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Talk:Cylon Spacecraft (RDM)/Archive 1: Difference between revisions

Discussion page of Cylon Spacecraft (RDM)/Archive 1
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Are the interiors of Raiders, Basestars, etc. truly "organic"?  I got the impression that they were synthetic; machines so advanced on a microscopic level that the overall "machine" is a "bio-chemical machine" rather than "organic".  I'm not sure on this so I don't want to make any "demands", but I would like to say that I'm worred that calling it "organic" would lead to confusion that they're somehow Cyborgs; I think they're more a step between purely mechanical Centurions and humanoid Cylons.  Perhaps "bio-mechanical" is a better term?  Discuss. --[[User:Ricimer|Ricimer]]
Are the interiors of Raiders, Basestars, etc. truly "organic"?  I got the impression that they were synthetic; machines so advanced on a microscopic level that the overall "machine" is a "bio-chemical machine" rather than "organic".  I'm not sure on this so I don't want to make any "demands", but I would like to say that I'm worred that calling it "organic" would lead to confusion that they're somehow Cyborgs; I think they're more a step between purely mechanical Centurions and humanoid Cylons.  Perhaps "bio-mechanical" is a better term?  Discuss. --[[User:Ricimer|Ricimer]]
:It's really just not very clear. I think using "organic" to make a point in opposition to "mechanical" is fine, but since we don't actually know whether or how those two elements interact, I'm a little averse to anything else. --[[User:Peter Farago|Peter Farago]] 21:50, 30 December 2005 (EST)

Revision as of 02:50, 31 December 2005

Are the interiors of Raiders, Basestars, etc. truly "organic"? I got the impression that they were synthetic; machines so advanced on a microscopic level that the overall "machine" is a "bio-chemical machine" rather than "organic". I'm not sure on this so I don't want to make any "demands", but I would like to say that I'm worred that calling it "organic" would lead to confusion that they're somehow Cyborgs; I think they're more a step between purely mechanical Centurions and humanoid Cylons. Perhaps "bio-mechanical" is a better term? Discuss. --Ricimer

It's really just not very clear. I think using "organic" to make a point in opposition to "mechanical" is fine, but since we don't actually know whether or how those two elements interact, I'm a little averse to anything else. --Peter Farago 21:50, 30 December 2005 (EST)