OrlandoNative wrote:They should build on the far side of the moon. After all, they have stealthed shuttles in Nimue's cave. It shouldn't be all that hard for the fabrication unit to make some prefab modules for a simple moonbase, then transfer whatever is necessary to expand that (preferably under the lunar surface) into a major facility. Unless Langhorne and company emplaced sensors on the moon (and even if they did, they'd likely be scanning the planet, not space), being on the far side should shield most if not all emissions from the OBS sensors or any under the Temple.
While what has happened on Safehold to date is a deviation from Langhorne's original plan, it's not yet a dangerous one, from outside appearances. All the tech Charis has introduced is still well within the limits imposed by the Proscriptions. So any "visitor" looking over the planet and it's society as it is today, might well not see anything significantly (and obviously) dangerous - especially considering 1000 years have passed. Given the obvious level of technology, there'd be no reason to scan the far side of the moon; so any base there would likely be safely hidden. Even if the "visitors" came from deep space, the continued existence of the OBS - which would normally be one of the first targets of any advanced tech on the planet - would no doubt make them complacent.
Except that we still aren't sure what will flip the OBS to "Safehold-shattering Ka-boom" (to paraphrase my favorite martian). Nimue was unreasonably lucky (as pointed out) that it didn't go
blam when she first poked a SNARC at it. Breaking out an assault shuttle, or maybe just flipping a SNARC out of low-Safehold orbit, might well set it off. Not something to be risking unless there is an absolute
need to risk it.
And yes, 'the Plan' (or at least the bastardized version of it that existed after Langhorne's mortal coil was shuffled off and the survivors began throwing, um,
controls on it left-right-center) is very much off. Steam is very much a violation of the Proscriptions (even if Paityr Wylsyn is able to 'letter of the law while violating the spirit' around them).
More insidiously is the dissemination of Arabic numerals and higher order math. At first it'll look like it supports the Writ because Langhorne said 'X does Y' and the math supports it. But sooner or later someone will take a serious look at orbital mechanics and realize the Ptolemaic universe Langhorne insisted on using doesn't hold up.
That's the big one, I think.
Merlin has commented on a number of times that one of the reasons the Writ is so effective is because it works. It holds up under what 'test conditions' exist, and when those conditions fail they
fail exactly how the Writ says they fail (I recall one character thinking about sailors unable to keep the dietary laws and suffering scurvy, for example).
But Ptolemy... With enough observational data and the right mathematical tools, Ptolemy goes 'nope!' and
then you have a situation where the math everywhere else
supports CoGA is also telling you that something is Not Quite Right.