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What species should be used for storage of human minds?


How could a human and an animal swap minds?Should our emotion be a catalyst for magic?What emotions should my wizard keep?What a reasonable person should conclude from these circumstances?What is the minimum human body size needed for respiration?Human-fungus symbiotic speciesCan one individual be used to repopulate an entire species?Can E=MC2 be used when thinking about human strengthWhat wishes should a genie grant itself?Why can't different runes that enhance the human body be used together?













16












$begingroup$


The business of mind storage became a profitable one, after the discovery of a magical process that allows the memories and personality of a living being to be transferred into another body. Consciousnesses are stashed in animals (or rented humans, for the wealthy) while the body undergoes surgery. Dangerous prisoners suddenly become much easier to take care of. Falconry becomes an extremely popular hobby, although in a rather altered form. The process is easy and cheap, only requiring a trained mage to do it. While in another body, one is fully capable of controlling and using the host body as if it were one's own.



For the purposes of this question:




  • Any vertebrate is capable of holding one human mind for an unlimited amount of time.


  • Intelligence is not affected by one's current body, only by the original.


  • If the host dies, the mind stored in it is lost.


  • This takes place on modern day Earth.


  • The host's mind does not exist while another mind is using that body.



My question: Based on affordability, portability, safety, and other factors, what animal is overall the best option for a mind storage business (primarily for hospital patients with painful conditions)? For example, mice would probably not be a good choice, because they have a short lifespan and could be too risky to use.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Rivershard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Can the animals communicate? Where are they kept? Who protects them?
    $endgroup$
    – chasly from UK
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    Seems like people we like would get interesting and fun animals ("Mom, be a Zebra while they rebuild your hip and knees!"), while people we don't like would be lobsters and snails and eels and the like ("Look at my terrarium full of internet trolls turned into angry cockroaches!")
    $endgroup$
    – user535733
    22 hours ago








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The animals are kept in facilities specifically for that purpose, which are generally much nicer than a standard dog pound. These are staffed with some trained mages in case of emergency, and other staff to take care of the animals. As for communication, most of the mages are able to telepathically communicate with the clients, but there would also be a simple, universal system of signals- something like one stomp for yes, two stomps for no, one stomp with each foreleg and then nod your head for I'm-a-human-please-spare-me.
    $endgroup$
    – Rivershard
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    Too bad this has to be a vertebrate. I would gladly be stored in a tardigrade or explore the sea as an octopus. Out of pure curiosity, why setting the limit there?
    $endgroup$
    – Alexis
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    @user535733 turning an internet troll into a cockroach would be a step up for them.
    $endgroup$
    – Justin Thyme the Second
    21 hours ago
















16












$begingroup$


The business of mind storage became a profitable one, after the discovery of a magical process that allows the memories and personality of a living being to be transferred into another body. Consciousnesses are stashed in animals (or rented humans, for the wealthy) while the body undergoes surgery. Dangerous prisoners suddenly become much easier to take care of. Falconry becomes an extremely popular hobby, although in a rather altered form. The process is easy and cheap, only requiring a trained mage to do it. While in another body, one is fully capable of controlling and using the host body as if it were one's own.



For the purposes of this question:




  • Any vertebrate is capable of holding one human mind for an unlimited amount of time.


  • Intelligence is not affected by one's current body, only by the original.


  • If the host dies, the mind stored in it is lost.


  • This takes place on modern day Earth.


  • The host's mind does not exist while another mind is using that body.



My question: Based on affordability, portability, safety, and other factors, what animal is overall the best option for a mind storage business (primarily for hospital patients with painful conditions)? For example, mice would probably not be a good choice, because they have a short lifespan and could be too risky to use.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Rivershard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Can the animals communicate? Where are they kept? Who protects them?
    $endgroup$
    – chasly from UK
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    Seems like people we like would get interesting and fun animals ("Mom, be a Zebra while they rebuild your hip and knees!"), while people we don't like would be lobsters and snails and eels and the like ("Look at my terrarium full of internet trolls turned into angry cockroaches!")
    $endgroup$
    – user535733
    22 hours ago








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The animals are kept in facilities specifically for that purpose, which are generally much nicer than a standard dog pound. These are staffed with some trained mages in case of emergency, and other staff to take care of the animals. As for communication, most of the mages are able to telepathically communicate with the clients, but there would also be a simple, universal system of signals- something like one stomp for yes, two stomps for no, one stomp with each foreleg and then nod your head for I'm-a-human-please-spare-me.
    $endgroup$
    – Rivershard
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    Too bad this has to be a vertebrate. I would gladly be stored in a tardigrade or explore the sea as an octopus. Out of pure curiosity, why setting the limit there?
    $endgroup$
    – Alexis
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    @user535733 turning an internet troll into a cockroach would be a step up for them.
    $endgroup$
    – Justin Thyme the Second
    21 hours ago














16












16








16


5



$begingroup$


The business of mind storage became a profitable one, after the discovery of a magical process that allows the memories and personality of a living being to be transferred into another body. Consciousnesses are stashed in animals (or rented humans, for the wealthy) while the body undergoes surgery. Dangerous prisoners suddenly become much easier to take care of. Falconry becomes an extremely popular hobby, although in a rather altered form. The process is easy and cheap, only requiring a trained mage to do it. While in another body, one is fully capable of controlling and using the host body as if it were one's own.



For the purposes of this question:




  • Any vertebrate is capable of holding one human mind for an unlimited amount of time.


  • Intelligence is not affected by one's current body, only by the original.


  • If the host dies, the mind stored in it is lost.


  • This takes place on modern day Earth.


  • The host's mind does not exist while another mind is using that body.



My question: Based on affordability, portability, safety, and other factors, what animal is overall the best option for a mind storage business (primarily for hospital patients with painful conditions)? For example, mice would probably not be a good choice, because they have a short lifespan and could be too risky to use.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Rivershard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$




The business of mind storage became a profitable one, after the discovery of a magical process that allows the memories and personality of a living being to be transferred into another body. Consciousnesses are stashed in animals (or rented humans, for the wealthy) while the body undergoes surgery. Dangerous prisoners suddenly become much easier to take care of. Falconry becomes an extremely popular hobby, although in a rather altered form. The process is easy and cheap, only requiring a trained mage to do it. While in another body, one is fully capable of controlling and using the host body as if it were one's own.



For the purposes of this question:




  • Any vertebrate is capable of holding one human mind for an unlimited amount of time.


  • Intelligence is not affected by one's current body, only by the original.


  • If the host dies, the mind stored in it is lost.


  • This takes place on modern day Earth.


  • The host's mind does not exist while another mind is using that body.



My question: Based on affordability, portability, safety, and other factors, what animal is overall the best option for a mind storage business (primarily for hospital patients with painful conditions)? For example, mice would probably not be a good choice, because they have a short lifespan and could be too risky to use.







biology magic consciousness mind






share|improve this question









New contributor




Rivershard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Rivershard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 16 hours ago









Cyn

9,46612246




9,46612246






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asked 23 hours ago









RivershardRivershard

814




814




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New contributor





Rivershard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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Rivershard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • $begingroup$
    Can the animals communicate? Where are they kept? Who protects them?
    $endgroup$
    – chasly from UK
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    Seems like people we like would get interesting and fun animals ("Mom, be a Zebra while they rebuild your hip and knees!"), while people we don't like would be lobsters and snails and eels and the like ("Look at my terrarium full of internet trolls turned into angry cockroaches!")
    $endgroup$
    – user535733
    22 hours ago








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The animals are kept in facilities specifically for that purpose, which are generally much nicer than a standard dog pound. These are staffed with some trained mages in case of emergency, and other staff to take care of the animals. As for communication, most of the mages are able to telepathically communicate with the clients, but there would also be a simple, universal system of signals- something like one stomp for yes, two stomps for no, one stomp with each foreleg and then nod your head for I'm-a-human-please-spare-me.
    $endgroup$
    – Rivershard
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    Too bad this has to be a vertebrate. I would gladly be stored in a tardigrade or explore the sea as an octopus. Out of pure curiosity, why setting the limit there?
    $endgroup$
    – Alexis
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    @user535733 turning an internet troll into a cockroach would be a step up for them.
    $endgroup$
    – Justin Thyme the Second
    21 hours ago


















  • $begingroup$
    Can the animals communicate? Where are they kept? Who protects them?
    $endgroup$
    – chasly from UK
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    Seems like people we like would get interesting and fun animals ("Mom, be a Zebra while they rebuild your hip and knees!"), while people we don't like would be lobsters and snails and eels and the like ("Look at my terrarium full of internet trolls turned into angry cockroaches!")
    $endgroup$
    – user535733
    22 hours ago








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The animals are kept in facilities specifically for that purpose, which are generally much nicer than a standard dog pound. These are staffed with some trained mages in case of emergency, and other staff to take care of the animals. As for communication, most of the mages are able to telepathically communicate with the clients, but there would also be a simple, universal system of signals- something like one stomp for yes, two stomps for no, one stomp with each foreleg and then nod your head for I'm-a-human-please-spare-me.
    $endgroup$
    – Rivershard
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    Too bad this has to be a vertebrate. I would gladly be stored in a tardigrade or explore the sea as an octopus. Out of pure curiosity, why setting the limit there?
    $endgroup$
    – Alexis
    22 hours ago












  • $begingroup$
    @user535733 turning an internet troll into a cockroach would be a step up for them.
    $endgroup$
    – Justin Thyme the Second
    21 hours ago
















$begingroup$
Can the animals communicate? Where are they kept? Who protects them?
$endgroup$
– chasly from UK
22 hours ago






$begingroup$
Can the animals communicate? Where are they kept? Who protects them?
$endgroup$
– chasly from UK
22 hours ago














$begingroup$
Seems like people we like would get interesting and fun animals ("Mom, be a Zebra while they rebuild your hip and knees!"), while people we don't like would be lobsters and snails and eels and the like ("Look at my terrarium full of internet trolls turned into angry cockroaches!")
$endgroup$
– user535733
22 hours ago






$begingroup$
Seems like people we like would get interesting and fun animals ("Mom, be a Zebra while they rebuild your hip and knees!"), while people we don't like would be lobsters and snails and eels and the like ("Look at my terrarium full of internet trolls turned into angry cockroaches!")
$endgroup$
– user535733
22 hours ago






1




1




$begingroup$
The animals are kept in facilities specifically for that purpose, which are generally much nicer than a standard dog pound. These are staffed with some trained mages in case of emergency, and other staff to take care of the animals. As for communication, most of the mages are able to telepathically communicate with the clients, but there would also be a simple, universal system of signals- something like one stomp for yes, two stomps for no, one stomp with each foreleg and then nod your head for I'm-a-human-please-spare-me.
$endgroup$
– Rivershard
22 hours ago






$begingroup$
The animals are kept in facilities specifically for that purpose, which are generally much nicer than a standard dog pound. These are staffed with some trained mages in case of emergency, and other staff to take care of the animals. As for communication, most of the mages are able to telepathically communicate with the clients, but there would also be a simple, universal system of signals- something like one stomp for yes, two stomps for no, one stomp with each foreleg and then nod your head for I'm-a-human-please-spare-me.
$endgroup$
– Rivershard
22 hours ago














$begingroup$
Too bad this has to be a vertebrate. I would gladly be stored in a tardigrade or explore the sea as an octopus. Out of pure curiosity, why setting the limit there?
$endgroup$
– Alexis
22 hours ago






$begingroup$
Too bad this has to be a vertebrate. I would gladly be stored in a tardigrade or explore the sea as an octopus. Out of pure curiosity, why setting the limit there?
$endgroup$
– Alexis
22 hours ago














$begingroup$
@user535733 turning an internet troll into a cockroach would be a step up for them.
$endgroup$
– Justin Thyme the Second
21 hours ago




$begingroup$
@user535733 turning an internet troll into a cockroach would be a step up for them.
$endgroup$
– Justin Thyme the Second
21 hours ago










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















16












$begingroup$


«primarily for hospital patients with painful conditions»




Assuming they are going to recover.



Turtles. Very sturdy, easy and cheap to keep, long-lived. You can also reduce their metabolism and keep them lethargic.



Otherwise, dogs. Not so cheap, and require way more space. At the same time, they're more active and could supply more enjoyable experiences.



In the long run, probably the law would start including sentences to temporary obliteration for those crimes where rehabilitation is either unlikely or pointless. In those cases, criminals would be sentenced to a certain period of time during which their bodies would be occupied by someone else. Since the new occupant is a productive member of society, and the criminal is, to all intents and purposes, nowhere, less prisons are needed. So, another possibility becomes «humans».






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$









  • 4




    $begingroup$
    People love dogs and dogs love people. A dog would be an excellent choice, especially since they are often allowed where humans are allowed and can thus spend time with family. Humans are also quite good at understanding dogs' body language. I'd feel sorry for the poor pupper who doesn't get to live its life during that period though. They are so full of love and taking their lifetime away from them so that humans can inhabit their bodies is too sad to think about.
    $endgroup$
    – Kapten-N
    5 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    If microscopic animals are valid, the tardigrade may be a good contender to the turtle. They are incredibly resilient. And while they only live for a few months, they have been known to dehydrate themselves for over a decade without dying. By comparison, turtles are still prone to die due to unforeseen circumstances (e.g. a cupboard falling over).
    $endgroup$
    – Flater
    31 mins ago



















14












$begingroup$

As much as there might be a trade in recreationally adopting the form of a golden eagle or a porpoise. A very safe and efishent storage vessle would be the goldfish:



enter image description here



Wikipedia 2019 CCSAL- Licence



Lifespan 5-10 years, small and easy to feed and house, cheap to replace when obsolete.



In a cash-strapped society this would be suitable for low value citizens, welfare-state cases or prisoners.



African Grey Parrot.



When the economy permits.:



enter image description here



Wikipedia 2019 CCSAA Licence



With a 40 to 60 year lifespan and the ability to communicate in recognisable human speach (not to mention fly) this would be a great option.



The better off citizens would I'm sure be given the choice of their preferred animal from among a suite available at each medical facility.



Ultimatley, the law of supply and demand will allow people to become whatever they want. There might be some illegal options such as an adult mayfly (too short a lifespan) or a planarians (people would be able to infinitely clone themselves and their memories at will) but commerce will prevail, it always does.



Commercial concerns.



Where commerce is concerned, fads and fashions will I'm sure come and go, the fallback option in times of financial chrisis will be the expedient and cheapest - the old goldfish.



Addendum:



Hospital administrators could find that there developes an illicit trade in revenge-consciousness transfers - "Do you know someone you'd like to see as a cockroach dancing on a hot tin-lid? We have the answer."



Society would then, of course need to cope with the illicit trade in body upgrades and people turning up at police stations claiming to be someone else. Interesting issues your world throws up.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Errr.... I thought the question is about "vertebrate" alone?
    $endgroup$
    – Nam Nguyen Hoang
    5 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @NamNguyenHoang Oops, I didn't notice that. I suppose that I could change caterpillar to goldfish or some such.
    $endgroup$
    – Agrajag
    5 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    Swap the roaches to mice or something thought of as degrading too, while you're at it
    $endgroup$
    – Nam Nguyen Hoang
    5 hours ago



















7












$begingroup$

Pigs.



The pig anatomy is very close to our own. Even the pig nervous system and brain structures are very close to human. Pigs even have a similar social structure.



So it would be a short acclimatization period for the human 'mind' to adjust to the new surroundings and body.



The biggest relearning curve would be walking on four legs vs two.



The drawback is the shorter life span of the pig - 15 to 20 years potential.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$





















    2












    $begingroup$

    How has no one said ape or chimpanzee yet? They're the animals already most similar to humans.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    Will is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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    $endgroup$









    • 1




      $begingroup$
      Hi Will, welcome to Worldbuilding. This kind of reply is best suited to commenting rather than an answer. Although, if I remember correctly you may not be able to comment since you're new...
      $endgroup$
      – Arkenstein XII
      11 hours ago






    • 2




      $begingroup$
      @ArkensteinXII I disagree. This is an answer. It concretely answers the question, and gives one reason to explain itself. This is not suitable for a comment, as answers should not be posted in the form of comments. Now, you may argue that this answer is too short or needs more reasoning, and that is another story. However, this is indeed an answer, not a comment.
      $endgroup$
      – Revetahw
      6 hours ago






    • 2




      $begingroup$
      @Will - I agree that apes could be a good idea but for a complete answer I think you need to say why similarity to human beings is an important factor. I'm sure there are many reasons but to judge the correctness of your answer we need to be persuaded.
      $endgroup$
      – chasly from UK
      4 hours ago



















    1












    $begingroup$

    Mantis Shrimp, for the wealthy



    Although the idea of being a shrimp seems weird, the experience will surely be worthwhile, and should keep them entertained for the duration of their habitation.



    Being a Mantis Shrimp would be cool for a couple reasons:




    • The claws of certain species can accelerate to 83 km/h, and hit with an impact of 1500 N. This is so fast and powerful even the shock waves can kill prey, and the claw itself can destroy aquarium glass in some species.

    • They have the most advanced natural visual system that we know of, anywhere. Some species of 16 different color preceptors, meaning that you would need to mix 16 primary colors to simulate colors accurately for them. From their point of view, we have a severe decatotritotan form of color blindness. This means that they perceive qualitatively more colors than humans. Their vision also extends into infrared and ultraviolet. They also see all qualities of polarization, whereas we see none (except linear polarization very slightly). Finally, their eyes can point in any two directions, and each have individual depth perception.

    • To go along with the last point, their bodies can produce color willfully, being able to produce nearly any color they can see. 16 dimensional color vision and color production would surely be a boon for artists!


    So, I think being a mantis shrimp would be rather fun.






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$













    • $begingroup$
      Shrimp are invertebrate though, right?
      $endgroup$
      – npostavs
      31 mins ago



















    0












    $begingroup$

    There isn't one answer, because you are applying the idea to different situations.



    Prisoners



    Used as punishment, you want something that's easy to handle, not dangerous and having big troubles running away. So something small, harmless and slow is best. Snails are out (not vertebrates), but there are also really small frogs, or of course, fish. Fish are generally easy to keep and can't run away due to lack of legs. Aquarium, done. You want to pick a species with a life expectancy higher than the prison sentence, or change bodies every few years.



    Hospitals



    Completely different requirements. You need something that is comfortable for the patient for a limited time. My best idea is cats. They sleep a lot (about 16 hours a day) but when they're awake, from what I see they are having fun, they are quite sturdy for their size and can reach places and do things that neither humans nor most other animals can. However, that would only be your default offer, because patients would most likely want a choice. Many people will want to fly, so you'll probably have some birds on offer as well as flying lessons.






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$













      Your Answer





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      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

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      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

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      active

      oldest

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      16












      $begingroup$


      «primarily for hospital patients with painful conditions»




      Assuming they are going to recover.



      Turtles. Very sturdy, easy and cheap to keep, long-lived. You can also reduce their metabolism and keep them lethargic.



      Otherwise, dogs. Not so cheap, and require way more space. At the same time, they're more active and could supply more enjoyable experiences.



      In the long run, probably the law would start including sentences to temporary obliteration for those crimes where rehabilitation is either unlikely or pointless. In those cases, criminals would be sentenced to a certain period of time during which their bodies would be occupied by someone else. Since the new occupant is a productive member of society, and the criminal is, to all intents and purposes, nowhere, less prisons are needed. So, another possibility becomes «humans».






      share|improve this answer











      $endgroup$









      • 4




        $begingroup$
        People love dogs and dogs love people. A dog would be an excellent choice, especially since they are often allowed where humans are allowed and can thus spend time with family. Humans are also quite good at understanding dogs' body language. I'd feel sorry for the poor pupper who doesn't get to live its life during that period though. They are so full of love and taking their lifetime away from them so that humans can inhabit their bodies is too sad to think about.
        $endgroup$
        – Kapten-N
        5 hours ago










      • $begingroup$
        If microscopic animals are valid, the tardigrade may be a good contender to the turtle. They are incredibly resilient. And while they only live for a few months, they have been known to dehydrate themselves for over a decade without dying. By comparison, turtles are still prone to die due to unforeseen circumstances (e.g. a cupboard falling over).
        $endgroup$
        – Flater
        31 mins ago
















      16












      $begingroup$


      «primarily for hospital patients with painful conditions»




      Assuming they are going to recover.



      Turtles. Very sturdy, easy and cheap to keep, long-lived. You can also reduce their metabolism and keep them lethargic.



      Otherwise, dogs. Not so cheap, and require way more space. At the same time, they're more active and could supply more enjoyable experiences.



      In the long run, probably the law would start including sentences to temporary obliteration for those crimes where rehabilitation is either unlikely or pointless. In those cases, criminals would be sentenced to a certain period of time during which their bodies would be occupied by someone else. Since the new occupant is a productive member of society, and the criminal is, to all intents and purposes, nowhere, less prisons are needed. So, another possibility becomes «humans».






      share|improve this answer











      $endgroup$









      • 4




        $begingroup$
        People love dogs and dogs love people. A dog would be an excellent choice, especially since they are often allowed where humans are allowed and can thus spend time with family. Humans are also quite good at understanding dogs' body language. I'd feel sorry for the poor pupper who doesn't get to live its life during that period though. They are so full of love and taking their lifetime away from them so that humans can inhabit their bodies is too sad to think about.
        $endgroup$
        – Kapten-N
        5 hours ago










      • $begingroup$
        If microscopic animals are valid, the tardigrade may be a good contender to the turtle. They are incredibly resilient. And while they only live for a few months, they have been known to dehydrate themselves for over a decade without dying. By comparison, turtles are still prone to die due to unforeseen circumstances (e.g. a cupboard falling over).
        $endgroup$
        – Flater
        31 mins ago














      16












      16








      16





      $begingroup$


      «primarily for hospital patients with painful conditions»




      Assuming they are going to recover.



      Turtles. Very sturdy, easy and cheap to keep, long-lived. You can also reduce their metabolism and keep them lethargic.



      Otherwise, dogs. Not so cheap, and require way more space. At the same time, they're more active and could supply more enjoyable experiences.



      In the long run, probably the law would start including sentences to temporary obliteration for those crimes where rehabilitation is either unlikely or pointless. In those cases, criminals would be sentenced to a certain period of time during which their bodies would be occupied by someone else. Since the new occupant is a productive member of society, and the criminal is, to all intents and purposes, nowhere, less prisons are needed. So, another possibility becomes «humans».






      share|improve this answer











      $endgroup$




      «primarily for hospital patients with painful conditions»




      Assuming they are going to recover.



      Turtles. Very sturdy, easy and cheap to keep, long-lived. You can also reduce their metabolism and keep them lethargic.



      Otherwise, dogs. Not so cheap, and require way more space. At the same time, they're more active and could supply more enjoyable experiences.



      In the long run, probably the law would start including sentences to temporary obliteration for those crimes where rehabilitation is either unlikely or pointless. In those cases, criminals would be sentenced to a certain period of time during which their bodies would be occupied by someone else. Since the new occupant is a productive member of society, and the criminal is, to all intents and purposes, nowhere, less prisons are needed. So, another possibility becomes «humans».







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 4 hours ago

























      answered 22 hours ago









      LSerniLSerni

      27.5k24787




      27.5k24787








      • 4




        $begingroup$
        People love dogs and dogs love people. A dog would be an excellent choice, especially since they are often allowed where humans are allowed and can thus spend time with family. Humans are also quite good at understanding dogs' body language. I'd feel sorry for the poor pupper who doesn't get to live its life during that period though. They are so full of love and taking their lifetime away from them so that humans can inhabit their bodies is too sad to think about.
        $endgroup$
        – Kapten-N
        5 hours ago










      • $begingroup$
        If microscopic animals are valid, the tardigrade may be a good contender to the turtle. They are incredibly resilient. And while they only live for a few months, they have been known to dehydrate themselves for over a decade without dying. By comparison, turtles are still prone to die due to unforeseen circumstances (e.g. a cupboard falling over).
        $endgroup$
        – Flater
        31 mins ago














      • 4




        $begingroup$
        People love dogs and dogs love people. A dog would be an excellent choice, especially since they are often allowed where humans are allowed and can thus spend time with family. Humans are also quite good at understanding dogs' body language. I'd feel sorry for the poor pupper who doesn't get to live its life during that period though. They are so full of love and taking their lifetime away from them so that humans can inhabit their bodies is too sad to think about.
        $endgroup$
        – Kapten-N
        5 hours ago










      • $begingroup$
        If microscopic animals are valid, the tardigrade may be a good contender to the turtle. They are incredibly resilient. And while they only live for a few months, they have been known to dehydrate themselves for over a decade without dying. By comparison, turtles are still prone to die due to unforeseen circumstances (e.g. a cupboard falling over).
        $endgroup$
        – Flater
        31 mins ago








      4




      4




      $begingroup$
      People love dogs and dogs love people. A dog would be an excellent choice, especially since they are often allowed where humans are allowed and can thus spend time with family. Humans are also quite good at understanding dogs' body language. I'd feel sorry for the poor pupper who doesn't get to live its life during that period though. They are so full of love and taking their lifetime away from them so that humans can inhabit their bodies is too sad to think about.
      $endgroup$
      – Kapten-N
      5 hours ago




      $begingroup$
      People love dogs and dogs love people. A dog would be an excellent choice, especially since they are often allowed where humans are allowed and can thus spend time with family. Humans are also quite good at understanding dogs' body language. I'd feel sorry for the poor pupper who doesn't get to live its life during that period though. They are so full of love and taking their lifetime away from them so that humans can inhabit their bodies is too sad to think about.
      $endgroup$
      – Kapten-N
      5 hours ago












      $begingroup$
      If microscopic animals are valid, the tardigrade may be a good contender to the turtle. They are incredibly resilient. And while they only live for a few months, they have been known to dehydrate themselves for over a decade without dying. By comparison, turtles are still prone to die due to unforeseen circumstances (e.g. a cupboard falling over).
      $endgroup$
      – Flater
      31 mins ago




      $begingroup$
      If microscopic animals are valid, the tardigrade may be a good contender to the turtle. They are incredibly resilient. And while they only live for a few months, they have been known to dehydrate themselves for over a decade without dying. By comparison, turtles are still prone to die due to unforeseen circumstances (e.g. a cupboard falling over).
      $endgroup$
      – Flater
      31 mins ago











      14












      $begingroup$

      As much as there might be a trade in recreationally adopting the form of a golden eagle or a porpoise. A very safe and efishent storage vessle would be the goldfish:



      enter image description here



      Wikipedia 2019 CCSAL- Licence



      Lifespan 5-10 years, small and easy to feed and house, cheap to replace when obsolete.



      In a cash-strapped society this would be suitable for low value citizens, welfare-state cases or prisoners.



      African Grey Parrot.



      When the economy permits.:



      enter image description here



      Wikipedia 2019 CCSAA Licence



      With a 40 to 60 year lifespan and the ability to communicate in recognisable human speach (not to mention fly) this would be a great option.



      The better off citizens would I'm sure be given the choice of their preferred animal from among a suite available at each medical facility.



      Ultimatley, the law of supply and demand will allow people to become whatever they want. There might be some illegal options such as an adult mayfly (too short a lifespan) or a planarians (people would be able to infinitely clone themselves and their memories at will) but commerce will prevail, it always does.



      Commercial concerns.



      Where commerce is concerned, fads and fashions will I'm sure come and go, the fallback option in times of financial chrisis will be the expedient and cheapest - the old goldfish.



      Addendum:



      Hospital administrators could find that there developes an illicit trade in revenge-consciousness transfers - "Do you know someone you'd like to see as a cockroach dancing on a hot tin-lid? We have the answer."



      Society would then, of course need to cope with the illicit trade in body upgrades and people turning up at police stations claiming to be someone else. Interesting issues your world throws up.






      share|improve this answer











      $endgroup$













      • $begingroup$
        Errr.... I thought the question is about "vertebrate" alone?
        $endgroup$
        – Nam Nguyen Hoang
        5 hours ago






      • 1




        $begingroup$
        @NamNguyenHoang Oops, I didn't notice that. I suppose that I could change caterpillar to goldfish or some such.
        $endgroup$
        – Agrajag
        5 hours ago










      • $begingroup$
        Swap the roaches to mice or something thought of as degrading too, while you're at it
        $endgroup$
        – Nam Nguyen Hoang
        5 hours ago
















      14












      $begingroup$

      As much as there might be a trade in recreationally adopting the form of a golden eagle or a porpoise. A very safe and efishent storage vessle would be the goldfish:



      enter image description here



      Wikipedia 2019 CCSAL- Licence



      Lifespan 5-10 years, small and easy to feed and house, cheap to replace when obsolete.



      In a cash-strapped society this would be suitable for low value citizens, welfare-state cases or prisoners.



      African Grey Parrot.



      When the economy permits.:



      enter image description here



      Wikipedia 2019 CCSAA Licence



      With a 40 to 60 year lifespan and the ability to communicate in recognisable human speach (not to mention fly) this would be a great option.



      The better off citizens would I'm sure be given the choice of their preferred animal from among a suite available at each medical facility.



      Ultimatley, the law of supply and demand will allow people to become whatever they want. There might be some illegal options such as an adult mayfly (too short a lifespan) or a planarians (people would be able to infinitely clone themselves and their memories at will) but commerce will prevail, it always does.



      Commercial concerns.



      Where commerce is concerned, fads and fashions will I'm sure come and go, the fallback option in times of financial chrisis will be the expedient and cheapest - the old goldfish.



      Addendum:



      Hospital administrators could find that there developes an illicit trade in revenge-consciousness transfers - "Do you know someone you'd like to see as a cockroach dancing on a hot tin-lid? We have the answer."



      Society would then, of course need to cope with the illicit trade in body upgrades and people turning up at police stations claiming to be someone else. Interesting issues your world throws up.






      share|improve this answer











      $endgroup$













      • $begingroup$
        Errr.... I thought the question is about "vertebrate" alone?
        $endgroup$
        – Nam Nguyen Hoang
        5 hours ago






      • 1




        $begingroup$
        @NamNguyenHoang Oops, I didn't notice that. I suppose that I could change caterpillar to goldfish or some such.
        $endgroup$
        – Agrajag
        5 hours ago










      • $begingroup$
        Swap the roaches to mice or something thought of as degrading too, while you're at it
        $endgroup$
        – Nam Nguyen Hoang
        5 hours ago














      14












      14








      14





      $begingroup$

      As much as there might be a trade in recreationally adopting the form of a golden eagle or a porpoise. A very safe and efishent storage vessle would be the goldfish:



      enter image description here



      Wikipedia 2019 CCSAL- Licence



      Lifespan 5-10 years, small and easy to feed and house, cheap to replace when obsolete.



      In a cash-strapped society this would be suitable for low value citizens, welfare-state cases or prisoners.



      African Grey Parrot.



      When the economy permits.:



      enter image description here



      Wikipedia 2019 CCSAA Licence



      With a 40 to 60 year lifespan and the ability to communicate in recognisable human speach (not to mention fly) this would be a great option.



      The better off citizens would I'm sure be given the choice of their preferred animal from among a suite available at each medical facility.



      Ultimatley, the law of supply and demand will allow people to become whatever they want. There might be some illegal options such as an adult mayfly (too short a lifespan) or a planarians (people would be able to infinitely clone themselves and their memories at will) but commerce will prevail, it always does.



      Commercial concerns.



      Where commerce is concerned, fads and fashions will I'm sure come and go, the fallback option in times of financial chrisis will be the expedient and cheapest - the old goldfish.



      Addendum:



      Hospital administrators could find that there developes an illicit trade in revenge-consciousness transfers - "Do you know someone you'd like to see as a cockroach dancing on a hot tin-lid? We have the answer."



      Society would then, of course need to cope with the illicit trade in body upgrades and people turning up at police stations claiming to be someone else. Interesting issues your world throws up.






      share|improve this answer











      $endgroup$



      As much as there might be a trade in recreationally adopting the form of a golden eagle or a porpoise. A very safe and efishent storage vessle would be the goldfish:



      enter image description here



      Wikipedia 2019 CCSAL- Licence



      Lifespan 5-10 years, small and easy to feed and house, cheap to replace when obsolete.



      In a cash-strapped society this would be suitable for low value citizens, welfare-state cases or prisoners.



      African Grey Parrot.



      When the economy permits.:



      enter image description here



      Wikipedia 2019 CCSAA Licence



      With a 40 to 60 year lifespan and the ability to communicate in recognisable human speach (not to mention fly) this would be a great option.



      The better off citizens would I'm sure be given the choice of their preferred animal from among a suite available at each medical facility.



      Ultimatley, the law of supply and demand will allow people to become whatever they want. There might be some illegal options such as an adult mayfly (too short a lifespan) or a planarians (people would be able to infinitely clone themselves and their memories at will) but commerce will prevail, it always does.



      Commercial concerns.



      Where commerce is concerned, fads and fashions will I'm sure come and go, the fallback option in times of financial chrisis will be the expedient and cheapest - the old goldfish.



      Addendum:



      Hospital administrators could find that there developes an illicit trade in revenge-consciousness transfers - "Do you know someone you'd like to see as a cockroach dancing on a hot tin-lid? We have the answer."



      Society would then, of course need to cope with the illicit trade in body upgrades and people turning up at police stations claiming to be someone else. Interesting issues your world throws up.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 5 hours ago

























      answered 22 hours ago









      AgrajagAgrajag

      4,798837




      4,798837












      • $begingroup$
        Errr.... I thought the question is about "vertebrate" alone?
        $endgroup$
        – Nam Nguyen Hoang
        5 hours ago






      • 1




        $begingroup$
        @NamNguyenHoang Oops, I didn't notice that. I suppose that I could change caterpillar to goldfish or some such.
        $endgroup$
        – Agrajag
        5 hours ago










      • $begingroup$
        Swap the roaches to mice or something thought of as degrading too, while you're at it
        $endgroup$
        – Nam Nguyen Hoang
        5 hours ago


















      • $begingroup$
        Errr.... I thought the question is about "vertebrate" alone?
        $endgroup$
        – Nam Nguyen Hoang
        5 hours ago






      • 1




        $begingroup$
        @NamNguyenHoang Oops, I didn't notice that. I suppose that I could change caterpillar to goldfish or some such.
        $endgroup$
        – Agrajag
        5 hours ago










      • $begingroup$
        Swap the roaches to mice or something thought of as degrading too, while you're at it
        $endgroup$
        – Nam Nguyen Hoang
        5 hours ago
















      $begingroup$
      Errr.... I thought the question is about "vertebrate" alone?
      $endgroup$
      – Nam Nguyen Hoang
      5 hours ago




      $begingroup$
      Errr.... I thought the question is about "vertebrate" alone?
      $endgroup$
      – Nam Nguyen Hoang
      5 hours ago




      1




      1




      $begingroup$
      @NamNguyenHoang Oops, I didn't notice that. I suppose that I could change caterpillar to goldfish or some such.
      $endgroup$
      – Agrajag
      5 hours ago




      $begingroup$
      @NamNguyenHoang Oops, I didn't notice that. I suppose that I could change caterpillar to goldfish or some such.
      $endgroup$
      – Agrajag
      5 hours ago












      $begingroup$
      Swap the roaches to mice or something thought of as degrading too, while you're at it
      $endgroup$
      – Nam Nguyen Hoang
      5 hours ago




      $begingroup$
      Swap the roaches to mice or something thought of as degrading too, while you're at it
      $endgroup$
      – Nam Nguyen Hoang
      5 hours ago











      7












      $begingroup$

      Pigs.



      The pig anatomy is very close to our own. Even the pig nervous system and brain structures are very close to human. Pigs even have a similar social structure.



      So it would be a short acclimatization period for the human 'mind' to adjust to the new surroundings and body.



      The biggest relearning curve would be walking on four legs vs two.



      The drawback is the shorter life span of the pig - 15 to 20 years potential.






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$


















        7












        $begingroup$

        Pigs.



        The pig anatomy is very close to our own. Even the pig nervous system and brain structures are very close to human. Pigs even have a similar social structure.



        So it would be a short acclimatization period for the human 'mind' to adjust to the new surroundings and body.



        The biggest relearning curve would be walking on four legs vs two.



        The drawback is the shorter life span of the pig - 15 to 20 years potential.






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$
















          7












          7








          7





          $begingroup$

          Pigs.



          The pig anatomy is very close to our own. Even the pig nervous system and brain structures are very close to human. Pigs even have a similar social structure.



          So it would be a short acclimatization period for the human 'mind' to adjust to the new surroundings and body.



          The biggest relearning curve would be walking on four legs vs two.



          The drawback is the shorter life span of the pig - 15 to 20 years potential.






          share|improve this answer









          $endgroup$



          Pigs.



          The pig anatomy is very close to our own. Even the pig nervous system and brain structures are very close to human. Pigs even have a similar social structure.



          So it would be a short acclimatization period for the human 'mind' to adjust to the new surroundings and body.



          The biggest relearning curve would be walking on four legs vs two.



          The drawback is the shorter life span of the pig - 15 to 20 years potential.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 21 hours ago









          Justin Thyme the SecondJustin Thyme the Second

          3925




          3925























              2












              $begingroup$

              How has no one said ape or chimpanzee yet? They're the animals already most similar to humans.






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Will is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.






              $endgroup$









              • 1




                $begingroup$
                Hi Will, welcome to Worldbuilding. This kind of reply is best suited to commenting rather than an answer. Although, if I remember correctly you may not be able to comment since you're new...
                $endgroup$
                – Arkenstein XII
                11 hours ago






              • 2




                $begingroup$
                @ArkensteinXII I disagree. This is an answer. It concretely answers the question, and gives one reason to explain itself. This is not suitable for a comment, as answers should not be posted in the form of comments. Now, you may argue that this answer is too short or needs more reasoning, and that is another story. However, this is indeed an answer, not a comment.
                $endgroup$
                – Revetahw
                6 hours ago






              • 2




                $begingroup$
                @Will - I agree that apes could be a good idea but for a complete answer I think you need to say why similarity to human beings is an important factor. I'm sure there are many reasons but to judge the correctness of your answer we need to be persuaded.
                $endgroup$
                – chasly from UK
                4 hours ago
















              2












              $begingroup$

              How has no one said ape or chimpanzee yet? They're the animals already most similar to humans.






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Will is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.






              $endgroup$









              • 1




                $begingroup$
                Hi Will, welcome to Worldbuilding. This kind of reply is best suited to commenting rather than an answer. Although, if I remember correctly you may not be able to comment since you're new...
                $endgroup$
                – Arkenstein XII
                11 hours ago






              • 2




                $begingroup$
                @ArkensteinXII I disagree. This is an answer. It concretely answers the question, and gives one reason to explain itself. This is not suitable for a comment, as answers should not be posted in the form of comments. Now, you may argue that this answer is too short or needs more reasoning, and that is another story. However, this is indeed an answer, not a comment.
                $endgroup$
                – Revetahw
                6 hours ago






              • 2




                $begingroup$
                @Will - I agree that apes could be a good idea but for a complete answer I think you need to say why similarity to human beings is an important factor. I'm sure there are many reasons but to judge the correctness of your answer we need to be persuaded.
                $endgroup$
                – chasly from UK
                4 hours ago














              2












              2








              2





              $begingroup$

              How has no one said ape or chimpanzee yet? They're the animals already most similar to humans.






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Will is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.






              $endgroup$



              How has no one said ape or chimpanzee yet? They're the animals already most similar to humans.







              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Will is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.









              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer






              New contributor




              Will is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.









              answered 11 hours ago









              WillWill

              311




              311




              New contributor




              Will is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.





              New contributor





              Will is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.






              Will is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.








              • 1




                $begingroup$
                Hi Will, welcome to Worldbuilding. This kind of reply is best suited to commenting rather than an answer. Although, if I remember correctly you may not be able to comment since you're new...
                $endgroup$
                – Arkenstein XII
                11 hours ago






              • 2




                $begingroup$
                @ArkensteinXII I disagree. This is an answer. It concretely answers the question, and gives one reason to explain itself. This is not suitable for a comment, as answers should not be posted in the form of comments. Now, you may argue that this answer is too short or needs more reasoning, and that is another story. However, this is indeed an answer, not a comment.
                $endgroup$
                – Revetahw
                6 hours ago






              • 2




                $begingroup$
                @Will - I agree that apes could be a good idea but for a complete answer I think you need to say why similarity to human beings is an important factor. I'm sure there are many reasons but to judge the correctness of your answer we need to be persuaded.
                $endgroup$
                – chasly from UK
                4 hours ago














              • 1




                $begingroup$
                Hi Will, welcome to Worldbuilding. This kind of reply is best suited to commenting rather than an answer. Although, if I remember correctly you may not be able to comment since you're new...
                $endgroup$
                – Arkenstein XII
                11 hours ago






              • 2




                $begingroup$
                @ArkensteinXII I disagree. This is an answer. It concretely answers the question, and gives one reason to explain itself. This is not suitable for a comment, as answers should not be posted in the form of comments. Now, you may argue that this answer is too short or needs more reasoning, and that is another story. However, this is indeed an answer, not a comment.
                $endgroup$
                – Revetahw
                6 hours ago






              • 2




                $begingroup$
                @Will - I agree that apes could be a good idea but for a complete answer I think you need to say why similarity to human beings is an important factor. I'm sure there are many reasons but to judge the correctness of your answer we need to be persuaded.
                $endgroup$
                – chasly from UK
                4 hours ago








              1




              1




              $begingroup$
              Hi Will, welcome to Worldbuilding. This kind of reply is best suited to commenting rather than an answer. Although, if I remember correctly you may not be able to comment since you're new...
              $endgroup$
              – Arkenstein XII
              11 hours ago




              $begingroup$
              Hi Will, welcome to Worldbuilding. This kind of reply is best suited to commenting rather than an answer. Although, if I remember correctly you may not be able to comment since you're new...
              $endgroup$
              – Arkenstein XII
              11 hours ago




              2




              2




              $begingroup$
              @ArkensteinXII I disagree. This is an answer. It concretely answers the question, and gives one reason to explain itself. This is not suitable for a comment, as answers should not be posted in the form of comments. Now, you may argue that this answer is too short or needs more reasoning, and that is another story. However, this is indeed an answer, not a comment.
              $endgroup$
              – Revetahw
              6 hours ago




              $begingroup$
              @ArkensteinXII I disagree. This is an answer. It concretely answers the question, and gives one reason to explain itself. This is not suitable for a comment, as answers should not be posted in the form of comments. Now, you may argue that this answer is too short or needs more reasoning, and that is another story. However, this is indeed an answer, not a comment.
              $endgroup$
              – Revetahw
              6 hours ago




              2




              2




              $begingroup$
              @Will - I agree that apes could be a good idea but for a complete answer I think you need to say why similarity to human beings is an important factor. I'm sure there are many reasons but to judge the correctness of your answer we need to be persuaded.
              $endgroup$
              – chasly from UK
              4 hours ago




              $begingroup$
              @Will - I agree that apes could be a good idea but for a complete answer I think you need to say why similarity to human beings is an important factor. I'm sure there are many reasons but to judge the correctness of your answer we need to be persuaded.
              $endgroup$
              – chasly from UK
              4 hours ago











              1












              $begingroup$

              Mantis Shrimp, for the wealthy



              Although the idea of being a shrimp seems weird, the experience will surely be worthwhile, and should keep them entertained for the duration of their habitation.



              Being a Mantis Shrimp would be cool for a couple reasons:




              • The claws of certain species can accelerate to 83 km/h, and hit with an impact of 1500 N. This is so fast and powerful even the shock waves can kill prey, and the claw itself can destroy aquarium glass in some species.

              • They have the most advanced natural visual system that we know of, anywhere. Some species of 16 different color preceptors, meaning that you would need to mix 16 primary colors to simulate colors accurately for them. From their point of view, we have a severe decatotritotan form of color blindness. This means that they perceive qualitatively more colors than humans. Their vision also extends into infrared and ultraviolet. They also see all qualities of polarization, whereas we see none (except linear polarization very slightly). Finally, their eyes can point in any two directions, and each have individual depth perception.

              • To go along with the last point, their bodies can produce color willfully, being able to produce nearly any color they can see. 16 dimensional color vision and color production would surely be a boon for artists!


              So, I think being a mantis shrimp would be rather fun.






              share|improve this answer









              $endgroup$













              • $begingroup$
                Shrimp are invertebrate though, right?
                $endgroup$
                – npostavs
                31 mins ago
















              1












              $begingroup$

              Mantis Shrimp, for the wealthy



              Although the idea of being a shrimp seems weird, the experience will surely be worthwhile, and should keep them entertained for the duration of their habitation.



              Being a Mantis Shrimp would be cool for a couple reasons:




              • The claws of certain species can accelerate to 83 km/h, and hit with an impact of 1500 N. This is so fast and powerful even the shock waves can kill prey, and the claw itself can destroy aquarium glass in some species.

              • They have the most advanced natural visual system that we know of, anywhere. Some species of 16 different color preceptors, meaning that you would need to mix 16 primary colors to simulate colors accurately for them. From their point of view, we have a severe decatotritotan form of color blindness. This means that they perceive qualitatively more colors than humans. Their vision also extends into infrared and ultraviolet. They also see all qualities of polarization, whereas we see none (except linear polarization very slightly). Finally, their eyes can point in any two directions, and each have individual depth perception.

              • To go along with the last point, their bodies can produce color willfully, being able to produce nearly any color they can see. 16 dimensional color vision and color production would surely be a boon for artists!


              So, I think being a mantis shrimp would be rather fun.






              share|improve this answer









              $endgroup$













              • $begingroup$
                Shrimp are invertebrate though, right?
                $endgroup$
                – npostavs
                31 mins ago














              1












              1








              1





              $begingroup$

              Mantis Shrimp, for the wealthy



              Although the idea of being a shrimp seems weird, the experience will surely be worthwhile, and should keep them entertained for the duration of their habitation.



              Being a Mantis Shrimp would be cool for a couple reasons:




              • The claws of certain species can accelerate to 83 km/h, and hit with an impact of 1500 N. This is so fast and powerful even the shock waves can kill prey, and the claw itself can destroy aquarium glass in some species.

              • They have the most advanced natural visual system that we know of, anywhere. Some species of 16 different color preceptors, meaning that you would need to mix 16 primary colors to simulate colors accurately for them. From their point of view, we have a severe decatotritotan form of color blindness. This means that they perceive qualitatively more colors than humans. Their vision also extends into infrared and ultraviolet. They also see all qualities of polarization, whereas we see none (except linear polarization very slightly). Finally, their eyes can point in any two directions, and each have individual depth perception.

              • To go along with the last point, their bodies can produce color willfully, being able to produce nearly any color they can see. 16 dimensional color vision and color production would surely be a boon for artists!


              So, I think being a mantis shrimp would be rather fun.






              share|improve this answer









              $endgroup$



              Mantis Shrimp, for the wealthy



              Although the idea of being a shrimp seems weird, the experience will surely be worthwhile, and should keep them entertained for the duration of their habitation.



              Being a Mantis Shrimp would be cool for a couple reasons:




              • The claws of certain species can accelerate to 83 km/h, and hit with an impact of 1500 N. This is so fast and powerful even the shock waves can kill prey, and the claw itself can destroy aquarium glass in some species.

              • They have the most advanced natural visual system that we know of, anywhere. Some species of 16 different color preceptors, meaning that you would need to mix 16 primary colors to simulate colors accurately for them. From their point of view, we have a severe decatotritotan form of color blindness. This means that they perceive qualitatively more colors than humans. Their vision also extends into infrared and ultraviolet. They also see all qualities of polarization, whereas we see none (except linear polarization very slightly). Finally, their eyes can point in any two directions, and each have individual depth perception.

              • To go along with the last point, their bodies can produce color willfully, being able to produce nearly any color they can see. 16 dimensional color vision and color production would surely be a boon for artists!


              So, I think being a mantis shrimp would be rather fun.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered 9 hours ago









              PyRulezPyRulez

              6,52633673




              6,52633673












              • $begingroup$
                Shrimp are invertebrate though, right?
                $endgroup$
                – npostavs
                31 mins ago


















              • $begingroup$
                Shrimp are invertebrate though, right?
                $endgroup$
                – npostavs
                31 mins ago
















              $begingroup$
              Shrimp are invertebrate though, right?
              $endgroup$
              – npostavs
              31 mins ago




              $begingroup$
              Shrimp are invertebrate though, right?
              $endgroup$
              – npostavs
              31 mins ago











              0












              $begingroup$

              There isn't one answer, because you are applying the idea to different situations.



              Prisoners



              Used as punishment, you want something that's easy to handle, not dangerous and having big troubles running away. So something small, harmless and slow is best. Snails are out (not vertebrates), but there are also really small frogs, or of course, fish. Fish are generally easy to keep and can't run away due to lack of legs. Aquarium, done. You want to pick a species with a life expectancy higher than the prison sentence, or change bodies every few years.



              Hospitals



              Completely different requirements. You need something that is comfortable for the patient for a limited time. My best idea is cats. They sleep a lot (about 16 hours a day) but when they're awake, from what I see they are having fun, they are quite sturdy for their size and can reach places and do things that neither humans nor most other animals can. However, that would only be your default offer, because patients would most likely want a choice. Many people will want to fly, so you'll probably have some birds on offer as well as flying lessons.






              share|improve this answer









              $endgroup$


















                0












                $begingroup$

                There isn't one answer, because you are applying the idea to different situations.



                Prisoners



                Used as punishment, you want something that's easy to handle, not dangerous and having big troubles running away. So something small, harmless and slow is best. Snails are out (not vertebrates), but there are also really small frogs, or of course, fish. Fish are generally easy to keep and can't run away due to lack of legs. Aquarium, done. You want to pick a species with a life expectancy higher than the prison sentence, or change bodies every few years.



                Hospitals



                Completely different requirements. You need something that is comfortable for the patient for a limited time. My best idea is cats. They sleep a lot (about 16 hours a day) but when they're awake, from what I see they are having fun, they are quite sturdy for their size and can reach places and do things that neither humans nor most other animals can. However, that would only be your default offer, because patients would most likely want a choice. Many people will want to fly, so you'll probably have some birds on offer as well as flying lessons.






                share|improve this answer









                $endgroup$
















                  0












                  0








                  0





                  $begingroup$

                  There isn't one answer, because you are applying the idea to different situations.



                  Prisoners



                  Used as punishment, you want something that's easy to handle, not dangerous and having big troubles running away. So something small, harmless and slow is best. Snails are out (not vertebrates), but there are also really small frogs, or of course, fish. Fish are generally easy to keep and can't run away due to lack of legs. Aquarium, done. You want to pick a species with a life expectancy higher than the prison sentence, or change bodies every few years.



                  Hospitals



                  Completely different requirements. You need something that is comfortable for the patient for a limited time. My best idea is cats. They sleep a lot (about 16 hours a day) but when they're awake, from what I see they are having fun, they are quite sturdy for their size and can reach places and do things that neither humans nor most other animals can. However, that would only be your default offer, because patients would most likely want a choice. Many people will want to fly, so you'll probably have some birds on offer as well as flying lessons.






                  share|improve this answer









                  $endgroup$



                  There isn't one answer, because you are applying the idea to different situations.



                  Prisoners



                  Used as punishment, you want something that's easy to handle, not dangerous and having big troubles running away. So something small, harmless and slow is best. Snails are out (not vertebrates), but there are also really small frogs, or of course, fish. Fish are generally easy to keep and can't run away due to lack of legs. Aquarium, done. You want to pick a species with a life expectancy higher than the prison sentence, or change bodies every few years.



                  Hospitals



                  Completely different requirements. You need something that is comfortable for the patient for a limited time. My best idea is cats. They sleep a lot (about 16 hours a day) but when they're awake, from what I see they are having fun, they are quite sturdy for their size and can reach places and do things that neither humans nor most other animals can. However, that would only be your default offer, because patients would most likely want a choice. Many people will want to fly, so you'll probably have some birds on offer as well as flying lessons.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 2 hours ago









                  TomTom

                  5,168727




                  5,168727






















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