<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="0" ><tr><td valign="top" style="font: inherit;">Another possibility is that Wolfe simply chose to ignore those complications. As an engineer, he is sometimes very technical---see the remarkably elegant explanation presented in this list for the Long Sun. But he is not really a hard-SF kind of guy, not when details might get in the way, and maybe especially in terms of biology. And he's never proposed non-carbon life or non-iron blood in any story, as far as I know.<div><br></div><div>Even if he considered one of those possibilities (we do know gene transfer is possible), he wouldn't put them out front. I suppose the inhumi do make it impossible to rule out any theory like that.</div><div><br></div><div><br><br>--- On <b>Mon, 9/27/10, Lee Berman <i><severiansola@hotmail.com></i></b> wrote:<br><blockquote style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"><br>From: Lee
Berman <severiansola@hotmail.com><br>Subject: (urth) note Re: Short Sun blog<br>To: urth@lists.urth.net<br>Date: Monday, September 27, 2010, 9:33 AM<br><br><div class="plainMail"><br><br>>David Stockhoff- Actually, the assumption that at least most life in the NS/LS/SS <br>>universe has the same biochemistry. The inhumi feed on both humans and <br>>Neighbors, for example. And then you have the alzabo.<br> <br>Yep. And The Mother and Seawrack are down there eating drowned human sailors and, I <br>think, Neighbor sailors before that. That's the picture I get from the Sun series- <br>a galaxy of creatures able to eat each other and share their physical and mental <br>being and existence.<br> <br>Is this because Urthly humans spread out across the galaxy and mutated into a myriad<br>of creatures? Or is it because a parasitic race feeding on multiple species serve<br>as a vector for genetic sharing and splicing, like a virus for bacteria cells
or even<br>oncogenes in humans. Perhaps some combination of these processes?<br> <br>I think the suggestions for this stuff are clear to see in the story. Identifying exactly<br>which process created each superhuman character is probably not so important. Only the<br>possibilities matter, which is all I've ever argued for.<br> <br> <br>For me, the underpinnings of BotNS are as an exploration of the interaction between<br>pagan gods and Judeo-Christianity. Wolfe did this by creating an Earth twin where<br>The Flood and Jesus never happened, allowing the pagan gods to have continued dominion<br>far into the future of where we on Earth are now.<br> <br>I'm glad Wolfe gave us various possibilities for the origin of such creatures as Erebus,<br>Zeus, Typhon, Gabriel, Odin, Arioch, Abaia, Tzadkiel, etc. But at the end of the day, for <br>the purpose of this story, I think it is more important to understand what they are rather <br>than where they came from.
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