Leonardo wrote:Auto Bot wrote:Nothing. Being sentient means being alive. It has nothing to do with some super capabilities.
Our modern cars can be said to be "alive" in a limited kind of way. Like it has circuitry to automatically diagnose itself (my car has this feature), decide when and how much pressure to apply to each individual brakes, stability control, etc. Transformers' sentient features is akin to that.
This is just a fiction based categorizing. Assuming that they are really alive.
Simply put, they perform like earth vehicles
when in alt mode. Their only difference from earth vehicles is that they happen to be alive. That's why they can talk and drive themselves.
Yes, I changed my post because I didn't mean to talk about sentience.
My point is, in this film, they didn't solely perform like Earth vehicles when in alt.mode, regardless of where the difference came from. And if there is a difference between their alt.modes and Earth vehicles, then they're obviously not limited.
I'm discussing this based solely on the movie itself, so far. I don't see how the movie supports that theory.
But still, i'll be interested to hear you pick out scenes from the movie to support this idea.
To say their alt modes and Earth vehicles has differences. Of course, yes. They're alive, and can manifest the fact that they are alive. (Such as talking, self-driving, etc.) And their metal parts are much tougher. Probably indestructible.
Other than those categories of qualities, their capabilities
as a machine in alt mode, is pretty much defined by the function of the earth vehicles they copied themselves from. Such as cars can't fly, F-22 can't perform like a Saturn rocket, choppers can't take off without spinning their blades, and so on.
But if we are to go beyond what the 2007 Movie itself suggests, of course, the possibilities will be endless. And the super powers that you like them to have in alt mode can certainly be accounted for.