thanatos wrote:First of all, RFC has already established that the Safeholdian belief system covers things like microbiology (germs are really tiny demons left behind from Shan-wei’s rebellion). Simply looking into a microscope is insufficient to prove the Writ wrong. The same is true for astronomy as well. All the things that poked holes in the Catholic Church’s view of the universe five or six centuries ago - a view that stemmed from ignorance, guesswork, mythologizing and the absence of adequate scientific tools - cannot exist on Safehold, since the Holy Writ spoon fed the population with perfectly accurate explanations for the way the natural world works. No Safeholdian believes that Safehold is the center of the universe because the Archangels told them it orbits the sun as other planetary bodies do in the system. No Safeholdian is unaware of the causes of disease because the Archangels told of ways to combat them. No - a scientific attack on the Writ’s credibility or accuracy will not suffice. Moreover, the Proscriptions of Jwo-Jeng establish that certain types of knowledge are reserved for the Archangels and God alone and that mankind must not explore them (and doing so is sinful).
I’m not looking to prove the Writ “wrong.” Nor am I proposing a “scientific attack” on the Writ. Instead, I’m suggesting that certain actions can be taken to familiarize people with more secular reasoning while slowly chipping away at some of the mysticism wrapped up in the Writ. Emphasizing a germ theory of disease doesn’t mean rejecting the idea of “little demons” running amok and forcing a theological confrontation; it does, however, give you a means of allowing familiarity to breed contempt and provide some small grounds for supporting the Reveal
in the future.
It also opens the door for vaccines with a bit of hand-wringing and a *very* creative attestation. Eventually, the idea that you can permanently keep germs/demons from making you sick contradicts the idea of sickness-as-sin. Plus, Pasquale and Jwo-Jeng couldn’t have banned vaccines without admitting that you can acquire immunity to a disease.
As for the Proscriptions, I’m not too concerned about them in this context. They limit certain areas of knowledge, but they had to be careful to avoid describing them in too much detail and giving would-be heretics a roadmap. And the Royal College got around them by focusing on exploring the boundaries of permitted knowledge. Microbiology, vaccines, and similar efforts wouldn’t have to come into conflict because they’re more of the same for the College.
In a sense, it’s not too different from Charis’s industrialization plans. They’re avoiding actual conflict with the Writ, but still subtly sabotaging it in a way that will help tilt the playing field a bit when people start to think about the Reveal after the initial revulsion. The goal is to make the Writ less credible when people start thinking about it critically and with a skeptical eye for the first time in a thousand years.
thanatos wrote:Second, within the Inner Circle there is the understanding that faith cannot ultimately depend upon a lie and that a rejection of God resulting in the revelation of the truth is an acceptable spiritual risk. For the moment, they must let the lie stand until the coercive power of the CoGA is broken. The philosophical tools they are using to accomplish this are entirely secular - an appeal to both the rulers and the ruled of Safehold to reject the Church because of its corruption. And Clyntahn’s atrocities only fuel that hatred even further. Yet there will always be those, even among the reformists, who would want a return to the status quo ante, to the reassertion of the Church’s authority throughout Safehold, albeit with new management, and a return to the “traditional” (and familiar) lifestyle espoused by the church (which includes the re-imposition of the Strictures). Add to them all those who benefited from the previous system (like say Harchongese nobles), people fearful of the technological changes (because they experienced the horrors of technological warfare) and those who truly believed the Church was right to attempt to destroy the “heresy” and you get the people who will coalesce for the next big fight.
No one is arguing that the Inner Circle should just go for it and trumpet the truth from the rooftops. It’d be suicidal, and taint *every* advancement made thus far.
I agree that the majority of reformists hope that the schism can be healed and the Church reformed and reunited. That’s probably a factor of distance from Old Charis and its industrial revolution, however. That same distance, however, brings you closer to the atrocities committed in Siddarmark and those people are the ones least likely to ever forgive Mother Church for her actions.
That said, I’m hesitant to extend that to a rejection of the advancements Charis has made. Railroads, steamships, gas lighting, the assembly line, and everything else improve conditions to an extent that can’t be denied. There isn’t an industry or kingdom on Safehold that wouldn’t benefit from them. Even northern Harchong is going to have some trouble with denying their usefulness (they’ll still try, of course). People might not be comfortable with the rate of innovation, but after a short period of time, those concerns are lessened through familiarity.
It won’t prevent the next war, and I agree with you about the likely major players in that war, but a lot of those groups will come out into the open well before the millennial return and/or the Reveal because they have no other choice. Harchong, for example, can’t compete against assembly lines and mechanized farming with serfs. And while Harchong might think trade is beneath them, they still have to deal with the consequences when their entire balance of trade is effectively eliminated. The same goes for those most uncomfortable with the changes being made: at some point during those twenty years, they’ll boil over. If they don’t, they miss their chance to prevent the end of whatever it is that each group holds dear (spiritual stasis, secular power, etc.). So the next war will have to deal with remnants and echoes of those groups trying to coalesce, but their initial industrial and power base will be significantly curtailed by comparison. It’ll still be a truly nasty fight, but it’ll be much shorter than the current one.
Where it all gets really interesting is when you start thinking about what happens after that war. For a while, I thought that they’d have a long-term security problem with a fringe minority of true believers making trouble. But the more I think about it, the more I think that’s unlikely. In addition to being able to recreate every single angelic miracle, prance about on “Holy ground,” and profane the hell out of the Rakurai while daring Langhorne to react, they’re going to be able to highlight the Church’s atrocities in a manner that’ll go a long way towards eliminating any lingering love of the CoGA. When you can witness full holographic recordings of concentration camps, mass murder, torture, and more it’s hard not to be sickened or to deny the wrongness of it when you can witness for yourself thousands of children being murdered. I think you’ll have some holdouts, but they’ll struggle to recruit amongst the younger generations. Give it enough time, and it’ll die out to a man.