And now just to stir things up a bit!
When I read through this thread, and through others in this forum, I always have smile and ask myself - "Why do we keep finding perfectly logical reasons why something WON'T work, and think about how ingenious people can be when it comes to finding ways that DO make things work?"
Case in point: I watched an episode of "Mythbusters" one time where they made a cannon out of ice. Was it practical? Nope. Was it ultimately workable? Nope. Was it hilarious to see this ice cannon shattering into a million pieces on TV? You betcha! But was the concept at least feasible? I think it was. Not in the form that they actually built it, but as a starting point. And nothing more than that.
So as we move into the discussion of turbine engines, I think not about exotic materials and advanced mathematics, but about a caveman engine. Perhaps not practical, perhaps not durable, perhaps not even feasible in its first (or even its first half dozen) iterations.
But workable as a CONCEPT. Workable as a STARTING POINT.
Howsym's people have repeatedly shown how innovative they can be when someone just gives them an idea. Or when someone ties together two disparate ideas. And then turns them loose to think about it and explore a bit. Think about the revolver innovation with metal cartridges and how it came about, resulting in a crude sketch that was shown to Howsym. And from that one discussion came a dramatic increase in short-range firepower.
These are the things I really enjoy reading about in David's books, perhaps because he drives to the core of the human spirit - the spirit of exploration. The spirit of encountering a barrier and not just saying "too hard, too much trouble." Instead saying "If we can't go through it, can we work around it?" or "What if we make the shotgun cases out of reinforced paper?"
I think we as readers tend to project our Earth-like preconceptions and biases onto the Safeholdians. We unconsciously think that because we have the neat, mature technologies available today that the maturity of those things should be the
starting point for the same innovations on Safehold. IMHO "It don't work that way."
Yes, I DO realize that today's technologies are (in most cases) the result of decades (or I guess centuries in many cases) of experimentation and thought. But global war is a most efficient way to spur innovation and new thinking. And innovations developed for wartime use often (dare I say very often) have non-wartime applications.
So ever time the Mad Wizard Weber throws a concept out, I put on my engineer hat and think about how it might be done given what they have as a technology base. What tradeoffs might they need to make? If something won't work, is there an alternative? Is there some other material? Some other path? Something that IS available to them that WOULD enable them to at least prove the concept? Personally, I think this might be Owl's most value - in guiding Howsym and others in the College to the possibilities, and to the allowable (under the proscriptions) alternatives.