Saturday, October 15, 2005





Fascinated by aberrant physiology? Click here for a quick fix.

The number of accessory or supernumerary glands varies: three pairs in one case, five milk-secreting organs in another, and eight glands in both sexes (1-2% of females and males) have been recorded. They are often asymmetrically placed and not uniformly developed. Comparative studies of the mammae in "lower animals" and the disposition of the supernumerary organs in the human subject suggest the probability that remote human ancestors normally possessed more than two glands; the occasional occurrence of the variant mammae in positions anticipated by the milk-ridges, rudimentary organs sometimes occupy very unusual locations, including the back, lateral thorax, neck, shoulder, inner aspect of the arm, axilla, buttocks, hip, thigh and labium majus.

(Via Aberrant News.)


How very Cronenbergian. And quite possibly a foretaste of future biotech fashions; we're probably only a few years from extra nipples being all the rage.

And then comes the era of cosmetic transgenics: humans endowed with suction cups, pincers, antennae, tails, exoskeletons, extra eyes, chromatophores. Within a decade or two we may be steeped in a "biopunk" milieu -- and not all of the modifications will be pure whimsy. It's not terribly difficult to imagine a genetic caste system arising, the human race fracturing into a sort of hive society complete with scurrying worker drones and decadent posthuman overlords -- Huxley's "Brave New World" on LSD.

This is, of course, exactly what Francis Fukuyama and his ilk are trying to prevent. But genetic modification, once it matures, will be as ubiquitous as body-piercing, and equally difficult to arrest should it be deemed illegal.

Neal Stephenson's "The Diamond Age" features commercial "mod parlors" where customers can have themselves upgraded with trendy cybernetic enhancements. Genetic modification may not be nearly so overt; a "package" could come bundled in the form of a designer virus or nanobot, invisible to society at large. It could even take the form of genetic "spam." (Imagine a population waking to the unpleasant fact that some malicious gene-hacker has deigned to gift them with a third arm or an eyestalk or two just for the unfettered surrealism of it.)

How might a society react to a rash of "mod plagues"? Maybe we'll simply go with the flow, becoming submissively polymorphic while the ruling class -- assuming there is one -- watches from a safe distance.

5 comments:

platts42 said...

Think about how slowly the transition is occuring. We already have a lot of mod going on now with plastic surgery, chemical enhancement and tattooing.

It will slip in gradually, and before you know it, your reality will be here. Alessandra can't wait. She really wants a tail.

Mac said...

I envision giant ants with human brains rebelling and attacking the White House! Yeah-yeah!

Anonymous said...

I remember thumbing through a crappy fantasy novel. It had a woman who had been modified so that her finger nails were iron instead of, well, what ever it is that nails are normally made of. Not going to bother looking up the correct name. The iron was drawn from her blood so she had to eat a LOT more read meat than normal. Whith a bit of sharpening they made nifty weapons.

What about a group of people altered with gills and webbing and organs that allow echo location. Cities, even nations of mer-maids and men.

The worse would be a person with a skin like that toad you can lick to get high. Real life of the party he would be.

Anonymous said...

I believe you can get fangs now. Porcelain replacements for your canines. Not as strong as the real thing however and I hear they tend to get in the way.

Having poison glands so I could spit it at a target like a cobra does would be nice though. Increased strength, reflexes, the nigh vision of a cat, nose of a bloodhound...ect.

Pretty soon you move into super hero territory.

A increase in the range of sounds that can be heard would effect music drastically. You would soon have music that normal folks could not appreciate. The down side is you would be able to hear the cars with the super bass stereo systems for about 50 miles. The entire city would constantly hum and buzz and thump.

Anonymous said...

i'd love to have fangs.. dead useful in eating steak..