[quote=@Expendable] [@Gisk] - What is the general policy concerning transplants and prosthetics? Say an eye transplant and an arm prosthetic? [/quote] Great question! Transplants are relatively common practice, including whole body parts like a hand, foot, arm or leg. An eye is doable, but a doctor capable of it would be considered nothing short of an artist. It's been done, but it still makes the papers when it's successful. Mechanical prosthetics are a different matter. At present there's no machine-nerve interface(again, maybe something a student works on!), so any mechanical prosthetic will fall short of the bionic arm that you might envision. They'll tend to be simple and clumsy, though a clever engineer can find ways to make them functional and useful. Just like we do with mechanical prosthetics today. Regarding culture: lower class folks take a pretty utilitarian approach, and won't scoff at whatever it takes to get a working arm back. But higher class people see (obvious) transplants and prosthetics as a sign of poor health. So a wealthy person would try very hard to find the very best doctor, and a replacement part that looks as much like their own as possible. Lower quality transplantations also require more care to keep them healthy. Lopsided arms, or a lumbering gait can be signs of poorer trasnplant work, no matter how the recipient tries to hide it. Worth noting that those attitudes are in society as a whole, but on board the [i]NKNM Frankenstein[/i], scientific curiosity will often win out over decorum, even among the high born.