| Return Create A Forum - Home | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| axglacieroutpost | |
| https://axglacieroutpost.createaforum.com | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| Return to: Medicine | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| #Post#: 101-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Stabilization Serums | |
| By: Oreo Date: February 7, 2014, 7:48 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "You spoke of knowing the Cabots for four hundred years, I | |
| said. Yes, said Misk, and your father who is a brave and noble | |
| man, has served us upon occasion, though he dealt only, | |
| unknowingly, with Implanted Ones. He first came to Gor more than | |
| six hundred years ago. Impossible! I cried. Not with the | |
| stabilization serums, remarked Misk." | |
| "Priest Kings of Gor" page 126 | |
| "Strangely, though it had now been six years since I left | |
| counter-earth, I can discover no signs of aging or physical | |
| alteration in my appearance. I have puzzled over this, trying to | |
| connect it with the mysterious letter, dated in the seventeenth | |
| century, ostensibly by my father, which I received in the blue | |
| envelope. Perhaps the serums of the Caste of Physicians so | |
| skilled on Gor, have something to do with this, but I cannot | |
| tell." | |
| "Tarnsman of Gor" page 218 | |
| "The Player was a rather old man, extremely unusual on Gor, | |
| where the stabilization serums were developed centuries ago by | |
| the Caste of Physicians in Ko-ro-ba and Ar, and transmitted to | |
| the Physicians of other cities at several of the Sardar Fairs. | |
| Age, on Gor, interestingly, was regarded, and still is, by the | |
| Castes of Physicians as a disease, not an inevitable natural | |
| phenomenon. The fact that it seemed to be a universal disease | |
| did not dissuade the caste from considering how it might be | |
| combated. Accordingly the research of centuries was turned to | |
| this end. Many other diseases, which presumably flourished | |
| centuries ago on Gor, tended to be neglected, as less dangerous | |
| and less universal than that of aging. A result tended to be | |
| that those susceptible to many diseases died and those less | |
| susceptible lived on, propagating their kind. One supposes | |
| something similar may have happened with the plagues of the | |
| Middle Ages on Earth. At any rate, disease is now almost unknown | |
| among the Gorean cities, with the exception of the dreaded | |
| Dar-Kosis disease, or the Holy Disease, research on which is | |
| generally frowned upon by the Caste of Initiates, who insist the | |
| disease is a visitation of the displeasure of Priest-Kings on | |
| its recipients. The fact that the disease tends to strike those | |
| who have maintained the observances recommended by the Caste of | |
| Initiates, and who regularly attend their numerous ceremonies, | |
| as well as those who do not, is seldom explained, though, when | |
| pressed, the Initiates speak of possible secret failures to | |
| maintain the observances or the inscrutable will of | |
| Priest-Kings. I also think the Gorean success in combating aging | |
| may be partly due to the severe limitations, in many matters, on | |
| the technology of the human beings on the planet. Priest-Kings | |
| have no wish that men become powerful enough on Gor to challenge | |
| them for the supremacy of the planet. They believe, perhaps | |
| correctly, that man is a shrewish animal which, if it had the | |
| power, would be likely to fear Priest-Kings and attempt to | |
| exterminate them. Be that as it may, the Priest-Kings have | |
| limited man severely on this planet in many respects, notably in | |
| weaponry, communication and transportation. On the other hand, | |
| the brilliance which men might have turned into destructive | |
| channels was then diverted, almost of necessity, to other | |
| fields, most notably medicine, though considerable achievements | |
| have been accomplished in the production of translation devices, | |
| illumination and architecture. The Stabilization Serums, which | |
| are regarded as the right of all human beings, be they civilized | |
| or barbarian, friend or enemy, are administered in a series of | |
| injections, and the effect is, incredibly, an eventual, gradual | |
| transformation of certain genetic structures, resulting in | |
| indefinite cell replacement without pattern deterioration. These | |
| genetic alterations, moreover, are commonly capable of being | |
| transmitted. For example, though I received the series of | |
| injections when first I came to Gor many years ago I had been | |
| told by Physicians that they might, in my case, have been | |
| unnecessary, for I was the child of parents who, though of | |
| Earth, had been of Gor, and had received the serums. But | |
| different human beings respond differently to the Stabilization | |
| Serums, and the Serums are more effective with some than with | |
| others. With some the effect lasts indefinitely, with others it | |
| wears off after but a few hundred years, with some the effect | |
| does not occur at all, with others, tragically, the effect is | |
| not to stabilize the pattern but to hasten its degeneration. The | |
| odds, however, are in the favor of the recipient, and there are | |
| few Goreans who, if it seems they need the Serum�s, do not avail | |
| themselves of them. The Player, as I have mentioned, was rather | |
| old, not extremely old but rather old." | |
| "Assassin of Gor" page 29/31 | |
| "They are administered in four shots ...said the Physician. | |
| ...The guard took me and threw me, belly down on the platform, | |
| fastening my wrists over my head and widely apart, in leather | |
| wrist straps. He similarly secured my ankles. The Physician | |
| busying himself with fluids and a syringe before a shelf in | |
| another part of the room laden with vials. I screamed. The shot | |
| was painful. It was entered in the small of my back, over the | |
| left hip. They left me secured on the table for several minutes | |
| and then the Physician returned to check the shot. There had | |
| been apparently no unusual reaction. ...On the first day I had | |
| been examined, given some minor medicines of little consequence, | |
| and the first shot in the Stabilization Series. On the second, | |
| third and fourth day I received the concluding shots of the | |
| series. On the fifth day the Physician took more samples. The | |
| serums are effective ...he told the guard." | |
| "Captive of Gor" page 93 | |
| "I had spent eight days in the slave pens, waiting the night of | |
| the sale. I had been examined medically, in detail, and had had | |
| administered to me, while I lay bound, helplessly, a series of | |
| painful shots, the purpose of which I did not understand. They | |
| were called the stabilization serums. We were also kept under | |
| harsh discipline, close confinement and given slave training". I | |
| well recalled the lesson which was constantly enforced upon us: | |
| "The master is all. Please him fully." | |
| "What is the meaning of the stabilization serums?" I had asked | |
| Sucha. She had kissed me. "They will keep you much as you are," | |
| she said, "young and beautiful." | |
| I had looked at her, startled. | |
| "The masters, and the free, of course, if there is need of it, | |
| you must understand, are also afforded serums of stabilization," | |
| she said adding, smiling, "though they are administered to them | |
| I suppose, with somewhat more respect than they are to a slave" | |
| "If there is need of it?" I asked. | |
| "Yes " she said. | |
| "Do some not require the serum'?" I asked. | |
| "Some, said Sucha, "but these individuals are rare, and are the | |
| offspring of individuals who have had the serums." | |
| "Why is this?" I asked. | |
| "I do not know," said Sucha "Men differ." | |
| The matter, I supposed, was a function of genetic subtleties, | |
| and the nature of differing gametes. The serums of stabilization | |
| effected, it seemed, the genetic codes, perhaps altering or | |
| neutralizing certain messages of deterioration, providing, I | |
| supposed, processes in which an exchange of materials could take | |
| place while tissue and cell patterns remained relatively | |
| constant. Ageing was a physical process and, as such, was | |
| susceptible to alteration by physical means. All physical | |
| processes are theoretically, reversible. Entropy itself is | |
| presumably a moment in a cosmic rhythm. The physicians of Gor, | |
| it seemed, had addressed themselves to the conquest conquest of | |
| what had hitherto been a universal disease called on Gor the | |
| drying and withering disease, called on Earth, ageing. | |
| Generations, of intensive research and experimentation had taken | |
| place. At last a few physicians drawing upon the accumulated | |
| data to hundreds of investigators, had achieved the | |
| breakthrough, devising the first primitive stabilization serums, | |
| later to be developed and exquisitely refined. I had stood in | |
| the rage startled, trembling. "Why are serums of such value | |
| given to slaves?" I asked. | |
| "Are they of such value?" she asked "Yes," she said, "I suppose | |
| so." She took them for granted, much as the humans of Earth | |
| might take for granted routine inoculations. She was unfamiliar | |
| with ageing. The alternative to the serums was not truly clear | |
| to her. "Why should slaves not be given the serums?" she asked. | |
| "Do the masters not want their slaves healthy and better able to | |
| serve them?" | |
| "Slave Girl of Gor" page 282 | |
| "In the first house of my slavery, I said, I was given a series | |
| of injections. I am curious about them. Were they innoculations | |
| against disease? I know those you mean, he said. No, they were | |
| the stabilization serums. We give them even to slaves. What are | |
| they? I asked. You do not know? he asked. No, I said. They are a | |
| discovery of the caste of physicians, he said. They work their | |
| effects on the body. What is their purpose? I asked. Is there | |
| anything in particular which strikes you generally, | |
| statistically, about the population of Gor? he asked. Their | |
| vitality, their health, their youth, I said. Those are | |
| consequences of the stabilization serums, he said. I do not | |
| understand, I said. You will retain your youth and beauty, | |
| curvaceous slave, he said. That is the will of masters. I do not | |
| understand, I said frightened. Ageing, he said, is a physical | |
| process, like any other. It is, accordingly, accessible to | |
| physical influences. To be sure, it is a subtle and complex | |
| process. It took a thousand years to developed the stabilization | |
| serums. Our physicians regarded ageing as a disease, the drying, | |
| withering disease, and so attacked it as a disease. They did not | |
| regard it as, say a curse, or a punishment, or something | |
| inalterable or inexplicable, say, assume sort of destined, | |
| implacable fatality. No. They regarded it as a physical problem, | |
| susceptible to physical approaches. Some five hundred years ago, | |
| they developed the first stabilization serums. How could I ever | |
| pay for such a thing! I gasped. There is no question of payment, | |
| he said. They are given to you as an animal, a slave. Master, I | |
| whispered, awed. Do not fret, he said. In the case of a woman | |
| from earth, like yourself, they are not free. Master? I asked. | |
| He took my collar in both hands, and moved it in such a way that | |
| I could feel how sturdily, and obdurately, it was locked on my | |
| neck. For a woman such as you, he said, their price is the | |
| collar." | |
| "Dancer of Gor" page 472 | |
| ***************************************************** |