Dilandu wrote:That's what readers need to understand if they want to put the Safeholdian rate of progress into context with the historical rate of progress here on Earth in real life.
The main problem is a educated workforce. How many people in the Charis able to at least read and write?
Genuine literacy in Charis probably approaches 50% of the total population and more like 75% of the skilled work force. Why do you persist in trying to make this fit a terrestrial model? It specifically
doesn't. You refer in your last post to the lack of a uniform standard of measurement. If someone in Charis is trying to make a part for a reaper in Siddarmark which was manufactured in Dohlar, this is going to be a
major problem. If a particular manufacturer is making parts for
hisreapers, with measurements
consistent with his own in-house units, then it becomes as least as practicable
for his manufactory as Eli Whitney's so-called "interchangeable parts" were for his rifle-making facility. When Charis needs to hugely expand its capacity, it exports a genuine system of standardized measures which
replace the existing nonstandard measures. It's not as if they had to invent the concept of measurement from scratch, and with the Church getting behind and pushing, implementing the new standards sailed through pretty darned quickly. Yes, it was a problem for them for a couple of years, but it was building on a well established platform of concepts.
This isn't Earth; there is a much larger skilled work force even before Merlin comes along; the starting points for metallurgy and other aspects of the technological infrastructure are much further advanced (although by "rote" learning, in many respects) than you are willing to allow/grasp; and the technological tool box includes capabilities which are substantially more advanced than the starting point you seem to insist on imposing upon the planet. Let me try this one more time.
Safehold didn't have to invent any of its basic pre-Merlin tech. It didn't have to figure out "how" it worked; it only had to accept
that it worked because the Archangels taught them how to do it. That meant that Safeholdian artisans --- of which there were many times as many, proportionately, as any Old Earth preindustrial society could have supported because of the agricultural advantages which have been repeatedly pointed out --- had a very good practical knowledge of processes which took centuries to develop from scratch in our own experience. What Merlin and Howsmyn have done is to take that basis of existing, practical, "rule of thumb," "divinely inspired" capability and impose understanding of the "why" upon it, with the help of the Royal College and the enthusiastic support of the Church of Charis.
Whether Langhorne realized it or not, he stuffed Safehold full of the launch pad for a genuine industrial revolution because of the information packed into the
Writ. The only things which kept his master plan from spinning out of control so long were (1) the fact that the
Writ also provided a "divine" explanation for why things worked which precluded a systematic examination of processes and natural laws to figure out how to do things even better and (2) the fact that the Inquisition was riding shotgun on the Proscriptions and making sure no one transgressed them on any organized scale.
What part of that do you not understand?