I'd suspend 'unusual punishment' or make a consensus that using a sandwich slicer to execute someone a millimeter at a time from feet to the top of his head isn't unusual while conscious. On pay-per-view. On global satellite.
Bill it as an art project and recombine the slices into a 'sandwich man' - or - serve it to his next of kin as luncheon meat.
Wouldn't that entail a front-to-back stack? I was thinking top-down / bottom-up.
There was in fact a convict they did exactly that with an execution donated for science with his consent - although he probably wasn't aware how novel this research would actually be. It was used as a reference model to compare early CT/CAT scan & MRI output with for testing fidelity - among many applications. Project started in the 1980s, but the University of Colorado took possession of the cadaver. I was living in CO at the time so I recall it in the papers.
I forgot this was a person, and I saw the muscles and thought "Damn that looks like a tasty-ass steak." Then I remembered it was a dude and well, it still looks delicious, but I'm also a little ashamed and scared of myself.
Data from those images have been put through various recompilations in supercomputers to create multiaxial renderings and regional topographic simulations. As seen here
This is what I do instead of TV. Much more fun chasing down random searches and video files (and vice-versa - takes me forever to get through a documentary or movie with all the searches it compels me to do).
I'd suspend 'unusual punishment' or make a consensus that using a sandwich slicer to execute someone a millimeter at a time from feet to the top of his head isn't unusual while conscious. On pay-per-view. On global satellite.
Bill it as an art project and recombine the slices into a 'sandwich man' - or - serve it to his next of kin as luncheon meat.
or arrange each slice between thin pieces of glass so that when viewed from the front he looks normal. But from the side, he'd be Baloney Man.
Wouldn't that entail a front-to-back stack? I was thinking top-down / bottom-up.
There was in fact a convict they did exactly that with an execution donated for science with his consent - although he probably wasn't aware how novel this research would actually be. It was used as a reference model to compare early CT/CAT scan & MRI output with for testing fidelity - among many applications. Project started in the 1980s, but the University of Colorado took possession of the cadaver. I was living in CO at the time so I recall it in the papers.
Lessie where's that wikipedia article ...
Ah, here it is!
Oh and here's some HD of the scans of the cuts compiled into video : The visible human project - Male (HD)
Top comment on the video :
Data from those images have been put through various recompilations in supercomputers to create multiaxial renderings and regional topographic simulations. As seen here
This is what I do instead of TV. Much more fun chasing down random searches and video files (and vice-versa - takes me forever to get through a documentary or movie with all the searches it compels me to do).