I was wondering, with the Grievous comic, whether transferring blood from a Jedi would give the recipient midichlorians? Since they exist in your cells, if you transferred blood from a heavy midichlorian person (ie Jedi) to a low midichlorian person, would that give them greater force affinity?
Is this how it is possible for Grievous to fight Jedi, in that he can 'use the force' to a certain extent (sensing a Jedi's attack)?
In Star Wars Adventure vol.3 (comics in same style as Clone Wars cartoon) there is a story where Grievous takes on both Durge and Assaj Ventriss in order to prove himself worthy to Dooku, and while he defeats them both, never displays any force powers......
It might be possible, but I don't think so with Grievous....gathering his hate for Jedi, he would probably die before getting a transfusion from one anyway....
didnt you read the comic? he used sifo dyas's blood.....
(this is on the assumption that the comic is how grievous becomes what he is....not that i believe it, but it its real....)
Take middle school science, then. That's where I figured it out - the names are way too similar to ignore the correlations. And if it dosn't sink in then, take high school, then college, and so on, and so forth, until you get tired of the same junk being shoved into your head.
or..maybe...i could not.....as ive never heard of that bacteria crap....and i dont want to...and maybe you could pull your head outta your ass and not give crap to us about something that isnt obvious to others.
You dont have to be a science geek for this one, Lucas has expained it ad nauseum. And I wasnt doing the sigh for the midi thing per se , cause I know it can be bit complicated, rather for the 14,000 thread on why GG is or is not force sensitive. Didnt mean to offend
OK brief explanation( i really thought this was common knowledge, sorry my bad) mitochondria are microscopic parts of each individual cell. They determine alot of our genetic makeup. Each person's is unique and is commonly used these days for DNA testing in crime solving.Just because you get a transfusion does not mean you begin to show characteristics of that persons genetic makeup, it just doesnt work that way. The difference is that the # of mitochondria you posess is in relation to the # of cells in you r body where as Lucas was saying that the # of midis varies from person to person and that is what determines their strength with the force. Hope that helps
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Last edited by kimmeh on Mar 21st, 2005 at 08:50 AM
Ah but you are quoting comics and not movie Mist.....
Miti's arent transferable.........
play nice men and no flamage of the billb , we have indeed discussed Grevious's force sensitivities alot. She wasnt flaming you, believe me you'd know it if she did.