• Flying SquidM
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        310 months ago

        You end up having a lot of journals.

        They showed that in Doctor Who with Lady Me, who lived forever but had a mortal memory.

    • @[email protected]
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      110 months ago

      No they are saying that since aging is the degradation of cells, being recreated by a transporter consistently would result in constant new cells that weren’t degrading like the old ones.

      The flaw here is that the transporter recreates people in the same state they were in when they were destroyed to be tp’d, ensuring the cause for original degradation remains present and thus gaining continues

      • Aa!
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        10 months ago

        The flaw here is that the transporter recreates people in the same state they were in when they were destroyed to be tp’d, ensuring the cause for original degradation remains present and thus gaining continues

        Unless, of course, the plot demands different. Notably in these episodes:

        • Unnatural Selection: Dr. Pulaski ages rapidly and they use the transporter to repair her DNA and revert her to her normal age
        • The Most Toys: O’Brien deactivates a weapon that Data fires just as he is being transported
        • Realm of Fear: Barclay discovers a whole missing crew within the transporter beam somehow

        And of course the bio filters that explain why nobody gets any unexpected diseases when they visit planets.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        Would childhood biological processes restart, if the cells were reset? Even if not, I feel like there would be complications if that was done to the brain, like sudden personality changes after your first teleport in a long time.

        I’m not entirely sure how memories are stored in the brain but I feel like if all the neurons in a pathway were reset, it’s affect the memory.