Explaining pyrokinesis powersHow might a superhero gain heat control powers?What all stops working when I pause time?Time ResistanceCharacter has the ability to change the value of mass what can he do?I'm trying to write a story connected with the theory of Hollow EarthEasily Proving Divinity via a single objectHow could my immortal avoid degenerative diseases?What's a good reason for a telekinesis user not being able to use his/her powers on living beings?Would a “perfect” clone ever rebel against the original?What type of acid could burn through skin and any type of metal?

What is the purpose or proof behind chain rule?

How to get the n-th line after a grepped one?

Did Ender ever learn that he killed Stilson and/or Bonzo?

Brexit - No Deal Rejection

Violin - Can double stops be played when the strings are not next to each other?

How do I hide Chekhov's Gun?

Have the tides ever turned twice on any open problem?

How difficult is it to simply disable/disengage the MCAS on Boeing 737 Max 8 & 9 Aircraft?

How do you talk to someone whose loved one is dying?

Can I use USB data pins as a power source?

About the actual radiative impact of greenhouse gas emission over time

Most cost effective thermostat setting: consistent temperature vs. lowest temperature possible

How to terminate ping <dest> &

What are substitutions for coconut in curry?

Is there a hypothetical scenario that would make Earth uninhabitable for humans, but not for (the majority of) other animals?

Is "upgrade" the right word to use in this context?

Aluminum electrolytic or ceramic capacitors for linear regulator input and output?

Professor being mistaken for a grad student

How could an airship be repaired midflight?

ERC721: How to get the owned tokens of an address

Why one should not leave fingerprints on bulbs and plugs?

Recruiter wants very extensive technical details about all of my previous work

Why Choose Less Effective Armour Types?

World War I as a war of liberals against authoritarians?



Explaining pyrokinesis powers


How might a superhero gain heat control powers?What all stops working when I pause time?Time ResistanceCharacter has the ability to change the value of mass what can he do?I'm trying to write a story connected with the theory of Hollow EarthEasily Proving Divinity via a single objectHow could my immortal avoid degenerative diseases?What's a good reason for a telekinesis user not being able to use his/her powers on living beings?Would a “perfect” clone ever rebel against the original?What type of acid could burn through skin and any type of metal?













2












$begingroup$


I write sci-fi, and I don't love fudging important things. I have a character that was a victim of genetic experiments (I know how original). I want to find a semi-reasonable way to explain this, because her developing pyrokinesis isn't accidental.










share|improve this question









New contributor




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







$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! When you have a moment, please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Per our help center, "When asking questions keep in mind that the goal of the site is to help you build your world, not to tell your story." It appears you're asking us to help you tell your story. This can be fixed. If you explain the specifics about your super hero, we can then find ways to justify that condition. That makes it an on-topic creature-design question.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    2 hours ago











  • $begingroup$
    Did you mean "devolving"? What does that mean in the context of pyrokinesis? Or was "devolving" an autocorrect change? Also, have some sympathy for the impotent things. They might not be feeling well.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    2 hours ago











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome Ame. I edited your question to try to make sense of it and I'm not sure I did. What exactly are you asking? How you should describe the development of pyrokinesis is a Writing question. How pyrokinesis can happen after genetic experimentation is a story question (it's not science-based because there is no science for this). Story questions are off topic here. If you have more details, add them. We're looking for a focused question people can answer clearly.
    $endgroup$
    – Cyn
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @Cyn I understand your reasoning about the non-science-basis for pyrokinesis itself. However, this is more about what changes a genetic experiment could do to a person to allow them to develop pyrokinesis. Pyrokinesis in this fictional world can be taken as a given. This can be considered scientifically. Story questions aren't off-topic if they are predominantly worldbuilding ones. It's all a matter of balance. This is a focused question.
    $endgroup$
    – a4android
    3 mins ago















2












$begingroup$


I write sci-fi, and I don't love fudging important things. I have a character that was a victim of genetic experiments (I know how original). I want to find a semi-reasonable way to explain this, because her developing pyrokinesis isn't accidental.










share|improve this question









New contributor




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







$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! When you have a moment, please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Per our help center, "When asking questions keep in mind that the goal of the site is to help you build your world, not to tell your story." It appears you're asking us to help you tell your story. This can be fixed. If you explain the specifics about your super hero, we can then find ways to justify that condition. That makes it an on-topic creature-design question.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    2 hours ago











  • $begingroup$
    Did you mean "devolving"? What does that mean in the context of pyrokinesis? Or was "devolving" an autocorrect change? Also, have some sympathy for the impotent things. They might not be feeling well.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    2 hours ago











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome Ame. I edited your question to try to make sense of it and I'm not sure I did. What exactly are you asking? How you should describe the development of pyrokinesis is a Writing question. How pyrokinesis can happen after genetic experimentation is a story question (it's not science-based because there is no science for this). Story questions are off topic here. If you have more details, add them. We're looking for a focused question people can answer clearly.
    $endgroup$
    – Cyn
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @Cyn I understand your reasoning about the non-science-basis for pyrokinesis itself. However, this is more about what changes a genetic experiment could do to a person to allow them to develop pyrokinesis. Pyrokinesis in this fictional world can be taken as a given. This can be considered scientifically. Story questions aren't off-topic if they are predominantly worldbuilding ones. It's all a matter of balance. This is a focused question.
    $endgroup$
    – a4android
    3 mins ago













2












2








2





$begingroup$


I write sci-fi, and I don't love fudging important things. I have a character that was a victim of genetic experiments (I know how original). I want to find a semi-reasonable way to explain this, because her developing pyrokinesis isn't accidental.










share|improve this question









New contributor




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







$endgroup$




I write sci-fi, and I don't love fudging important things. I have a character that was a victim of genetic experiments (I know how original). I want to find a semi-reasonable way to explain this, because her developing pyrokinesis isn't accidental.







science-fiction super-powers






share|improve this question









New contributor




Ame Quinn 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




Ame Quinn 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




share|improve this question








edited 15 mins ago









a4android

32.6k342127




32.6k342127






New contributor




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









asked 2 hours ago









Ame QuinnAme Quinn

112




112




New contributor




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





New contributor





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






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











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! When you have a moment, please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Per our help center, "When asking questions keep in mind that the goal of the site is to help you build your world, not to tell your story." It appears you're asking us to help you tell your story. This can be fixed. If you explain the specifics about your super hero, we can then find ways to justify that condition. That makes it an on-topic creature-design question.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    2 hours ago











  • $begingroup$
    Did you mean "devolving"? What does that mean in the context of pyrokinesis? Or was "devolving" an autocorrect change? Also, have some sympathy for the impotent things. They might not be feeling well.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    2 hours ago











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome Ame. I edited your question to try to make sense of it and I'm not sure I did. What exactly are you asking? How you should describe the development of pyrokinesis is a Writing question. How pyrokinesis can happen after genetic experimentation is a story question (it's not science-based because there is no science for this). Story questions are off topic here. If you have more details, add them. We're looking for a focused question people can answer clearly.
    $endgroup$
    – Cyn
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @Cyn I understand your reasoning about the non-science-basis for pyrokinesis itself. However, this is more about what changes a genetic experiment could do to a person to allow them to develop pyrokinesis. Pyrokinesis in this fictional world can be taken as a given. This can be considered scientifically. Story questions aren't off-topic if they are predominantly worldbuilding ones. It's all a matter of balance. This is a focused question.
    $endgroup$
    – a4android
    3 mins ago
















  • $begingroup$
    Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! When you have a moment, please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Per our help center, "When asking questions keep in mind that the goal of the site is to help you build your world, not to tell your story." It appears you're asking us to help you tell your story. This can be fixed. If you explain the specifics about your super hero, we can then find ways to justify that condition. That makes it an on-topic creature-design question.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    2 hours ago











  • $begingroup$
    Did you mean "devolving"? What does that mean in the context of pyrokinesis? Or was "devolving" an autocorrect change? Also, have some sympathy for the impotent things. They might not be feeling well.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    2 hours ago











  • $begingroup$
    Welcome Ame. I edited your question to try to make sense of it and I'm not sure I did. What exactly are you asking? How you should describe the development of pyrokinesis is a Writing question. How pyrokinesis can happen after genetic experimentation is a story question (it's not science-based because there is no science for this). Story questions are off topic here. If you have more details, add them. We're looking for a focused question people can answer clearly.
    $endgroup$
    – Cyn
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @Cyn I understand your reasoning about the non-science-basis for pyrokinesis itself. However, this is more about what changes a genetic experiment could do to a person to allow them to develop pyrokinesis. Pyrokinesis in this fictional world can be taken as a given. This can be considered scientifically. Story questions aren't off-topic if they are predominantly worldbuilding ones. It's all a matter of balance. This is a focused question.
    $endgroup$
    – a4android
    3 mins ago















$begingroup$
Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! When you have a moment, please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Per our help center, "When asking questions keep in mind that the goal of the site is to help you build your world, not to tell your story." It appears you're asking us to help you tell your story. This can be fixed. If you explain the specifics about your super hero, we can then find ways to justify that condition. That makes it an on-topic creature-design question.
$endgroup$
– JBH
2 hours ago





$begingroup$
Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! When you have a moment, please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. Per our help center, "When asking questions keep in mind that the goal of the site is to help you build your world, not to tell your story." It appears you're asking us to help you tell your story. This can be fixed. If you explain the specifics about your super hero, we can then find ways to justify that condition. That makes it an on-topic creature-design question.
$endgroup$
– JBH
2 hours ago













$begingroup$
Did you mean "devolving"? What does that mean in the context of pyrokinesis? Or was "devolving" an autocorrect change? Also, have some sympathy for the impotent things. They might not be feeling well.
$endgroup$
– Willk
2 hours ago





$begingroup$
Did you mean "devolving"? What does that mean in the context of pyrokinesis? Or was "devolving" an autocorrect change? Also, have some sympathy for the impotent things. They might not be feeling well.
$endgroup$
– Willk
2 hours ago













$begingroup$
Welcome Ame. I edited your question to try to make sense of it and I'm not sure I did. What exactly are you asking? How you should describe the development of pyrokinesis is a Writing question. How pyrokinesis can happen after genetic experimentation is a story question (it's not science-based because there is no science for this). Story questions are off topic here. If you have more details, add them. We're looking for a focused question people can answer clearly.
$endgroup$
– Cyn
2 hours ago




$begingroup$
Welcome Ame. I edited your question to try to make sense of it and I'm not sure I did. What exactly are you asking? How you should describe the development of pyrokinesis is a Writing question. How pyrokinesis can happen after genetic experimentation is a story question (it's not science-based because there is no science for this). Story questions are off topic here. If you have more details, add them. We're looking for a focused question people can answer clearly.
$endgroup$
– Cyn
2 hours ago












$begingroup$
@Cyn I understand your reasoning about the non-science-basis for pyrokinesis itself. However, this is more about what changes a genetic experiment could do to a person to allow them to develop pyrokinesis. Pyrokinesis in this fictional world can be taken as a given. This can be considered scientifically. Story questions aren't off-topic if they are predominantly worldbuilding ones. It's all a matter of balance. This is a focused question.
$endgroup$
– a4android
3 mins ago




$begingroup$
@Cyn I understand your reasoning about the non-science-basis for pyrokinesis itself. However, this is more about what changes a genetic experiment could do to a person to allow them to develop pyrokinesis. Pyrokinesis in this fictional world can be taken as a given. This can be considered scientifically. Story questions aren't off-topic if they are predominantly worldbuilding ones. It's all a matter of balance. This is a focused question.
$endgroup$
– a4android
3 mins ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















1












$begingroup$

The condition Hypothyroidism, an under active thyroid gland, can cause Hypothermia or low body temperature. In an attempt to treat the symptom of low body temperature, scientist used genetic engineering to alter your character. They gave her the ability to speed up the atoms in her body to produce heat on demand to warm herself. However, your character eventually discovers that she can speed up the atoms of anything that she can see and focus on, that is located in her general vicinity. This would give her the ability to set things on fire from a distance.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$




















    1












    $begingroup$

    You specify your character underwent genetic experiments. How does that happen in the real world? Perhaps your character was experimented on in the context of a clinical trial.



    Your character might have been born with a genetic disease. There are many. Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency is an example, and there are clinical trials looking at genetic modification of people born this way in hopes of overcoming or sidestepping the disease. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00004498?cond=ornithine&draw=2&rank=5



    Or perhaps she has a childhood cancer like a brain tumor and undergoes experimental gene therapy or infusion of her own genetically altered T cells to treat the cancer.



    As opposed to "experiments" done out of malice or some perversion, you can have the experimental procedure done in hopes of helping her, and it actually worked - she was cured of her illness.



    But later there are consequences. And she was not the only participant in this clinical trial...






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$




















      0












      $begingroup$

      Any scientific explanation of pyrokinesis should start with a definition. As usual, wikipedia provides...




      Pyrokinesis is the purported psychic ability allowing a person to create and control fire with the mind




      ...from that article, a useful initial premise arises...




      Parapsychologists describe pyrokinesis as the ability to excite the atoms within an object until they generate enough energy to burst into flame. Science fiction works define pyrokinesis as speeding up the movement of molecules in order to increase temperature.




      So we want to create a character whose mind can excite atoms at a distance to the point of combustion. Atoms usually get excited when thermal energy, such as heat from an adjacent fire, is applied to them. Depending upon the substance being ignited, the amount of thermal energy does not need to be very high. Gasoline fumes for example, only need a spark.



      So let's make the job easy for our character, beginning our explanation with some real world possible sensory enhancements which allow her to sense the presence of easily combustible compounds at a distance. Since sharks can reportedly smell a single drop of blood at many miles distance, I don't think anyone will complain if our little fire starter can smell and precisely locate her favorite volatile substances at 20-30 feet.



      From there, it is just a small step to light the proverbial match. If your fictional world already has telekinesis, then the mechanism for that match already exists. Your fire starter is just a telekinetic who moves energy instead of matter. Stealing enough heat from the surrounding matter and focusing it on the volatile target is all it takes to get the process started. If your world doesn't have telekinesis, you can explain her ability away by saying that it is still telekinesis, which remains impossible at anything above the energy level.



      None of this will give your character fireball throwing abilities. For that, you probably need to focus her telekinesis down below the atomic level, allowing her to split a few otherwise stable atoms to release the required heat. Giving her that much power however jumps the shark in a big way, leaving you with every little that can threaten or challenge your character later in the story. Fireballs also don't make a lot of sense strategically. Why throw it at a target when you can just create it inside their skull, bypassing their defenses.



      Without the subatomic energy boost, your character will still have a considerable range of abilities, depending mainly on what combustible compounds are nearby. She will also have very useful limitations which can help in your story creation.



      If you can be satisfied with a super hero who can set an enemy's clothes on fire rather than incinerate them, then these ideas should make it look like you are at least trying to play within the laws of physics. It is still not science because at its' core, it is still dependent on telekinesis which has not yet been scientifically proven. But beyond that fundamental flaw, a pyrokinetic character, created using these ideas, could be a physical-law-abiding member of your otherwise real world.






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$




















        0












        $begingroup$

        There is a scientific rationale for a person developing pyrokinesis because of a genetic experiment.



        Assume that in this fictional world effectively everybody, human beings that is, have the genetic capacity (or at the very least the genetic basis for those powers) for them to have pyrokinetic powers. However, this capacity is not expressed, because of a genetic blocking factor. The genetic experiment unblocks the innate biological mechanism repressing her pyrokinetic powers.



        Viola! She now develops her pyrokinesis.





        share









        $endgroup$












          Your Answer





          StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function ()
          return StackExchange.using("mathjaxEditing", function ()
          StackExchange.MarkdownEditor.creationCallbacks.add(function (editor, postfix)
          StackExchange.mathjaxEditing.prepareWmdForMathJax(editor, postfix, [["$", "$"], ["\\(","\\)"]]);
          );
          );
          , "mathjax-editing");

          StackExchange.ready(function()
          var channelOptions =
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "579"
          ;
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
          createEditor();
          );

          else
          createEditor();

          );

          function createEditor()
          StackExchange.prepareEditor(
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: false,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: null,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader:
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          ,
          noCode: true, onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          );



          );






          Ame Quinn is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworldbuilding.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f141662%2fexplaining-pyrokinesis-powers%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes








          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          1












          $begingroup$

          The condition Hypothyroidism, an under active thyroid gland, can cause Hypothermia or low body temperature. In an attempt to treat the symptom of low body temperature, scientist used genetic engineering to alter your character. They gave her the ability to speed up the atoms in her body to produce heat on demand to warm herself. However, your character eventually discovers that she can speed up the atoms of anything that she can see and focus on, that is located in her general vicinity. This would give her the ability to set things on fire from a distance.






          share|improve this answer









          $endgroup$

















            1












            $begingroup$

            The condition Hypothyroidism, an under active thyroid gland, can cause Hypothermia or low body temperature. In an attempt to treat the symptom of low body temperature, scientist used genetic engineering to alter your character. They gave her the ability to speed up the atoms in her body to produce heat on demand to warm herself. However, your character eventually discovers that she can speed up the atoms of anything that she can see and focus on, that is located in her general vicinity. This would give her the ability to set things on fire from a distance.






            share|improve this answer









            $endgroup$















              1












              1








              1





              $begingroup$

              The condition Hypothyroidism, an under active thyroid gland, can cause Hypothermia or low body temperature. In an attempt to treat the symptom of low body temperature, scientist used genetic engineering to alter your character. They gave her the ability to speed up the atoms in her body to produce heat on demand to warm herself. However, your character eventually discovers that she can speed up the atoms of anything that she can see and focus on, that is located in her general vicinity. This would give her the ability to set things on fire from a distance.






              share|improve this answer









              $endgroup$



              The condition Hypothyroidism, an under active thyroid gland, can cause Hypothermia or low body temperature. In an attempt to treat the symptom of low body temperature, scientist used genetic engineering to alter your character. They gave her the ability to speed up the atoms in her body to produce heat on demand to warm herself. However, your character eventually discovers that she can speed up the atoms of anything that she can see and focus on, that is located in her general vicinity. This would give her the ability to set things on fire from a distance.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered 2 hours ago









              SciFiGuySciFiGuy

              9908




              9908





















                  1












                  $begingroup$

                  You specify your character underwent genetic experiments. How does that happen in the real world? Perhaps your character was experimented on in the context of a clinical trial.



                  Your character might have been born with a genetic disease. There are many. Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency is an example, and there are clinical trials looking at genetic modification of people born this way in hopes of overcoming or sidestepping the disease. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00004498?cond=ornithine&draw=2&rank=5



                  Or perhaps she has a childhood cancer like a brain tumor and undergoes experimental gene therapy or infusion of her own genetically altered T cells to treat the cancer.



                  As opposed to "experiments" done out of malice or some perversion, you can have the experimental procedure done in hopes of helping her, and it actually worked - she was cured of her illness.



                  But later there are consequences. And she was not the only participant in this clinical trial...






                  share|improve this answer









                  $endgroup$

















                    1












                    $begingroup$

                    You specify your character underwent genetic experiments. How does that happen in the real world? Perhaps your character was experimented on in the context of a clinical trial.



                    Your character might have been born with a genetic disease. There are many. Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency is an example, and there are clinical trials looking at genetic modification of people born this way in hopes of overcoming or sidestepping the disease. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00004498?cond=ornithine&draw=2&rank=5



                    Or perhaps she has a childhood cancer like a brain tumor and undergoes experimental gene therapy or infusion of her own genetically altered T cells to treat the cancer.



                    As opposed to "experiments" done out of malice or some perversion, you can have the experimental procedure done in hopes of helping her, and it actually worked - she was cured of her illness.



                    But later there are consequences. And she was not the only participant in this clinical trial...






                    share|improve this answer









                    $endgroup$















                      1












                      1








                      1





                      $begingroup$

                      You specify your character underwent genetic experiments. How does that happen in the real world? Perhaps your character was experimented on in the context of a clinical trial.



                      Your character might have been born with a genetic disease. There are many. Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency is an example, and there are clinical trials looking at genetic modification of people born this way in hopes of overcoming or sidestepping the disease. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00004498?cond=ornithine&draw=2&rank=5



                      Or perhaps she has a childhood cancer like a brain tumor and undergoes experimental gene therapy or infusion of her own genetically altered T cells to treat the cancer.



                      As opposed to "experiments" done out of malice or some perversion, you can have the experimental procedure done in hopes of helping her, and it actually worked - she was cured of her illness.



                      But later there are consequences. And she was not the only participant in this clinical trial...






                      share|improve this answer









                      $endgroup$



                      You specify your character underwent genetic experiments. How does that happen in the real world? Perhaps your character was experimented on in the context of a clinical trial.



                      Your character might have been born with a genetic disease. There are many. Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency is an example, and there are clinical trials looking at genetic modification of people born this way in hopes of overcoming or sidestepping the disease. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00004498?cond=ornithine&draw=2&rank=5



                      Or perhaps she has a childhood cancer like a brain tumor and undergoes experimental gene therapy or infusion of her own genetically altered T cells to treat the cancer.



                      As opposed to "experiments" done out of malice or some perversion, you can have the experimental procedure done in hopes of helping her, and it actually worked - she was cured of her illness.



                      But later there are consequences. And she was not the only participant in this clinical trial...







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered 2 hours ago









                      WillkWillk

                      113k27211472




                      113k27211472





















                          0












                          $begingroup$

                          Any scientific explanation of pyrokinesis should start with a definition. As usual, wikipedia provides...




                          Pyrokinesis is the purported psychic ability allowing a person to create and control fire with the mind




                          ...from that article, a useful initial premise arises...




                          Parapsychologists describe pyrokinesis as the ability to excite the atoms within an object until they generate enough energy to burst into flame. Science fiction works define pyrokinesis as speeding up the movement of molecules in order to increase temperature.




                          So we want to create a character whose mind can excite atoms at a distance to the point of combustion. Atoms usually get excited when thermal energy, such as heat from an adjacent fire, is applied to them. Depending upon the substance being ignited, the amount of thermal energy does not need to be very high. Gasoline fumes for example, only need a spark.



                          So let's make the job easy for our character, beginning our explanation with some real world possible sensory enhancements which allow her to sense the presence of easily combustible compounds at a distance. Since sharks can reportedly smell a single drop of blood at many miles distance, I don't think anyone will complain if our little fire starter can smell and precisely locate her favorite volatile substances at 20-30 feet.



                          From there, it is just a small step to light the proverbial match. If your fictional world already has telekinesis, then the mechanism for that match already exists. Your fire starter is just a telekinetic who moves energy instead of matter. Stealing enough heat from the surrounding matter and focusing it on the volatile target is all it takes to get the process started. If your world doesn't have telekinesis, you can explain her ability away by saying that it is still telekinesis, which remains impossible at anything above the energy level.



                          None of this will give your character fireball throwing abilities. For that, you probably need to focus her telekinesis down below the atomic level, allowing her to split a few otherwise stable atoms to release the required heat. Giving her that much power however jumps the shark in a big way, leaving you with every little that can threaten or challenge your character later in the story. Fireballs also don't make a lot of sense strategically. Why throw it at a target when you can just create it inside their skull, bypassing their defenses.



                          Without the subatomic energy boost, your character will still have a considerable range of abilities, depending mainly on what combustible compounds are nearby. She will also have very useful limitations which can help in your story creation.



                          If you can be satisfied with a super hero who can set an enemy's clothes on fire rather than incinerate them, then these ideas should make it look like you are at least trying to play within the laws of physics. It is still not science because at its' core, it is still dependent on telekinesis which has not yet been scientifically proven. But beyond that fundamental flaw, a pyrokinetic character, created using these ideas, could be a physical-law-abiding member of your otherwise real world.






                          share|improve this answer









                          $endgroup$

















                            0












                            $begingroup$

                            Any scientific explanation of pyrokinesis should start with a definition. As usual, wikipedia provides...




                            Pyrokinesis is the purported psychic ability allowing a person to create and control fire with the mind




                            ...from that article, a useful initial premise arises...




                            Parapsychologists describe pyrokinesis as the ability to excite the atoms within an object until they generate enough energy to burst into flame. Science fiction works define pyrokinesis as speeding up the movement of molecules in order to increase temperature.




                            So we want to create a character whose mind can excite atoms at a distance to the point of combustion. Atoms usually get excited when thermal energy, such as heat from an adjacent fire, is applied to them. Depending upon the substance being ignited, the amount of thermal energy does not need to be very high. Gasoline fumes for example, only need a spark.



                            So let's make the job easy for our character, beginning our explanation with some real world possible sensory enhancements which allow her to sense the presence of easily combustible compounds at a distance. Since sharks can reportedly smell a single drop of blood at many miles distance, I don't think anyone will complain if our little fire starter can smell and precisely locate her favorite volatile substances at 20-30 feet.



                            From there, it is just a small step to light the proverbial match. If your fictional world already has telekinesis, then the mechanism for that match already exists. Your fire starter is just a telekinetic who moves energy instead of matter. Stealing enough heat from the surrounding matter and focusing it on the volatile target is all it takes to get the process started. If your world doesn't have telekinesis, you can explain her ability away by saying that it is still telekinesis, which remains impossible at anything above the energy level.



                            None of this will give your character fireball throwing abilities. For that, you probably need to focus her telekinesis down below the atomic level, allowing her to split a few otherwise stable atoms to release the required heat. Giving her that much power however jumps the shark in a big way, leaving you with every little that can threaten or challenge your character later in the story. Fireballs also don't make a lot of sense strategically. Why throw it at a target when you can just create it inside their skull, bypassing their defenses.



                            Without the subatomic energy boost, your character will still have a considerable range of abilities, depending mainly on what combustible compounds are nearby. She will also have very useful limitations which can help in your story creation.



                            If you can be satisfied with a super hero who can set an enemy's clothes on fire rather than incinerate them, then these ideas should make it look like you are at least trying to play within the laws of physics. It is still not science because at its' core, it is still dependent on telekinesis which has not yet been scientifically proven. But beyond that fundamental flaw, a pyrokinetic character, created using these ideas, could be a physical-law-abiding member of your otherwise real world.






                            share|improve this answer









                            $endgroup$















                              0












                              0








                              0





                              $begingroup$

                              Any scientific explanation of pyrokinesis should start with a definition. As usual, wikipedia provides...




                              Pyrokinesis is the purported psychic ability allowing a person to create and control fire with the mind




                              ...from that article, a useful initial premise arises...




                              Parapsychologists describe pyrokinesis as the ability to excite the atoms within an object until they generate enough energy to burst into flame. Science fiction works define pyrokinesis as speeding up the movement of molecules in order to increase temperature.




                              So we want to create a character whose mind can excite atoms at a distance to the point of combustion. Atoms usually get excited when thermal energy, such as heat from an adjacent fire, is applied to them. Depending upon the substance being ignited, the amount of thermal energy does not need to be very high. Gasoline fumes for example, only need a spark.



                              So let's make the job easy for our character, beginning our explanation with some real world possible sensory enhancements which allow her to sense the presence of easily combustible compounds at a distance. Since sharks can reportedly smell a single drop of blood at many miles distance, I don't think anyone will complain if our little fire starter can smell and precisely locate her favorite volatile substances at 20-30 feet.



                              From there, it is just a small step to light the proverbial match. If your fictional world already has telekinesis, then the mechanism for that match already exists. Your fire starter is just a telekinetic who moves energy instead of matter. Stealing enough heat from the surrounding matter and focusing it on the volatile target is all it takes to get the process started. If your world doesn't have telekinesis, you can explain her ability away by saying that it is still telekinesis, which remains impossible at anything above the energy level.



                              None of this will give your character fireball throwing abilities. For that, you probably need to focus her telekinesis down below the atomic level, allowing her to split a few otherwise stable atoms to release the required heat. Giving her that much power however jumps the shark in a big way, leaving you with every little that can threaten or challenge your character later in the story. Fireballs also don't make a lot of sense strategically. Why throw it at a target when you can just create it inside their skull, bypassing their defenses.



                              Without the subatomic energy boost, your character will still have a considerable range of abilities, depending mainly on what combustible compounds are nearby. She will also have very useful limitations which can help in your story creation.



                              If you can be satisfied with a super hero who can set an enemy's clothes on fire rather than incinerate them, then these ideas should make it look like you are at least trying to play within the laws of physics. It is still not science because at its' core, it is still dependent on telekinesis which has not yet been scientifically proven. But beyond that fundamental flaw, a pyrokinetic character, created using these ideas, could be a physical-law-abiding member of your otherwise real world.






                              share|improve this answer









                              $endgroup$



                              Any scientific explanation of pyrokinesis should start with a definition. As usual, wikipedia provides...




                              Pyrokinesis is the purported psychic ability allowing a person to create and control fire with the mind




                              ...from that article, a useful initial premise arises...




                              Parapsychologists describe pyrokinesis as the ability to excite the atoms within an object until they generate enough energy to burst into flame. Science fiction works define pyrokinesis as speeding up the movement of molecules in order to increase temperature.




                              So we want to create a character whose mind can excite atoms at a distance to the point of combustion. Atoms usually get excited when thermal energy, such as heat from an adjacent fire, is applied to them. Depending upon the substance being ignited, the amount of thermal energy does not need to be very high. Gasoline fumes for example, only need a spark.



                              So let's make the job easy for our character, beginning our explanation with some real world possible sensory enhancements which allow her to sense the presence of easily combustible compounds at a distance. Since sharks can reportedly smell a single drop of blood at many miles distance, I don't think anyone will complain if our little fire starter can smell and precisely locate her favorite volatile substances at 20-30 feet.



                              From there, it is just a small step to light the proverbial match. If your fictional world already has telekinesis, then the mechanism for that match already exists. Your fire starter is just a telekinetic who moves energy instead of matter. Stealing enough heat from the surrounding matter and focusing it on the volatile target is all it takes to get the process started. If your world doesn't have telekinesis, you can explain her ability away by saying that it is still telekinesis, which remains impossible at anything above the energy level.



                              None of this will give your character fireball throwing abilities. For that, you probably need to focus her telekinesis down below the atomic level, allowing her to split a few otherwise stable atoms to release the required heat. Giving her that much power however jumps the shark in a big way, leaving you with every little that can threaten or challenge your character later in the story. Fireballs also don't make a lot of sense strategically. Why throw it at a target when you can just create it inside their skull, bypassing their defenses.



                              Without the subatomic energy boost, your character will still have a considerable range of abilities, depending mainly on what combustible compounds are nearby. She will also have very useful limitations which can help in your story creation.



                              If you can be satisfied with a super hero who can set an enemy's clothes on fire rather than incinerate them, then these ideas should make it look like you are at least trying to play within the laws of physics. It is still not science because at its' core, it is still dependent on telekinesis which has not yet been scientifically proven. But beyond that fundamental flaw, a pyrokinetic character, created using these ideas, could be a physical-law-abiding member of your otherwise real world.







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered 13 mins ago









                              Henry TaylorHenry Taylor

                              46.1k872167




                              46.1k872167





















                                  0












                                  $begingroup$

                                  There is a scientific rationale for a person developing pyrokinesis because of a genetic experiment.



                                  Assume that in this fictional world effectively everybody, human beings that is, have the genetic capacity (or at the very least the genetic basis for those powers) for them to have pyrokinetic powers. However, this capacity is not expressed, because of a genetic blocking factor. The genetic experiment unblocks the innate biological mechanism repressing her pyrokinetic powers.



                                  Viola! She now develops her pyrokinesis.





                                  share









                                  $endgroup$

















                                    0












                                    $begingroup$

                                    There is a scientific rationale for a person developing pyrokinesis because of a genetic experiment.



                                    Assume that in this fictional world effectively everybody, human beings that is, have the genetic capacity (or at the very least the genetic basis for those powers) for them to have pyrokinetic powers. However, this capacity is not expressed, because of a genetic blocking factor. The genetic experiment unblocks the innate biological mechanism repressing her pyrokinetic powers.



                                    Viola! She now develops her pyrokinesis.





                                    share









                                    $endgroup$















                                      0












                                      0








                                      0





                                      $begingroup$

                                      There is a scientific rationale for a person developing pyrokinesis because of a genetic experiment.



                                      Assume that in this fictional world effectively everybody, human beings that is, have the genetic capacity (or at the very least the genetic basis for those powers) for them to have pyrokinetic powers. However, this capacity is not expressed, because of a genetic blocking factor. The genetic experiment unblocks the innate biological mechanism repressing her pyrokinetic powers.



                                      Viola! She now develops her pyrokinesis.





                                      share









                                      $endgroup$



                                      There is a scientific rationale for a person developing pyrokinesis because of a genetic experiment.



                                      Assume that in this fictional world effectively everybody, human beings that is, have the genetic capacity (or at the very least the genetic basis for those powers) for them to have pyrokinetic powers. However, this capacity is not expressed, because of a genetic blocking factor. The genetic experiment unblocks the innate biological mechanism repressing her pyrokinetic powers.



                                      Viola! She now develops her pyrokinesis.






                                      share











                                      share


                                      share










                                      answered 9 mins ago









                                      a4androida4android

                                      32.6k342127




                                      32.6k342127




















                                          Ame Quinn is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









                                          draft saved

                                          draft discarded


















                                          Ame Quinn is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












                                          Ame Quinn is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











                                          Ame Quinn is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














                                          Thanks for contributing an answer to Worldbuilding Stack Exchange!


                                          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                          But avoid


                                          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                                          Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


                                          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                          draft saved


                                          draft discarded














                                          StackExchange.ready(
                                          function ()
                                          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworldbuilding.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f141662%2fexplaining-pyrokinesis-powers%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                                          );

                                          Post as a guest















                                          Required, but never shown





















































                                          Required, but never shown














                                          Required, but never shown












                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Required, but never shown

































                                          Required, but never shown














                                          Required, but never shown












                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Popular posts from this blog

                                          名間水力發電廠 目录 沿革 設施 鄰近設施 註釋 外部連結 导航菜单23°50′10″N 120°42′41″E / 23.83611°N 120.71139°E / 23.83611; 120.7113923°50′10″N 120°42′41″E / 23.83611°N 120.71139°E / 23.83611; 120.71139計畫概要原始内容臺灣第一座BOT 模式開發的水力發電廠-名間水力電廠名間水力發電廠 水利署首件BOT案原始内容《小檔案》名間電廠 首座BOT水力發電廠原始内容名間電廠BOT - 經濟部水利署中區水資源局

                                          Prove that NP is closed under karp reduction?Space(n) not closed under Karp reductions - what about NTime(n)?Class P is closed under rotation?Prove or disprove that $NL$ is closed under polynomial many-one reductions$mathbfNC_2$ is closed under log-space reductionOn Karp reductionwhen can I know if a class (complexity) is closed under reduction (cook/karp)Check if class $PSPACE$ is closed under polyonomially space reductionIs NPSPACE also closed under polynomial-time reduction and under log-space reduction?Prove PSPACE is closed under complement?Prove PSPACE is closed under union?

                                          Is my guitar’s action too high? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Strings too stiff on a recently purchased acoustic guitar | Cort AD880CEIs the action of my guitar really high?Μy little finger is too weak to play guitarWith guitar, how long should I give my fingers to strengthen / callous?When playing a fret the guitar sounds mutedPlaying (Barre) chords up the guitar neckI think my guitar strings are wound too tight and I can't play barre chordsF barre chord on an SG guitarHow to find to the right strings of a barre chord by feel?High action on higher fret on my steel acoustic guitar