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#1 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Forest Grove, Beaverton, Oregon
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How would they differ? It's seems like the first should fall under the second, but they're both Hard skills.
When studying a (formerly) living thing when would I need one versus the other?
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#2 |
Night Watchman
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Cambridge, UK
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GURPS follows modern academic practice here, as is does for most sciences. The chemistry of living things is of the same order of complexity as the chemistry of everything else put together. Chemistry deals with a vast range of things, including very basic biochemistry. Biochemistry deals with a much narrower field, but its depth is far greater.
The overall subject seems to have ended up divided that way because it's a split into manageable-size fields for study. For a living creature, you usually need biochemistry. For a deceased one, it can depend what you're trying to find out, and how long it's been dead. |
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#3 |
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Location: Forest Grove, Beaverton, Oregon
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While that makes sense, there's no way to identify when something gets too complicated for basic Chemistry and requires Biology: Biochemistry.
And if one has high Biochemistry skill shouldn't Chemistry default to it and vice versa?
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#4 | ||
Night Watchman
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Cambridge, UK
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#5 |
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It still seems like real life biochemistry is a specialization of chemistry, not a separate skill.
It's weird to imagine an expert biochemist unable to analyze unidentified ooze because it didn't come from a living thing. But have no trouble if it turned out to be decomposed slime molds poisoned by arsenic compounds.
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#6 | |
Night Watchman
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Cambridge, UK
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#7 | |
Join Date: Sep 2011
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There was a biochemist, his name escapes me at the moment, who used to do a PBS special on cholesterol during pledge week a decade ago. A You Tube video by Dr. Eric Berg on Blood Sugar and Diabetes is essentially another biochemist explaining things in layman's terms. That is the sort of thing biochemists do. A biochemist would probably not be very useful for a deceased being as the chemical processes that he normally studies would have ceased. OTOH, he could probably study the chemical reactions of the being as it decomposes and explain how it decomposes. By the way, the two skills are not both Hard. Biology and its optional specialization Biology (Biochemistry) are Very Hard (B180), Chemistry is Hard (B183). GURPS itself provides no default between the two by RAW. A biochemist really ought to have the Chemistry skill at a level not too far removed from his skill level in Biochemistry to reflect his training in Chemistry at the university level as part of his degree program. I might allow a player to make some "default" rolls if he left Chemistry off his character sheet but only if he genuinely overlooked it and plans to remedy the deficiency in short order. I might allow a character a roll at a penalty to perform a synthesis of a compound, depending on how close the synthesis sounds to Biochemistry. For example, synthesizing acetylsalicylic acid [Aspirin] from acetyl and salicylic acid, sounds very much like organic, but not bio-, chemistry, so I might allow that at a -2 to his effective biochemistry skill. Synthesizing sulphuric acid on the other hand, while fairly basic, is definitely Inorganic Chemistry so I might rate it at -4 or even -6 as a penalty for being out of field with a +2 or +4 bonus, since it is a fairly simple high school experiment and not a complex operation. In other words, it's something that our biochemist has actually done at some time or other, so he has actual hands on experience but it's not something that comes up all that often in his practice, so he probably has to really think about it to get it right. Last edited by Curmudgeon; 04-22-2016 at 01:01 AM. |
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#8 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Forest Grove, Beaverton, Oregon
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Still it seems like there should be some default between the two. But I also don't see why any other branch of Biology would get such a default.
I keep waffling in my own views.
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Beware, poor communication skills. No offense intended. If offended, it just means that I failed my writing skill check. |
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#9 |
Join Date: Sep 2011
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Biochemistry is by its nature somewhat restrictive. The six major elements involved are carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, calcium and phosphorus. Because nitrogen and phosphorus belong to the same family in the periodic table, they react similarly to the same chemicals. Those five families that are represented cover a bit more than half of the periodic table and you can probably find some of the missing families among the roughly eighteen elements that have minor occurrences in biochemistry but even so, he has probably never dealt with the elements of the lathanide and actinide series in the table.
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#10 |
Night Watchman
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Cambridge, UK
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biochemestry, science |
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