Okay, I've read some of the replies to the thread...and admittedly I got a little dizzy, partly from the controversy, and partly from being already frazzled between having finals on top of me and having a friend who's in the hospital and not doing too well.
So I'm going to mostly confine my remarks to the topic with only limited knowledge of what was posted before me. Sorry, I know...I generally get annoyed when people post without reading the topic through, but it's just been that kind of day, people.
In general, I'll say this: I can't wrap my head around it when people read something they know is
sci-fi and say they think it's "too farfetched." That's kind of the point. So what if we don't know how to (fill in the blank) right now; the idea is to speculate on a future where such things are possible through technology. And yes, there is even a fantasy element in Star Trek, due to all the creatures with powers they encounter from time to time. I can understand maybe finding stories more realistic if they're
inspired by what we can do now technologically, but I do feel it's overly dismissive to say it isn't any good if it isn't based on science we have today. To me that's akin to...I don't know...going down to Decon and complaining that there's too much sex. It's science
fiction.Now, if this is still about interspecies pregnancy...I don't have a fancy medical degree, but to be honest, almost this very topic came up between me and my high school biology teacher, who was a Trekkie. I had asked this in reference to Spock (yeah, for me high school was back in the stone age when there was only ONE series to follow and a handful of movies!). I have also discussed this topic with my mom, who is a registered nurse and was a whiz in all her biology courses (and a Trekkie!). So the conclusions I came to a long time ago go something like this: An accidental, medically unsupervised pregnancy CAN happen between a Vulcan and a human, however it's doubtful the mother would be able to carry it for very long. Sperm could fertilize egg just fine, but because of the "alien" elements, it's likely that the mother would miscarry before she even realized she was pregnant. Keep in mind this question was originally asked in context of the mother being a human woman (Amanda), so the way my mother explained it to me, miscarriages happen because it's nature's way of taking care of things when there's something really wrong with the baby, and it's common for women to miscarry very early on without really realizing it--it often gets blown off as a really bad period or something. Now, I suppose it's open for debate whether or not T'Pol menstruates like a human woman, but even so, it goes with the assumption that a Vulcan mother, too, would likely lose the pregnancy early on, because the body is designed to reject anything it perceives to be too damaged or foreign.
For this reason, I've always imagined a hybrid pregnancy to require lots of medical intervention--possibly test tube conception and genetic manipulation, and then implantation into the mother later. And lots of anti-rejection drugs.
Now, I know that people have mentioned complications like mom and baby having different species' blood. Humans have a similar thing that can happen within ourselves, when Rh incompatibility occurs. (Basically, mom and baby have different blood types.) According to what little research I've done on this subject, that isn't usually a problem during first pregnancies unless there's something wrong, mother's blood and baby's blood don't mix--that's all taken care of through the placenta. So in the case of a Vulcan/human hybrid, it would be logical to assume that some of the genetic manipulation has to do with making sure the placenta takes care of the Vulcan/human differences as it would account for blood type differences in a normal human pregnancy.
Then, this from the website I was reading:
However, during delivery, the mother's and baby's blood can intermingle. If this happens, the mother's body recognizes the Rh protein as a foreign substance and can begin producing antibodies (protein molecules in the immune system that recognize, and later work to destroy, foreign substances) against the Rh proteins introduced into her blood.
Other ways Rh-negative pregnant women can be exposed to the Rh protein that might cause antibody production include blood transfusions with Rh-positive blood, miscarriage, and ectopic pregnancy.
Rh antibodies are harmless until the mother's second or later pregnancies. If she is ever carrying another Rh-positive child, her Rh antibodies will recognize the Rh proteins on the surface of the baby's blood cells as foreign, and pass into the baby's bloodstream and attack those cells. This can lead to swelling and rupture of the baby's RBCs. A baby's blood count can get dangerously low when this condition, known as hemolytic or Rh disease of the newborn, occurs.
So it would be "logical" to assume a Vulcan woman's body may react similarly to a fetus with human blood.
Basically, it looks like with today's technology, this is prevented with some sort of anti-rejection drug, which dovetails nicely into the assumption for the need for anti-rejection drugs in the first place. If anyone's curious,
this site is what I was looking at, but all you have to do is google "Rh incompatibility" to get the information.
Basically, I'm all for an author using creative solutions around the problem of "we cant' do that with today's current technology," but I also agree with the notion that it's a little more realistic if these creative solutions are based in what we know or at least theorize to be true today. In the case of an "accidental" pregnancy, I'd have to be honest and say it would pull me out of the story if T'Pol were able to carry it to term just fine without any medical intervention beyond the standard prenatal checkups. I wouldn't be able to buy it if the problems inherent in the situation were just ignored, given what we know about human biology. (And keep in mind, I'm saying this as a lay person who just paid attention in school and not much more than that.)
And if an author says it's possible because of midichlorians, I'll just go off.
