(urth) Typhon's nature

Marc Aramini marcaramini at yahoo.com
Sat Oct 15 03:34:01 PDT 2011



--- On Sat, 10/15/11, Gerry Quinn <gerry at bindweed.com> wrote:






 


 

From: David Stockhoff 
 

> >
> > *From:* David Stockhoff <mailto:dstockhoff at verizon.net>
> > > > On the other hand, Typhon would have known of the dangers of
> > > > inbreeding, and it also seems that he didn’t much like the idea of
> > > > genetically engineering his offspring.
> > >
>From Gerry> > > Why do you think this?
> > Because he had access to the technology, and he didn’t use it.
> How do you know this?

 

Surely these things are obvious?  We know he had the technology, because the Whorl is loaded with it.  It seems obvious that a technology that can produce Mucor or a psychic internet can prevent, say, the blindness of Tartarus, who seems otherwise sound.  So Typhon must have chosen not to use it.

 

Sigh.  Putting your head on someone else and wanting a perfect child means to me that Typhon would have LOVED genetically getting the perfect heir, and somehow his technology either didn't foresee or couldn't predict Tartarus' blindness. He wants a more worthy son after all these failures, so he decides to get the perfect one.  That's what he wants.  I think Mucor and Typhon have "natural" psyhic powers (inherited but possibly augmented from normal homosapiens over time, not necessarily machine based at all; Wolfe believes in souls) I think its a mistake to dismiss the unscientific as naturally impossible in Wolfe.  I would certianly engineer an heir if I would put my head on somebody else, but I would still want it to be my genetic material, even if tweaked to be the best of me.
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