I prick a holo-person. Do they bleed? Is that replicated? Can I use it for a transfusion?
It would be extremely painful.
I prick a holo-person. Do they bleed? Is that replicated? Can I use it for a transfusion?
Maybe 24th century people just aren't that observant?If anyone has ever been in a holodeck and unaware of it, there must be full taste and smell feedback.
The holodeck is part replicator anyway - any time a person is required to interact with something on the holodeck beyond simple touch, it's replicated. That's how Wesley got soaked when he fell in the water in Encounter at Farpoint, and why he stayed soaked after leaving - replicated water.
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This makes me think of the EMH and how when he is treating someone or hugging them or whatever, he is obviously solid and has a 'skinness' to him..but if he is punched by some villain, he goes full hologram and zaps out of solidity almost like a protection mechanism. So could there be a sense of the holographic technology de-solidifying itself in certain circumstances? Returning to a less complex state when its not needed oe would not be beneficial?We have seen "tactile" things that are probably replicated - snowballs and pieces of paper that leave the holodeck and do not lose consistency in the process. OTOH, we have seen equally "tactile" things that disappear when leaving the holodeck - the chair used to demonstrate to Moriarty the futility of leaving, the Dixon Hill gangsters whose fists, pistol butts and bullets felt quite real just moments before.
Does this mean everything is replicated and the computer then selectively dereplicates stuff if it thinks the user wants it to disappear, but refrains from dereplicating if this is the user's wont? Or that a surface layer to everything is replicated, and this is enough to allow a snowball to hit Picard or a piece of paper to survive indefinitely, but not enough to keep the bodies of the gangsters together when the forcefields and tractor beams no longer reach them in the corridor?
I'd assume it's even subtler than that, with a touch of replication here and there, but with the machinery producing just the desired partial effect of "matter" when plausible - just the warmth of the touch, the hint of a scent, a slight breeze or electric charge, all covering the hard forcefield with the impression of "skinness". Only in certain special cases does the computer do more, and typically it does much less, trying to exercise as little effort as it possibly can. It's not "all this" or "all that", just as theater or circus never is.
Timo Saloniemi
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