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Old 10-31-2012, 08:11 AM   #84
Polydamas
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Central Europe
Default Re: Lengthening Low-Tech History

Quote:
Originally Posted by combatmedic View Post
Men were doing the good old 'analyze and innovate' for millenia before the so-called 'Enlightenment.'
The other thing to remember is that cultures are always dynamic, and features that become maladaptive will tend to be lost (whether through cultural change, exchange with another culture [as when one culture starts importing most of its metal from those blasphemous foreigners], or cultural replacement). I would have trouble believing in an anti-experimental mood lasting more than a thousand years or occupying much more than a quarter of Eurasia.

Similarly, ordinary people usually have religious beliefs different from sophisticated intellectuals.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Flyndaran View Post
But only in a personal subjective way. That is not ever anywhere near as useful as a truly scientific approach.
It can get you only so far, so fast. Methodical experimentation requires an O.C.D. type if not adhering to such an approach.
We know very little about how artisans before 1800 thought, because they didn't write much about their work and didn't get written about much. For every early 20th century report of craftsmen who listened to instructions then ignored them and did what they had always done, we have those Pakistani gunsmiths who could imitate any firearm that was given to them as far back as 1950.
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Last edited by Polydamas; 10-31-2012 at 08:15 AM.
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