Tramp wrote:Siren Prime wrote:Tramp wrote:Siren Prime wrote:I don't know, I just don't think of it that way.
Maybe it's just the fact that I'd find it extremely wierd for a femme to be pregnant.
If I could explain, I guess my view of the Transformers is that they are not organic so much as they are mechanic with organic tendencies (you know, love, personality).
And I know what nanites are, but for the whole time I've been a TF fan, I've never heard them mentioned.
TF: More than Meets the Eye # 8 refers to them as internal regeneration circuitry. It's the same thing—microscopic self-replicating circuitry and machines which rebuild damaged systems, ultimately healing damage, just like our own cells replicate to heal our injuries. Transformers use CR chambers to boost this healing. That same type of regenerative circuitry system could also be used for reproduction.
Okay, fair enough.
But I still don't agree.
Think past "organic" or "inorganic". These are life forms, as such, they have to be capable of reproducing in order to propegate the species. All life reproduces through either asexual or sexual means. These are the only options. These can take the form of budding, mitosis, or spores in the cae of asexual reproduction, or, for sexual reproduction, in the form of pollenation, internal fertilization (sex), or external fertilization (like frogs and some fish). All require the merging of cells containing half of each parent's genetic makeup. Examples of non-organic life using asexual reproduction can be found in a number of stories including Star Trek: TNG. the little flying saucer aliens from [b]Battereies Not Included[/i] are a perfect example of machine-based life which uses internal sexual reproduction and internal genstation. The little female gets pregnant and has babies. Other than size and lack of the ability to transform, they are no different than Cybertronians. In the TF universe itself, we have the Lithonians from the '86 TF the Movie. There we clearly have males, females and small children running around.
I agree with you on some things, but I don't that the TF's have cells at all.
I don't like that they are the same as the little saucers.
I'm not trying to be inflexible or anything, but your theory has bits to it that I just don't agree with.
I think that the TF's are organic mentally with their emotions, desires, etc. But I don't believe that they are organic bodily.
I think that they are somewhat like a character in a movie I just recently watched with my father. I forget the name, but the setting was in a future earth where robots are common place. But a company decides to create a robot that has emotions, dreams... that can actually LOVE it's owner. But not like a romantic love. A love like between a mother and child.
It's body was not built with thinks like reproductive organs or anything like that. It was a machine, but it's mind was completely human.
That's how I view the Transformers.
The TF's can have children, but I don't think it's the way that people do.