Morphing and Pregnancy II

Apr 05, 2017 23:59

First things first, I realize that this place is not as active anymore ( Read more... )

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frenchroast April 7 2017, 14:21:58 UTC
I think a lot of it depends on whether the morphing technology sees the embryo as part of or separate from the mother. And even that could go a bunch of different ways--if it's part of the mother, it might just get caught up in the jumble of changes that come with the morph, which I could see making it survive or not survive. It could be a complete toss-up, or it could be "well of course it comes back like it was ( ... )

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acts_of_tekla April 16 2017, 19:37:38 UTC
Honestly, I don't think it would be an issue at all unless/until morphing technology improves significantly in terms of amount of time that can be spent in morph. First of all, they'd have to have morphed a female mammal (you originally said pregnancy, so that's what I'm assuming) that was at the correct point it its hormonal cycle. There would also have to be a mature egg that had been released and was in the fallopian tubes, awaiting fertilization. Then, the sperm would actually have to reach and fertilize the egg within the time period of the morph, which, while possible, is not the most common scenario ( ... )

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