I've read all the posts in this thread, and am overall at least -0.5 on the idea. I like methods well enough, but mostly it just seems to invite confusion versus the equivalent and existing option of importing functions. I am happy, initially, to stipulate that "some clever technique" is available to make accessing an extension method/attribute efficient. My objection isn't that. Rather, my concern is "spooky action at a distance." It becomes difficult to know whether my object 'foo' will have the '.do_blaz()' method or not. Not difficult like no determinate rule could exist, but difficult in the sense that I'm looking at this one line of code in a thousand line module. The type() of 'foo' is no longer enough information to know the answer. That said, one crucial difference is once an extension method is "used" we are stuck with it for the entire module. In contrast, functions can be both namespaced and redefined. So I can do: import alpha, beta if alpha.do_blaz() == beta.do_blaz(): ... I can also do this: from alpha import do_blaz def myfun(): from beta import do_blaz ... We get scoping and namespaces that extension method lack. So perhaps we could add that? from extensions import do_blaz with extend(list, do_blaz): assert isinstance(foo, list) foo.do_blaz() This would avoid the drawbacks I perceive. On the other hand, it feels like ain't a fair amount of complexity for negligible actual gain.