David Weber has said that the Writ links electricity and lightning with lightning being reserved for God and Langhorne.
Plus David Weber has said that for all the history of Safehold, the Inquistition has punished strongly anybody playing around with electricity.
So while nobody within the Inner Circle knows for sure that generation of electricity would trigger the bombardment system *or* awaken whatever is sleeping under the temple, none of them wants to risk finding out for sure.
As for Merlin testing if steam power would trigger the bombardment system or awakening whatever is sleeping under the temple, while steam power was something likely forbidden by the Proscriptions it was also not directly mentioned as being forbidden in the Writ as was electricity.
So it was viewed as safer to test than would be testing the expressed ban on electricity.
Another thing to consider, since the ban on electricity is expressly mentioned in the Writ the vast majority of Reformers would likely see electric power as a "step into heresy".
So based on what David Weber has said, even if the bombardment system (or whatever is under the temple) didn't react to electric power generation, the reaction of the vast majority of people on Safehold, including people loyal to Cayleb, means that electric power generation is a bad idea.
n7axw wrote:This is intended as a question, not a contradiction. But why assume that electricity is the trip wire for the bombardment system? I realize that this is implied in the book and assumed in the forums, but why?
Merlin thought that steam could be the trip wire, but it didn't turn out that way... Maybe juice wouldn't trip anything either. Could Merlin test that in the same way he did for steam?
Don