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After the war (or sooner)--electricity, Rakuri, and spoilers | |
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by NHBL » Mon Oct 19, 2015 12:42 pm | |
NHBL
Posts: 36
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The other nations starting to innovate is a good thing overall for Merlin's goals--but I see a few serious problems, especially since they're coming up with developments completely on their own, rather than just trying to match what the empire's done...
Right now, anything resembling electricity in the Empire of Charsis can be declared contrary to the proscriptions...but elsewhere, a desperate inquisitor might not make such a declaration in light of the needs of the jihad--or in light of large amounts of gold being transferred. This threat will only grow with time--and then Rakuri may strike... Even worse--if someone develops even primitive radio,it could attract the Gababa--and the people doing the development in foreign lands know nothing about these threats... |
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Re: After the war (or sooner)--electricity, Rakuri, and spoi | |
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by Duckk » Mon Oct 19, 2015 1:57 pm | |
Duckk
Posts: 4200
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I don't know why this idea that electricity is something that can be wiggled out of with a wink and a nod keeps coming up. This isn't like gunpowder, which had no explicit injunction against use. Electricity has its own little dedicated part in the Writ that specifically tells you that, no, you never, ever can touch Langhorne's holy lightning under any circumstances. It goes out of its way to explain what electricity looks like just so people know not to mess with it, ever.
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Shields at 50%, taunting at 100%! - Tom Pope |
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Re: After the war (or sooner)--electricity, Rakuri, and spoi | |
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by Dauntless » Mon Oct 19, 2015 2:17 pm | |
Dauntless
Posts: 1072
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while i agree electricity was setup as a major no-no and gunpowder wasn't as the idiots seem to have forgotten what can be invented once can be invented again, the church is getting DESPERATE. with already seen clynthan let things he would have never allowed to pass before the war, through without blinking an eye. maybe not yet, but I could see a desperate clynthan setting aside the injunction against elec if it was proven that it would a crucial tool in the defeat of the heretic of charis. that fact that it makes him just as dammed would be irrelevant. becuase he works for god and anything he does to combat heretics is right. |
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Re: After the war (or sooner)--electricity, Rakuri, and spoi | |
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by Duckk » Mon Oct 19, 2015 2:24 pm | |
Duckk
Posts: 4200
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viewtopic.php?f=7&t=4821&p=116198
In fact, there have been. Not a lot, given the nature of the Punishment of Schueler, and some of them have been allowed to recant and abjure their sinful trespass against Langhorne's Holy Rakurai. In return for a lifetime vow of poverty and service in one of the more severely austere monastic orders on top of some lonely, icy mountain somewhere, I handful of them have actually been allowed to live. Others have not been allowed to recant or have been allowed to recant and thus avoid the full rigor of the Punishment and settle for a simple hanging or beheading. This is not one of the prohibitions upon which the Inquisition is prepared to fool around, and any move to deploy electricity-based technology by Charis would automatically turn pretty much every believer on the face of the planet against it. Nor would even Zhaspahr Clyntahn be prepared to grant a dispensation to permit Mother Church's loyal sons to use it, no matter how big an advantage it appeared to give the heretics on the other side of the battlefield. There are Safeholdian analogs of electric fish, and their ability to deliver shocks marks them as sacred to Langhorne, which means they must be released if caught. The Proscriptions are framed primarily in terms of what is permissible, with the understanding that everything else is impermissible. That is, if it isn't permitted, it's prohibited. This precluded the need to explain exactly what constituted "technology" so that it could be outlawed. The Rakurai are a separate matter from the rest of the Proscriptions. Electricity is not simply not listed among the permissible forms of technology (which automatically makes it impermissible), but it is specifically forbidden — ostensibly because of its close association with Langhorne and the Rakurai — and is the only form of prohibited power which is described in some detail. It is, in fact, the specificity with which electricity is defined and prohibited which constitutes much of the basis for the inner circle's assumption that artificially generated electricity will draw a kinetic strike. -------------------------
Shields at 50%, taunting at 100%! - Tom Pope |
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Re: After the war (or sooner)--electricity, Rakuri, and spoi | |
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by n7axw » Mon Oct 19, 2015 2:26 pm | |
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Clyntahn is not the issue here. The OBS is. Of course it would be humorous if the inquisition started experimenting with juice and called down an Rakurai strike on themselves, wouldn't it? Don When any group seeks political power in God's name, both religion and politics are instantly corrupted.
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Re: After the war (or sooner)--electricity, Rakuri, and spoi | |
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by Expert snuggler » Mon Oct 19, 2015 5:12 pm | |
Expert snuggler
Posts: 491
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The Writ's an immovable object.
Desperate people's urge to rationalize is an irresistible force. |
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Re: After the war (or sooner)--electricity, Rakuri, and spoi | |
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by Dauntless » Tue Oct 20, 2015 9:52 am | |
Dauntless
Posts: 1072
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Clyntahn is not the issue here. The OBS is. Of course it would be humorous if the inquisition started experimenting with juice and called down an Rakurai strike on themselves, wouldn't it? Don[/quote] point is Clynthan doesn't know about the OBS plus he would never believe GOD would strike at his most loyal and devoted. though if not for the collateral damage it would be interesting to see. plus the PR bonus for the EoC. "God has struck down that liar etc who called himself man of god. The church must give up the punishment and return to its roots" kind of thing. |
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Re: After the war (or sooner)--electricity, Rakuri, and spoi | |
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by n7axw » Tue Oct 20, 2015 10:06 pm | |
n7axw
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No. But Clyntahn does know about the rakurai. He does not know what it really is, but does know that it smites those who violate the proscriptions by playing with God's holy fire. That is pretty much the same thing dressed up in religious language. Don When any group seeks political power in God's name, both religion and politics are instantly corrupted.
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Re: After the war (or sooner)--electricity, Rakuri, and spoi | |
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by evilauthor » Wed Oct 21, 2015 12:26 am | |
evilauthor
Posts: 724
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I'd like to tackle this argument from another direction: exactly what practical use would early electrical tech provide that would be so valuable, that someone IGNORANT of electricity's full potential would be willing to violate the Proscriptions and all the nasty political and religious fighting that would entail in order to use it? Yes, the Proscriptions include a somewhat detailed description of what electricity is, but somehow I doubt that description includes something along the lines of, "Hey, this stuff can be used for instant long distance communications!" Is something like an early telegraph system REALLY worth a religious war and potential civil war? Especially when continent spanning semaphore nets already exist? Somehow I don't think so. Frankly, I can't think of any early electrical tech that would be worth the resulting hullabaloo over it. And that's before you factor in the belief that "God" might strike such any such blatant violation of the Proscriptions. |
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Re: After the war (or sooner)--electricity, Rakuri, and spoi | |
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by Expert snuggler » Wed Oct 21, 2015 12:42 am | |
Expert snuggler
Posts: 491
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A telegraph has way lower latency than a semaphore chain and is weather-independent. Those are compelling advantages for military use.
By "early", do you mean prior to vacuum tubes? Radio's compelling but does require amplifiers. Telegraphs are strategic, field telephones are tactical, and they're golden too. The hullabaloo is already happening and Clyntahn has overplayed his hand. His enemies have nothing to lose if they outrage him further, except maybe their internal cohesion. At this point I wouldn't bet either way about how the Charisian on the street would react. |
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