by Kyunji » Fri Jan 11, 2008 11:13 pm
I've given some thought to these subjects before. Travesty basically covered my conclusion, but here're a few other thoughts I've had. For example, I feel that this is how the Pokemon/trainer relationship would work in reality:
1. A trainer encounters a wild Pokemon. The Pokemon, depening on its species, will either attack on sight or attempt to flee until the trainer's Pokemon provokes it.
2. The trainer captures the Pokemon and sends it into a state of stasis within a Pokeball. While in the Pokeball, the Pokemon is essentially unconcious, but otherwise unchanged.
3. The trainer does as his or her title suggests and trains the Pokemon, working with it carefully -- perhaps in a controlled environment such as a gym -- so it won't run away, will respond to commands, and so on. Since Pokemon appear to have very high intelligence compared to real animals, they are able to quickly pick up the new concepts and even learn to understand (but not normally speak) human language.
4a. If the trainer treats the Pokemon with respect, he or she will develop a bond of trust and friendship with the Pokemon, and the Pokemon will fight for the trainer because it trusts the trainer not to put its life in danger.
4b. If the trainer is abusive, the Pokemon will still learn to fight -- it will learn even quicker than normal, in fact -- but it will only obey out of fear. This lack of a bond leads to a Pokemon that has slightly more power than normal, but has great emotional loss that can cause problems for its trainer. Think of it as the "dark side" of training -- fast, but, well, bad.
5. The Pokemon now obeys the trainer, and the rest is in the games.
Pokemon reproduce sexually, although they don't show it because hey, this is a kids' game. The way they breed is a little confusing, however; in the games (which are the only source I draw information from), Pokemon of different species but similar types are able to breed. (It's worth noting that Ditto can breed with all Pokemon and genders, with the exception of a few legendary Pokemon.) However, the offspring of such a relationship are not fusions of the mother and father, as might be expected; instead, the child is of the mother's species and inherits one of its father's attacks at birth.
I think that in real life, cross-breeding Pokemon would produce entirely new species, but in fanfiction it might be best to use the games' system, if only for simplicity's sake. ("Hey, guys! Look at my new Pokemon! I call it Electachu!") Pokemon breeders, therefore, would be people who specialize in breeding and cross-breeding Pokemon to produce powerful monsters that have the maximum genetic advantage and the ability to attack in ways not normally possible for their type.
None of the countries in the Pokemon world are ever mentioned as having any specific government. It's clear, however, that there is some sort of upper authority; police officers show up in a few places in the first games. You can probably write around the issue, but if I had to take a guess, I would say that the most likely form of government for any of the countries is a democracy with a prime minister as its head. My only reason for this is that... well, that's what Japan does. There's no evidence to prove this or any other theory, though, so you should write it as you see fit.
... Well, these are my feelings on a couple of the concepts you asked about. Of course, some of this is just my own conjecture, but I feel it makes sense, moreso in some cases than what the games indicate. I hope this helps.
EDIT: Oh, and just for the record, the "Pokemon can only say their names except Meowth because it's special" thing was only in the anime. In the games, they just make miscellaneous growling/chirping/"pipipipi" noises.