I'm going to have to pull a few piecemeal quotes out of your post to respond in a coherent manner...
Tramp wrote:ctually Glyph, Simon wrote a good majority of the Marvle TF run. Bob Budyansky left pretty early on
Actually Tramp, Furman's earliest work on the US title was #56 of 80 - a little earlier than I'd initially thought it was, as I'd thought he joined in the early 60s and worked on the last quarter of the run. The title was still more than two-thirds of the way through its run when Furman did his first work for it.
Tramp wrote:It is only in the Marvel UK run where Arcee was created on Earth. In the rest of canon she was created on Cybertron, Also, the Marvel run, both UK and US ignores the fact that there are other female transformers that have existed long before Prime and the Autobots left for earth 4 millon years prior. The Marvel run conveniaently ignores this detail
The Marvel run doesn't conveniently 'ignore the fact' of the existence of 'female' Transformers. The comics exist in a separate and irreconcilable continuity from the cartoon, where the female Autobots appeared and were shown to have been around at Arklaunch. I believe, though I could be wrong, that there have been a few fembot-styled TFs in the background of Marvel stories, as well as the obvious inclusion of Arcee, but they will have their own version of the history.
As to Arcee, in the rest of 'canon' I don't believe it states where she was created. Your persistent use of "it doesn't contradict me so my imagination must be right!" in place of any actual evidence is getting wearing.
Tramp wrote:I am not picking and choosing. I am looking at the entirety of TF lore and looking at the commoin threads throughout the majority of it.
You most certainly are picking and choosing. For example, you're taking the existence of female Autobots and something that looks like romantic involvement in the 80s cartoon (one continuity), combining it with a very vague throwaway line about other ways to create Transformer life in Dreamwave's MTMTE (a separate, rebooted continuity) and inferring from it that Transformers must reproduce sexually.
Yet you're leaving out the parts of the cartoon where it's very clearly stated that Vector Sigma is required to give life to new Transformers, or where Shockwave believes the female Autobots to be long extinct, and the part of Arcee's MTMTE bio where Kup has to explain Arcee's 'resemblance to the females of other species'* because other TFs don't understand what's different about her (how can they reproduce sexually if they don't even have a concept of male and female?).
You can't just pick and choose the bits you want to use - if you take one thing from a continuity, you have to accept the rest of that continuity as well.
* Note how Kup, the seen-it-all old-timer with lots of offworld experience, describes Arcee as resembling a female rather than actually being a female herself?Tramp wrote:What common thread is there? that there are clear males and females, not masculine and feminine. Masculine and feminine are traits, Male and female are strictly biological. Look it up in the dictionary.
The common thread is that, in most TF continuities, there have been lots of bots who've been characteristically masculine and a very small number of bots who've been characteristically feminine. That does not support sexual reproduction on the level of a species (and the argument that the Quints made the fembots disappear doesn't hold up, because it's your inference from a single unfinished arc in one continuity only). If they
did reproduce sexually, then I would expect the scarcity of fembots to produce a matriarchal colony society similar to a beehive, or possibly a pride/harem tendency - but you don't see those in any of the continuities, do you?
Also, didn't you just completely destroy your own argument? Male and female, as you said, are strictly biological. The dictionary extract you posted defines them in terms of their biological function. Machines... are not biological, therefore the biological concept of male and female is meaningless in relation to them. QED.
Tramp wrote:Under synonyms, it states that the term "Male always refers to sex, while masculine refers to qualitiies properly associated with the male sex. Female also refers strictly to sexz while feminine refers to qualities associated with females.
According to every canon source, save the Marvel runs, the Transformers have males and females, not robots with masculine and feminine qualities... males and females.
It's quite obvious that the synonym you posted refers to the strict sense of the word. See the note at the end of my previous post about the usage in general, casual and nonscientific language.
Tramp wrote:When you have that many series and stories all agreeing on TF genders and the implications thereof, and only one run, the Marvel US and UK going against that, the proof is clear. For the majority of TF lore, sexual reproduction is possible and highly likely among Transformers. That is not "cheery-picking", that is weighing one side against another and seeing which side has more to back it up.
Unfortunately, your reasoning is fatally flawed because it entirely rests on your own inference from the material, and not on what was actually shown. Let's compare the Western continuities...
ContinuityDirect references to sexual reproductionDirect references to asexual reproductionCartoonNone. Some
weak implication via inter-TF romance in two episodes and flirting between Hot Rod and Arcee, and Wreck-gar is apparently married in one episode. However, note that Powerglide and Seaspray each display romantic attraction to
non-Transformer characters with whom they presumably could not possibly reproduce, scuppering the "they wouldn't be attracted except for reproduction" theory.
Lithonians are
not Cybertronians, and Wheelie's child-like appearance is never explained.
S.O.S. Dinobots: Wheeljack creates the Dinobots from components.
The Search for Alpha Trion: Optimus Prime realises that Alpha Trion must have been his
creator (note terminology) because he knows a specific and unique technical detail about his circuitry. A3 knows this same detail about Elita-One, and thus presumably created her as well - so if your reproduction theory is correct, Prime's so-called lover is his sister. Eww.
The Key to Vector Sigma: Megatron states that the megacomputer Vector Sigma 'gave us
all life' - it is arguable whether he is talking about 'all of us here in this room' or 'all of us Transformers'. Both Autobots and Decepticons state that Vector Sigma is required to give new Transformers life.
MarvelNone, whatsoever.Shockwave is unable to give life to his creations (Jetfire and the Constructicons) without the Creation Matrix held by Optimus Prime.
Optimus Prime, on multiple occasions, uses the Matrix to give life to new Transformers.
Cloudburst states unequivocally that Transformers do not mate.
Introduction of Primus, the Transformers' creator-god, establishes that the Matrix is the essence of Primus himself, and that creation of new Transformer life is therefore a pseudo-spiritual process.
G2 comics establish that prior to Matrix-fuelled creation, Transformers reproduced by cellular division.
Beast WarsNo direct reference. Tigatron / Airrazor and Silverbolt / Blackarachnia / Cheetor display romantic attraction; Rattrap makes various lewd comments relating to (among other examples) fembot waitresses walking around without their torso plates, and calls Blackarachnia an "emasculatin' fembot" when she "nips the tip" of his tail. Innuendo = quick laugh slipped into the kids' show for the benefit of the known adult fan contingent.The series establishes the existence of sparks as a requirement for Transformer life, and also establishes that they arise externally, not from within other Transformers.
Protoforms are introduced as the 'raw material' for new Transformers.
Beast MachinesNone. Again, some weak implication via romance between Blackarachnia / Silverbolt and Rattrap / Botanica.Megatron can only create drones, and is unable to create new Transformers without the use of captured sparks (even when he uses a captured spark, it is an existing Transformer in a new body, not a brand new Transformer).
Armada / Energon / CybertronNone. Some flirting between various characters, most notably involving Thunderblast.Eh... I dunno. Armada is tolerable at times, but I mostly avoid these series like the plague.
This is just what I can come up with off the top of my head. Which would you say is the better-supported position?
Tramp wrote:On top of that, there is the passage from TF MtMtE #8 stating that Cybertronians have other options for creatign new life aside from the use of manufactured protoforms.
... which actually only
suggests that there
may be other options, does not in any way suggest that any of those options involve sexual reproduction. In any case, it also states that whatever those options may be, Transformers don't currently understand how to use them. Doesn't that rather go against your repeated claim that sex must be their normal method of reproduction?
Again, you pick and choose the bits you like from your beloved Dreamwave guidebook, but ignore the bits which blatantly contradict your preferred theory (such as Arcee's bio, mentioned above, or the establishment of protoform + spark as the normal process in the same passage or in the section about sparks).
Basically, this whole issue of the point of fembots has
never been addressed in canon. I believe there's a host of evidence to say that, whatever the reason is, it's not sex; you clearly believe the opposite based on your own inferences. Therefore, in closing, I leave you with this final quote:
Bertrand Russell wrote:The most savage controversies are those about matters as to which there is no good evidence either way.