Ok, we know that wizards have a constitution that, while not decidedly human, outstrips mundane mortals. We know that that includes very long life, and the ability to eventually recover from (almost?) any wound. I condition the almost, because while DFRPG limits the 'healing factor' to non-extreme conditions,
it seems fairly clear (at least to me) that Dresden's ongoing recovery from his burned hand is and example of recovering from an extreme wound that would be impossible for a human to recover from
.
That aside, I've been wondering just how far wizard's constitution goes?
* Does it grant immunity, resistance, or rapid recovery from many common diseases? (Has Dresden or any other wizard been sick with any non-supernatural diseases?) This seems implied by the long life, as otherwise it seems likely that older wizards would tend to die from, for example, cancer.
* Given that evidence suggests it is genetic in nature, are wizards born with it? Or is it something that 'develops' due to extended exposure to magical energy?
* If they are born with it, does it impact the baby wizard's likelihood of suffering from genetic defects? Or due to their 'wizard genes' are wizards all born defect-free?
* As the flip side to the above, if they are not born with it, will their wizard's constitution allow them to 'recover' from genetic defects?
I was toying with a concept for a midget wizard (High Concept: World's
GreatestSmallest Wizard! Trouble: Judge me by my size, do you?), and I wondered about this. Is it even possible to have a midget wizard (question 3)? Or (question 4) would the development of wizard's constitution bring with it an eventual reversal of his stunted growth?
Any thoughts?