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#21 |
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GURPS FAQ Keeper
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Kyïv, Ukraine
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Raising TL above 8 isn't strictly necessary for meeting the challenge, no. Being able to maintain it indefinitely for further generations, though, is essential, so other people's point about universities is very important.
BTW, ditching democracy is acceptable, but remember that a revolt inevitably will result in loss of equipment, knowledge and TL, so we must keep the population content. As mentioned before, this can be compared to the Alpha Centauri scenario, but without the hostile ecosystem and the TL9ish starting gear. |
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#22 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2006
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Primitive Computer Hardware: FabLab a la Gershenfeld can make circuit boards. http://fablab.marcboon.com/pcb/ A large number of circuit boards adds up to a crude "integrated circuit." Computer Software: Use Linux and BSD. Primitive Plastics: Use organic farming to get bioplastics. Hydroponic Farms: Check issue 18 of Make magazine. Arduino for home agriculture- off-grid laundry - drip irrigation - solar heating sustainability etc. Machines. Use the Gingery approach to work up to the Factor-E Farm level. Vincent R. Gingery was an American who started with a bucket of sand and a lot of junk and managed to build his own machine shop. He wrote quite a few books about it. The modern equivalents of Gingery are the folks building open-source machine tools at: http://openfarmtech.org/index.php?ti...nstruction_Set They can start with rural junk and end up with: HABITAT PACKAGE: CEB Press (brickmaking machine) - Sawmill - Living Machines (I think that means water purifiers) - Modular Housing Units | AGROECOLOGY PACKAGE: LifeTrac Multi Purpose Tractor - MicroTrac - Agricultural Spader - Agricultural Microcombine - Hammer Mill - Well Drilling Rig - Organoponic Raised Bed Gardening - Orchard and Nursery - Modular Greenhouse Units - Bakery - Dairy - Energy Food Bars - Freeze Dried Fruit Powders | ENERGY PACKAGE: Pyrolysis Oil - Babington Burner - Solar_Combined_Heat_Power_System - Steam Engine Construction Set - Solar Turbine - Electric Motors/Generators - Inverters & Grid Intertie - Batteries | FLEXIBLE INDUSTRY PACKAGE: Lathe - Torch Table - Multimachine & Flex Fab - Plastic Extrusion & Molding - Metal Casting and Extrusion | TRANSPORTATION PACKAGE: Open Source Car Clearly I failed to communicate my notions of labor economics. Your question would not have arisen if I had expressed myself clearly. I do apologize for writing so clumsily, but I do not change my claim. Maybe I'm missing out on the communication, but if you think I'm lacking a boatload of data on how to improvise industrial tools, I've got a lot of posting to do.
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"It is now time to put away this embargo of truth about the alien presence. I call upon our government to open up ... " - Edgar Mitchell, Ph. D., Captain (Ret.) |
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#23 | ||||||
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Join Date: Jul 2006
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A skill that is practiced is remembered by its practitioner; a skill that is practiced in a small community tends to get passed on within the community. Modern education often serves as soul-destroying busywork that obstructs skill transmission. Do you disagree? The Gingery method was detailed in my previous post. Gingery was one real-life person who built a ridiculously complete machine shop. His methods are widely studied - but apparently not by everyone. Quote:
I have already claimed that each household can produce abundant food with minimal work. Apparently you wish to contest some part of that claim, but we haven't gotten down to specifics for some reason. http://books.google.com/books?id=9_s...ing%22&f=false http://www.your-vegetable-gardening-...gardening.html Your rhetoric is ambiguous. Are you implying that everyone else on this thread has a complete, itemized list of TL details, but I don't? Are you implying that the number of little things is incalculably vast? Reality Check: Real-life academics write papers about how many little things make up real-life TLs. Let me quote four papers. Quote:
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When you ask "How can she do all that stuff?" I'm not sure if you're stressing that it's impossible, or if you're requesting an explanation. I don't concede any of the points I think you've tried to make. However, my grasp of your communication is loose, and I don't know that I'm evaluating your thoughts as they were intended. Also I apologize for not posting this many hours ago - for some reason I couldn't log onto this forum for most of yesterday.
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"It is now time to put away this embargo of truth about the alien presence. I call upon our government to open up ... " - Edgar Mitchell, Ph. D., Captain (Ret.) |
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#24 | ||
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Join Date: Jul 2006
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If I can ask your indulgence, I'd like to first address the hardware issues of fab labs and open source machine tools. If we can get consensus on the mechanics of that, I will further argue that skills can be preserved and transmitted without recognizable universities. Consider, for example: http://opensourcemachine.org/ That website reads in part: Quote:
In brief, Molokh's issue is fictional (i.e. "How can the GM move fictional characters to a fictional world and have them do a fictional Robinsonade?") but the science underlying my contentions concerning this issue is factual. Over the past ten years, many highly-skilled workers and academics have considered issues of industrial sustainability. Unfortunately, the popular media, notably Kevin Kelly, have suggested that industrial interdependence is simply too complex to be considered. This has been disproven by McCarthy et al. Industrial evolution can be mapped out by means of cladistics. Most of the readers of this thread will probably decline to read engineering journals. (A flat-out refusal to read might be preferable to a shallow reading! Then again, if anyone reading this has an interest in the journals, by all means post a reply or PM me.) However, the practical side of this field has been extensively documented on the web by a very diverse assortment of interested parties. For example, Jeff Vail wants to build a sustainable society that can survive peak oil: http://www.theoildrum.com/node/4720 http://www.theoildrum.com/node/4741 http://www.theoildrum.com/node/4774 http://www.theoildrum.com/node/4844 Conversely, the fabrication crowd (the fablab/reprap hackers) are just hackers: they just love the act of using technology. http://reprap.org/bin/view/Main/WebHome The Whole Earth/Organic Farming/Urban Farming bunch are somewhere in-between. They like the activity for its own sake, but they also want to save the world: http://www.nature.my.cape.com/greenc...ewalchemy.html In short, the technology side of this is a real-life technical topic. It should not be hand-waved; rather, you should pick a set of technical experts that you trust and put their opinions into GURPS terms. (Note that the technical experts are not unanimous: Jay Hanson of dieoff.org might believe the human race will go extinct; Neil Gershenfeld might believe that Hans Moravec will lead us to a post-human singularity in ten years; Jeff Vail will probably predict wars against "global guerrillas.") Beyond the technology, the issue of universities is a question of economics and demographics. I am less sanguine about proving that rigorously, because I don't think economics is very clear-cut. Even if it were clear-cut, it tends to produce acrimonious controversies.
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"It is now time to put away this embargo of truth about the alien presence. I call upon our government to open up ... " - Edgar Mitchell, Ph. D., Captain (Ret.) |
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#25 |
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Join Date: Jun 2006
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Part of the difficulty here is deciding what you mean by maintaining a TL7 or 8 civilization. There are a good many millions of different products manufactured now, if your civilization must be actually making them all right now to qualify as TL8, then you really will need millions of workers and trillions of dollars of infrastructure.
If you don't have to produce them all right now, then the question becomes how many of them can you not be producing before you decide the TL has dropped. After 1 engineer who can read and a patent library probably can figure out how to produce most of them given a year or two - is a civilization with this still TL8? Probably not. But where you decide to draw the line above that is pretty arbitrary. What *is* the TL of a civilization that, say, can't make x-ray tubes right now, hasn't made one in two generations, but has a warehouse full of spares and could tool up to make them by the end of next year if nothing more important comes up? Much of the difficulty is that TLs aren't purely about either knowledge or current production, there is a significant standard of living component for individuals, and probably an equally signficant standing infrastructure and existing trade routes component for civilizations. In some ways, I think you could argue that a new colony could *never* not drop many TLs in the first few years after it arrived, no matter how much stuff it brought along, simply because a part of being a TL5+ civilization is having in place stuff like mining and transport infrastructure that it is going to take time to set up. How many people do they need to construct all that in a generation? Well, not much infrastructure really lasts more than a half century replacement time, and probably not more than couple percent of our population is involved in replacing it, call it a billion man-years, so maybe 50 million people to rebuild it in a generation. Capital costs are in the same order of magnitude as wages, so probably not more than trillions of dollars of equipment given some of it can be bootstrapped as part of their civilization building effort.
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-- MA Lloyd |
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#26 |
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GURPS FAQ Keeper
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Kyïv, Ukraine
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Malloyd: TL8 is defined as the information-oriented era with some other bits. It would include (based on GURPS Basic Set): Personal computers (at least on the level of 286), fuel cells, advanced batteries, solar power, gas turbines, hydroponics, DNA-related tech, essential pharmacy, medical scanners (X-ray etc.), organ transplants, unmanned (AI or teleoperated) scout craft, plastics and metals etc.
Things Basic suggests for TL8 that I allow to ignore due to being near-useless for small communities: anything space-related, fission power plants. I'm also assuming we can skip over luxuries which are easily doable at TL8, but are not feasible for scaling reasons - coca-cola factories, TV channels (aside from Youtube-like DIY video repositories). Is that sufficient to describe it? |
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#27 | |
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GURPS FAQ Keeper
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Kyïv, Ukraine
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Quote:
'The one who cannot do, teaches to do; the one who cannot teach to do, teaches to teach. The one who can do, can only do.' While it sounds harsh, it is also a very true proverb. For instance, my SO plays several musical instruments, but is incapable of teaching me, because of being unable to explain how to do it, or even explain what a note is. Sure, bad teachers still can produce good students - but only when the student is stubborn, curious and talented, and not otherwise. The rest they will accuse of being inept, lazy or whatever, but the result will indeed be near-zero. A student's only real requirement is willingness to learn. After that, a good teacher can always make the student into a good student. A good teacher and a talented, willing student will result in a perfect student. An unwilling-to-learn student will give bad results even with a very good teacher. |
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#28 | |||||||||
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Zagreb,Croatia
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Ill start with : "Phuuuuh" and continue with "Aaaahhhhhh" lol I started reading at 09:00 and after following your links and links of links and watching several videos it is now 14:52 h... One more lol haha :d 1) I would like to thank you for that info.It was very,very interesting read(specially links onto links) and I learned a lot today :)) 2) Quote:
More important is basic nature of Universities as institutions.You dont learn "What you will need to know" .... thats what technicians learn/do. What you learn ,as engineer...etc, is "What you may need to know" which makes tremendous difference in base of knowledge,implementation of same and multidisciplinary application /cooperation of same. What I do agree on is that modern education model is in desperate need of change from mostly "rote learning" and stuff that it still didnt surpass.But thats irrelevant for our discussion. 3) Quote:
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5) [QUOTE =Agramer]How many little things do you think constitute overall TL?[/QUOTE] Quote:
So no,I dont have clue how much of those 2little things" is needed to preserve <i>fully</i> targeted TL but number must be very high. 6) Quote:
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8) On your 2nd post I mostly agree with what you say and what most of people linked said. What I do disagree is that we will have "Replicator"(ala Star Trek) technology on TL8. Yes Rot machine is nice and will do a lot for mass produced goods and even specialised parts that could all be made at home,but still a lot of technology will be out of reach of such machine during TL8(OR it will be mamuthian mobile factory). Quote:
To summ all of above : You presented me with very interesting read and I learned a lot of new stuff. I fully disagree that fully functional TL8 society can be sustained with such small number of people(Im not even delving into deep sea/space programs here). 15:35 h /post :)
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SJG Browser turn based strategy game Ultracorps Great community...give it a try :) Last edited by Agramer; 11-29-2009 at 08:39 AM. |
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#29 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Apr 2008
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#30 | |||
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Banned
Join Date: Apr 2008
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Because scale is small compared to Earth 2009, in a lot of cases demand would not be sufficient to support specialization in a lot of cases anyway. While the super-doctors idea may be stretching things a bit, it seems to me that it would be reasonable to ask a select group of highly motivated people to bring or add a second or third occupational specialty to their erudition. Perhaps not as significant as their main line, but available if needed and teachable. Medic/beekeepers, Agronomist/videographer, etc. Quote:
That said, you might want to include some kind of sub-function/facility/social structure/ethic that captures some core functions of universities: collegial free inquiry, teaching a shared paradigm for transmitting analytical meaning, eliciting critical thinking ability. Maybe you'd go with a stripped-down university to 'keep the flame alive', so to speak. {BTW, regarding food production: there's no need to get too fancy, Molokh said it's an Earthlike ecology, so pick your best spot for your relatively tiny population, apply well known technology with a handful of people to ensuring a the basics, and food will practically take care of itself.} Last edited by Figleaf23; 11-29-2009 at 10:28 AM. |
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