n7axw wrote:SWM wrote:Yeah, we understand what you are urging. But we've already told you (and David has also said) it won't happen, because the worst case is not that they lose an isolated island. The worst case is that it wakes something up under the Temple that Merlin really wouldn't want woken up, something that can examine the entire situation and make a decision to bombard the Empire of Charis into reefs. Even the tiniest risk of that is too much--Merlin won't do it until he is certain the potential danger does not exist or is neutralized.
I agree, but with qualification. Merlin did take exactly that risk with steam. Something under the temple could have been awakened. No sign of any communicarion whatever to inform the temple "look! We have steam!" Nothing. Why? We don't know. All we can do is speculate. Should Merlin take that risk again? No comment.
Don
All right, it was a slight exaggeration to say "even the tiniest risk." But the risk with steam is miniscule compared to the risk with electricity.
Electricity is explicitly and vehemently prohibited by the Proscriptions. If anything is watching for prohibited technologies, it will be looking for electricity. I think we can take that as a certainty.
At the time that Merlin did his tests with steam, Charis had limited its innovations to improvements of
already existing technologies. The danger to Charis from examination at that time was relatively low. If we assume there is something watching, the probability that it is watching for the development of steam is fairly low. The developing industry Charis
needed more power than was available from the traditional Safeholdian sources, or it would be unable to compete with the total industry of the mainland.
Compare that to electricity. Charis has a burgeoning steam industry which is a total break from previous Safehold technologies. The danger to Charis from examination is now deadly; anything trying to enforce Langhorne's plan would have to eradicate Charis and steam technology. Given the emphasis the Proscriptions placed on electricity, we can be 100% certain that if there is anything monitoring for violations of the Proscriptions, they would be watching for electricity. And Charis does not need electricity at this point in time; they can get by with the power sources they have now. There is no pressing urgency to get electricity in the near future.
Given the fearful danger if electricity were detected, and the inability to put electricity to public use even in Charis because of the explicit Proscription, there is no point in taking even a tiny risk by making even small demonstration tests.