| ▲ | PurpleRamen a day ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> So instead of being in a medical approximation of your new gender, you really were that gender, with your old brain and all your memories intact. This implicates the brain and experience being genderless, which does not really seem to pass by today's understanding of it. But then again, the brain would probably also experience a very traumatic phase of body-adaption. There are many syndromes with people having strange feelings about the body they were born in, or missing parts of it; how awful would be to switch the whole body overnight and not having a long phase of adapting to it. Not sure if I would really call this elegant. But then again, body switching is quite common in SciFi, and those aspects are usually completely ignored. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | Freak_NL a day ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Not explaining something is not the same as ignoring it. You can't really explain technology which doesn't exist without risking getting it completely wrong as actual science moves along, or just harming the narrative by focusing on irrelevant details. If a society has advanced medical technology where changing your body is not just possible but broadly available, then it follows that they have solved any issues with rejection and adaptation. Nanobots constantly tweaking hormones? Your mind and memories simply layered over a virgin clone brain with everything set for whichever sex that body has? If the writer set out to explore that theme they might delve into it, otherwise all that matters is that it works and sounds plausible from within the context of the story. Scifi is about 'what if?' and how that affects people. 'What if money could buy a body of the opposite gender?' is all that is relevant. Similarly, we don't need to know how the huge space station capable of destroying a whole planet in a single shot works (unless you are a rebel princess), just that it does. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | B1FF_PSUVM 17 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> body switching is quite common in SciFi, and those aspects are usually completely ignored. I think it was Fredrik Pohl in Man Plus who got that part better sorted out - of course your body/physical experience shapes your brain. One of the Oliver Sacks stories (I know, his stock crashed recently) was about a man who had lost his vision as a toddler, and had it restored in midlife. Which tripped him badly. [ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_Plus , https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1993/05/10/to-see-and-not... ] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||