From: Jeff Davis (jdavis@socketscience.com)
Date: Fri Aug 20 1999 - 04:41:01 MDT
Anders Sandberg (asa@nada.kth.se)
17 Aug 1999 15:58:10 +0200
wrote:
>The problem with using anencephalic bodies is that the head doesn't
develop properly without
>the brain, and becomes literally flat.
The problem is the use of the word "properly" above. Let's get past this.
It's a minor problem.
Whatever unique conditions produce anencephally, predictably and logically
produce the flattened, and thus "unsatisfactory" head configuration. The
fact that anencephaly actually occurs is more or less a proof of concept.
What remains is refinement. Understand the developmental particulars and
reconfigure them to produce the "proper", ie, desired result. To wit: a
perfectly configured body with all the parts you want and none that you
don't.
To get the proper head shape you probably only need some sort of
non-functional brain-sized tissue mass, a kind of biological packing material.
It would also be useful to rapidly grow the body to adult size.
Jeff Davis
Socket Science
322 Princeton Avenue
Half Moon Bay, CA 94019-4039
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