to accept gills.
Water of a given temperature has a more depleting effect on the body
than does air at a similar temperature.
What can you wear to keep you warm in water? A light sweater or T-shirt
won't hack it.
If the gills have to be very large (as I contend they'll have to be
to exchange enough air), then your can't cover them up while keeping warm.
How will we hear? Our ears are not well-developed for underwater use.
Our bodies will need better pressure maintenance and flotation mechanisms,
as well as swimming controls.
How will we see? It gets dark not too far down.
I'd prefer to see some good land-based enhancements made, as the nutrition
engancements noted earlier, or in disease control, or just raw abilities,
like strength, speed, agility, and such.
- tom powers]
|
402.12 | Details | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Wed Oct 29 1986 10:52 | 20 |
| Pressure is not too much of a problem if your body cavities are
full of water instead of air. You are, in effect, solid water from
stem to stern and pressures equalize all the way through.
Temperature, on the other hand, is a real problem. I would solve
it by a network of blood vessels using counter-current heat exchange.
Many animals have these. Notably, sea birds and sea mammals have
them in their extremities and under their skin to help conserve
warmth. So you would install a system of the same sort between
the gills and the rest of the body. Once that is our of the way,
you insulate the skin with blubber, fur, or heavy-duty wet-suits.
(If the latter, we are probably talking about amphibious people,
not purely aquatic.)
How about giving the gills to dolphins and whales instead of humans?
They are already adapted in terms of streamlining, insulation, and
snese organs. Imagine the energy they'd save and the safety they'd
have if they didn't have to come put for air.
Earl Wajenberg
|
402.13 | How The Fishies Did It | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Wed Oct 29 1986 11:14 | 7 |
| The latest Scientific American has an article on Antarctic fish
and how they "solved" their temperature problems (don't want to
sound *too* teleogical). Haven't had a chance to read it yet, but
thought the pointer might be useful given this discussion.
len.
|
402.14 | BUT WHO'S GOING TO BELL THE CAT? | EDEN::KLAES | Singing Pumpkin carols! | Wed Oct 29 1986 11:23 | 4 |
| How about transplanting human brains into dolphin bodies?
Larry
|
402.15 | "Clams got legs?" | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Wed Oct 29 1986 11:34 | 14 |
| To keep it within the realm of genetic engineering, how about
engineering dolphins to have more humanlike brains? See the works
of David Brin (described in 309), especially "Startide Rising,"
where about half the characters are genetically engineered dolphins.
However, the main problem with a dolphin body is that it has no
hands. To supply these while maintaining streamlining, you could
either design arms that fold out of the way, or supply the creature
with, say, a tongue divided into several tentacles. Or you could
switch from dolphins to squids.
But we seem to have left HUMAN genetic engineering behind.
Earl Wajenberg
|
402.16 | Animal Gifts | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Wed Oct 29 1986 11:39 | 9 |
| I'd like to have the regenerative abilities of salamanders, who
can re-grow lost limbs.
Then there are animal senses. ("Heaven only knowses the noselessness
of Man," as Edward Lear said.) Besides enhanced smell, there is
hearing, echolocation, infrared and ultraviolet vision, polarization
sensitivity, and electric and magnetic perception, to name a few.
Earl Wajenberg
|
402.17 | the nose knows | ROCK::REDFORD | DREADCO staff researcher | Thu Oct 30 1986 18:20 | 19 |
| Can salamanders regrow all their limbs, or just their tails? A tail
is fairly simple to begin with, and probably doesn't need the complex
rewiring required for an arm.
I don't know about better senses. It would be nice, but we
don't use the ones we have all that thoroughly. Would there be any
social effect caused by being able to perceive electric fields? Maybe fewer
babies would put their fingers into sockets, but I doubt it would
effect much else.
On the other hand, a better sense of smell would allow
you to perceive other people's moods more directly. That could have
a big impact. Suppose that your nose was keen enough to detect the
slight sweating caused by lying - it would revolutionize human behavior.
No more polite evasions, no more "hey baby, you know you're the one",
no more used car salesmen. People might have to wear heavy perfume
just to get through the day.
/jlr
|
402.18 | RE 402.17 | 25725::KLAES | Singing Pumpkin carols! | Fri Oct 31 1986 09:59 | 11 |
| Trying to relate this to the last reply, in Harry Harrison's
1984 novel, WEST OF EDEN, the alternate Earth's intelligent reptiles
(evolved from the dinosaurs on an Earth where an asteroid did NOT
wipe them out) communicated not only with their voices, but with
a multitude of subtle body motions, so that it was impossible for
them to lie to one another - in fact, that trait actually made the
concept of lying UNKNOWN to them, until the leader of one of their
new cities in North America learned of lying from a human captive.
Larry
|
402.19 | Body Language | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Oct 31 1986 10:34 | 17 |
| Re .17
Yes, salamanders re-grow legs as well as tails. Lizards re-grow tails
but not legs, so far as I know.
An electric sense might be just as useful for detecting moods and
state of mind and health as would a keener sense of smell.
Re .18
I have a very difficult time believing in totally truthful creatures
based on what I've heard so far. We use body language too, and
can lie with it just as with words. Unless the movements are
involuntary, like blushing or coughing, they wouldn't be much use
for lie-proofing.
Earl Wajenberg
|
402.20 | RE 402.19 | EDEN::KLAES | Singing Pumpkin carols! | Fri Oct 31 1986 11:34 | 14 |
| Yes - in Harrison's book, they were involuntary, thus the inability
to lie. The Ylanie (as the reptiles were called) could NOT control
their body movemets when they spoke. That is why the Ylanie leader,
Vainte, in the new city, had to go into hiding to pretend mourning
over having an opponent murdered - she had messengers claim she
was in mourning, but her whole body showed nothing but unbridled
joy.
Body movement s were so ingrained in Ylanie speech that Harrison
had to use non-alphabetic symbols when he wrote Ylanie words to
even try to "explain" the body movements' messages. The Ylanie
had no written language as a consequence of this characteristic.
Larry
|
402.21 | FIRST BORN on the A&E Network | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Mon Jun 19 1989 15:03 | 19 |
| On the Arts and Entertainment Network (cable), there is a three
part British series being shown on Saturday nights at 10 pm EDT
called FIRST BORN, about a secret British government experiment to
produce a race of beings who are half human and half primate. The
story is based on the events surrounding Gordon, the only successful
"result" of the combining of human sperm in a gorilla's ovum.
FB is rather well done, and not B-grade schlock as one might
expect. It brings up a lot of thought-provoking issues, such as how
the government wanted to use these beings as essentially a race of
expendible slaves. The chief scientist on the project wants to create
a race with human intelligence but none of the aggresiveness.
BTW, I am aware that it is genetically "impossible" to create a
human-gorilla baby, but all I can say is I "know" faster-than-light
travel is also impossible, but I still watch STAR TREK every week.
Larry
|
402.22 | Details on a Bad Idea | ATSE::WAJENBERG | and the Cthulhuettes | Mon Jun 19 1989 15:26 | 11 |
| Re .21
Oh, not necessarily THAT impossible. The genetics are very similar,
even there are different numbers of chromosomes. I have heard
speculations that such a cross WOULD be viable, though probably a
sterile "mule." The gestation periods and the birth weights for the
two species are identical, too, which makes things simpler.
What does Gordon look like?
Earl Wajenberg
|
402.23 | RE 402.22 | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Mon Jun 19 1989 15:39 | 12 |
| Gordon started out looking like a very hairy human baby, and
he lost most of his body hair as he got older. Except for the
fact that he doesn't coo, gurgle, or smile, Gordon looks like a
normal human infant.
One of the questions posed by the government official to the
chief scientist was if Gordon and his kind would be able to breed
one day. The scientist said they'd have to wait quite a while to
find out.
Larry
|
402.24 | | RICKS::REDFORD | Disbelief is the best revenge | Mon Jun 19 1989 20:12 | 7 |
| An ethnic group that is treated as slaves and menials isn't going
to stay non-agressive for long, particularly when they figure out
that they're ten times stronger than their masters... I would
think that behavioral patterns like passivity or aggressiveness
depend a whole lot on environment as well as genetics.
/jlr
|
402.25 | "GOR" | HAGGIS::IRVINE | I hate Boomer .008 Guage! | Tue Jun 20 1989 06:39 | 12 |
| This series was shown in the UK earlier this year under the name
"GOR". The story was quite good, but I suspect that it is only
just as the book should have been. I have never read the book,
but suspect that it would be too predictable after the series.
I must admit that I do prefer to read a book before I see a
dramatisation of any book. (especially SF material)
A good enough series, though in my opinion a bit long winded.
Bob
|
402.26 | GENTALK - Genetic Engineering Discussion List | MTWAIN::KLAES | No Guts, No Galaxy | Fri Aug 26 1994 16:21 | 39 |
| From: US1RMC::"[email protected]" "MAIL-11 Daemon" 25-AUG-1994
To: Multiple recipients of list NEW-LIST <[email protected]>
CC:
Subj: NEW: GENTALK - Genetic engineering
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