The problem is, you're not making a carbon copy. You're
taking already developed genetic material and using that
as the basis for a living creature. Flaws in the source
material due to age, mutation, or damage during extraction,
combined with the stress of geneticly engineering the
clone cell and problems that might arise during development,
can give you bad genes and badly defective clones.
That does not seem to be the problem in NGE, from the
looks of it they've got their cloning techniques down pat.
Rei's problem is that she's got a mismatch between her
body and soul, and she can't resolve the internal conflict.
FW
That's hardly news. Didn't they have to clone Dolly the sheep hundreds of
times before they got one that worked, so to speak?
Matt Durrant wrote:
>
> That's hardly news. Didn't they have to clone Dolly the sheep hundreds of
> times before they got one that worked, so to speak?
The process goes something like this: First, you need about 200 egg
donors. The DNA of the donor creature is inserted into each egg, and
only about 40 survive that process and show signs of fertilization.
Those that survive are placed in a female 'volunteer' (animals can't
volunteer, after all) in groups of 5 to 8, depending on the species.
Probability says that of those females, only one will actuall get
pregnant. And of the eggs inserted only 1 will actuall become a living creature.
Sounds like way too much work just to get a sheep.
How about a boy sheep, a girl sheep, and some Barry White music...?
----
FRM (Rubbin' wool, makin' mutton, whatever you wanna call it...)
I dunno. Ask the sheep.
Laters. =)
Stan
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/ _ | |/ Stanlee Dometita sta...@cif.rochester.edu
| ( _| | U of Rochester cif.rochester.edu/~stanlee
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