People tend to shit on clones, but who else can come up with a large enough army to defend the Republic?
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At 1/2^42 odds, you're unlikely to have a large enough army to man a V Wing, much less defend the Republic
Not even the Republic, it would appear.
The Confederacy of Independent Systems has far more BattleDroids than your Republic has Clones.
Defeat of the Republic is inevitable.
Yes but battle droids can't improvise!
It's unlikely to have ever happened.
2^42 is 25 times the total number of people ever born in all of history.
...i think it's quite a bit more than that
I had to check the math and I was surprised that 2^42 is “only” 4.4 trillion. Thought it would be a lot greater like there are less atoms in the universe similar to the uniqueness of a shuffled deck of cards.
Also, twins aren't identical copies either. Different fingerprint etc.
Fingerprints aren't genetically coded, and clones wouldn't have the same fingerprints, either.
I typically associate "clone" with "an exact copy", with the same exact molecular layout and even thoughts. So a literal exact copy. Clones on a DNA basis, so something possible for years, would indeed be different in some details.
The definition of "clone" you believe in is science fiction nonsense. Why believe in nonsense when the scientific definition of clone is different?
You didn't factor recombination. Nobody ever receives any of their parents' exact chromosomes, except the sex chromosomes from dad - each pair shuffles up the equivalent DNA between the 2 chromosomes, resulting in 2 chromosomes that are each a mix of both of that parent's chromosomes of that pair, one of which is passed on to the child for each pair for each parent.
Delete your account
Jesse, what the fuck are you talking about?
google chromosome crossing over
Yea the number is way higher than that
Holy genetic diversity
You mean googol?
Untrue, chromosomes also get shuffled during crossover
Well that's some cursed knowledge right there.
I figured this out while thinking about Red Dwarf. Canonically, Lister is his own father. How can his DNA remain stable across all the time loops if he's saturated his own ancestry with himself? This is the answer. It was a 1 in 2^42 chance the first time, but after that, the time loop preserves the coincidence and Lister ends up his own clone every time. He gets all his own DNA from himself every time, and then he just has to get the same DNA from his mum every time. The science is sound. It's tremendously unlikely, but in the infinity of the universe it had to happen eventually, assuming an infinite supply of time travellers banging their own mums.
You can also apply this logic to Futurama, Star Trek, and any other science fiction show with a grandfather paradox.
Great now I have to change accents in the 3rd panel.