Victor didn’t have a doctorate as we find out in the first page of the story. He learned all he could and had to move on his own to discover new information in the realm of the Physics of Life. We are only told he had built “life giving machines” that had nothing to do with mere electricity. The main question is why didn’t he just revive an intact corpse over building one from parts? (That increased the difficulty considering all the arteries, veins, muscles and nerves to connect.)
Superfrog about 8 years ago
You must have used plenty of currant.
Wenthral about 8 years ago
Kill it! Kill it with Fire!
Doug Taylor Premium Member about 8 years ago
and now it’s a hockey commentator on Saturday nights.
Happy, happy, happy!!! Premium Member about 8 years ago
Wouldn’t that make it a grape now?
ChessPirate about 8 years ago
Thee more and you’ve got a Cover Band! ☺
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] about 8 years ago
Victor didn’t have a doctorate as we find out in the first page of the story. He learned all he could and had to move on his own to discover new information in the realm of the Physics of Life. We are only told he had built “life giving machines” that had nothing to do with mere electricity. The main question is why didn’t he just revive an intact corpse over building one from parts? (That increased the difficulty considering all the arteries, veins, muscles and nerves to connect.)
Sisyphos about 8 years ago
No lack of self-esteem for Leopold!
Do the California Raisins (“I Heard It Through the Grapevine”) owe their existence to this momentous, earth-shaking achievement?
Nobel Prize in Resuscitation for Leopold!