cthia wrote:NOT "always pursue." It should never become the default. Man should keep the lion's share of himself on the human side of the fence, as the norm.
Why? There may be philosophical or religious reasons for this and I don't want to dismiss them. In fact, they may very well be the reason why this isn't allowed or done in the first place. But is there a biological reason?
Besides, replacing limbs
with stronger artificial limbs may also require strengthening surrounding muscle and more. Again, man and woman are
very vain creatures, and we like to retain as much of our original, basic "look and feel" as possible. At any rate, my point is that the resistance would come from the average man in the street. I imagine most people are horrified of the prospect of artificial limbs if they don't regenerate. Just because you CAN do something doesn't mean you should. I think the proposition of "prosthetics" will always carry a stigma. Humanity likes to keep the body "stock" if it were an automobile.

We like to retain as much of our original? Sorry, I don't think that's exactly true, not for the entirety of the population. Plastic surgery exists today, which adds to us. I'd even venture the reason we don't replace more is that we currently don't have the technology.
But the HV does.
You may be right that people in the HV are indeed horrified of replacing limbs
with anything non-biologic and not generated from their own DNA. There may still be a lot of resentment from way back in the Final War, when those implanted and augmented cyborgs were created and unleashed.
As for cars... well, you do know there's a very large after-market mod community, don't you?
Agreed. And interesting. But those capabilities would be, for all intents and purposes, noninvasive. Humanity likes that word.
Albeit, these types of abilities would have to be a copper-plated Ransom to law enforcement. I can see some planets outlawing the ability if it is developed.
But why limit to non-invasive? Why not allow an extra pair of arms? I could even imagine this becoming popular in Sphinx, where the native fauna is six-limbed.
Or vice versa. It would have been a significant help if Honor could have shut down her aggressive metabolism when she was captured and held "for Ransom."
Quite true. So if the Meyerdahl Mods that she had inherited had been technological in nature, allowing comfortable living on Sphinx, they could easily be turned off when not on Sphinx.
There would also be no Great Cookie Heist to get Travis Long busted and thus forming a friendship
with Chomps.
Brilliant use of the tech! But it borders the unethical by crossing the bridge into mind control. In the hands of the unscrupulous it would be used to swindle, pilfer or even murder. Albeit, a mother would use it to control her kids. "Go to sleep you brats!"
Oh, yeah. Many a parent would like to command their newborns to sleep when it's time to sleep and to be awake when it's time to be awake. Though most transhumanist sci-fi I've read says that implants and nanite technology is only given to young adults after puberty. Sometimes, the reason given is biological development; sometimes, it's ethical as the people need to reach age of informed consent to make their choices.
In one of them (Peter F Hamilton's Commonwealth Saga series; specifically, in the Void Trilogy), one of the characters reminisces about using his newly-installed ability to enlarge a certain body part to impress a girl,
with unexpected side-effects. Earlier in the series, Justine Burnelli remembers how she's been slowly adding to
her height over R&R periods, and that in one of them she decided to have bigger breasts, but reverted that in
her next Rejuv because it wasn't worth all the bad pickup lines she was getting.
Incidentally, the Commonwealth Saga is the best depiction of transhumanism I've ever read. If you haven't, I highly recommend; it may change your view of the topic and thus this thread. In the original Saga, it's very reachable from where our technology is today and even informative on what we could be as a species. By the Void Trilogy, like the Gordianverse, it's at "indistinguishable from magic" Clarketech level, but still made me want to be that way.
It could be a boon to the medical professional too, if you could be ordered not to feel pain and/or to hold very still.
We have anaesthetics today. Injecting someone
with a serum or injecting someone
with nanites that shut down peripheral nerve perception and major limb control is not very different from one another.
The advantage would be if the nanites are already in your body and all you have to do is grant the doctor access to your internal network. (incidentally, "internal network" is the name that Glynn Stewart gives the same topic in his Peacekeepers of Sol series) Just click Yes/No/Cancel.
The operative phrase being "if one wants it." Again, I think the "humanity" found in the general market would offer the resistance to certain aspects.
I'm curious as to why you think they would.
And I'm also curious if your opinion should change after reading the two Gordianverse novels and the Commonwealth Saga, if you haven't.
Hands off buddy! Mine! Mine! Mine! I hope all of the doting and slobbering affections I bestowed upon her in the Eridani Edict Violation of the Most Dismissive Kind thread didn't somehow affect the author and made him jealous.
Okay, okay, you can have Aldona, if I get Ruth!
The equipment clause was broached in other books but it was never so visually and emotionally invested.
Aye, and this is yet one more reason why TEiF is a good book. I'm pretty sure the passage you're describing was David's contribution more than Eric's. That one is just David at his best.
I enjoyed Cachat's interactions as well. As readers, the benefit is that his character is fleshed out quite a bit more.
"It's not fetish. It's just good precaution."

Anyway, we now know roughly where you are in the book. I'm
sure we'll know when you get to some of the juicier bits towards the end, because you
will be posting. Can't wait.