This whole time he set up Lemuel to become the Heavenly equivilant of Abigor, huh? Except that unlike Abigor, Michael ends up in charge - or so he thinks.

Moderator: LadyTevar
Wow. Impressive chapter. Nice to see things pay off...and this is going to be interesting. So Michael is bringing the human army in? I didn't (quite) see that coming.I wonder if I'll ever forgive me.
Nice catch. Fixed.Ace Pace wrote:Typo, you confuse section Three and section six. That's just as a quick reply and not as a criticism of the chapter.
Then you are being overly skeptical. No one in the world today posses a supersonic passenger transport. Do you honestly believe that because we don't have any today, they couldn't have been built in the past? There's a hole in your arguement so large concord could fly through it. In fact you might even be able to trundle a Moon Rocket through it. (Are those examples good enough for you?) Your logic also seems to bares similarity to Arguement From Personal (Chronological?) Credulity. If I (we today) can't understand it, then neither can you (them yesterday)!Simon_Jester wrote:ANTIcarrot, I am very skeptical when people talk about technological capabilities "more advanced" than what we have today in some sense that can be done feasibly using old technology.
Well that's the difference. I'd be willing speak to him before he was able to comply with your requirements; and thus I'd get a six month lead on you in deciding if the idea was genius or crackpot. Worst outcome for me is losing half an hour. Worse for you is losing a multi billion dollar contract. I'm sure you're happy with that risk. I know I am with mine.And because it's very easy to talk big about something no one really expects you to build. Like the Tesla death ray. So no, I would not give him money without a detailed description of how, exactly, his device works, with equations. Which he isn't going to be able to provide, because he never did learn the requisite material.
what about thisStuart wrote:Nice catch. Fixed.Ace Pace wrote:Typo, you confuse section Three and section six. That's just as a quick reply and not as a criticism of the chapter.
Stuart wrote: The focussed trumpet blast from the assembled angelic assault group shattered the wall that surrounded the old temple that the League of Divine Justice used as its headquarters. The one I told them to use as their headquarters anway Michael thought to himself. He sensed the angels around him had already gathered their power and shaded his eyes as a blinding glare of the purest white light shone from them. Then, while the guards in the ruined temple were still disorientated by the trumpet blast and blinded by the glare, they stormed across the narrow gap and climbed the destroyed wall.
How does any of the examples you point out refute his skepticism about technological capabilities "more advanced" than what we have today done with older technology? All your examples point out what could've been done, but not how well they'd be done. Could some things not to far back do things some stuff made later do? Yes. Do it as well or better? As efficiently (or better)? As cheaply (or better)? Doubtful, to use an understatement. Very doubtful.ANTIcarrot wrote:Then you are being overly skeptical. No one in the world today posses a supersonic passenger transport. Do you honestly believe that because we don't have any today, they couldn't have been built in the past? There's a hole in your arguement so large concord could fly through it. In fact you might even be able to trundle a Moon Rocket through it. (Are those examples good enough for you?) Your logic also seems to bares similarity to Arguement From Personal (Chronological?) Credulity. If I (we today) can't understand it, then neither can you (them yesterday)!Simon_Jester wrote:ANTIcarrot, I am very skeptical when people talk about technological capabilities "more advanced" than what we have today in some sense that can be done feasibly using old technology.
Consider the B-52 as a worked example. There has recently been a lot of back and forth in the USAF about whether its a good idea to replace its 8 old engines with 4 new engines. Imagine if this had been done ten years ago. Then people (ten years) in the past would have a B-52 that could fly further and faster than the one we actually have today; even though with todays engines we could do better still.
Technology is often a matter of politics and economics and imagination, as well as applications of science. It's what we choose to build, and what we can think of to build. Since human imagination is largely random, it is quite fair to concieve of alternative histories where great inventors had other great ideas. Or had the same great ideas, but in a different order, or with different funding. The US Space Shuttle is a monstrous white elephant. But if NASA had been given the required budget, and they hadn't be laboured with the USAF's insane mass/volume/cross-range requirements, they might have done the job properly by investigating any of other launch architectures which almost certainly would have worked better. Speaking of near misses, I'd also like to draw attention to projects like the german 1980s Stealth Fighter, 1940s german X-4 wire-guided missiles, and 1940s british M.52 supersonic jet. None of which got quite finished, but all of which were technically feasible and got damn close to beating the 'official' introduction date by a good ten or twenty years.
Liquid nitrogen cooled coper electromagnets were possible back then. Heavy water did exist. Basic knowledge of light element fusion existed in 1932. If someone had come up with the bright idea to put them all together in the right order, and found the funding, they almost certainly could have built a simple polywell far more powerful than the USN's current best. Because I'm sure you googled this subject extensively before throwing acccusations of foolishness about, you are of course quite aware that the experimental polywells (8 & 8.1 might be exceptions) are currrently being built on a shoestring budget, mostly using materials that have essentially remained unchanged since the 1930s. Whether or not that could have produced positive energy production is more uncertain, but I feel it is quite reasonable to believe they almost certainly could have built a functional polywell.
Well that's the difference. I'd be willing speak to him before he was able to comply with your requirements; and thus I'd get a six month lead on you in deciding if the idea was genius or crackpot. Worst outcome for me is losing half an hour. Worse for you is losing a multi billion dollar contract. I'm sure you're happy with that risk. I know I am with mine.And because it's very easy to talk big about something no one really expects you to build. Like the Tesla death ray. So no, I would not give him money without a detailed description of how, exactly, his device works, with equations. Which he isn't going to be able to provide, because he never did learn the requisite material.
I certainly hope so. If Lemuel is as good an investigator as Michael credits him with being, he ought to come round once Maion is no longer in danger and he has the skeptical investigative acumen of human military authorities to help him. Lemuel might be blinded by his affection for his fuckbuddy, but human authorities will not be nearly so gullible, and Michael will have to survive the same kind of rigorous questioning that Abigor did in the Iraqi detainment center - except that Abigor was genuinely ignorant of human military power and had a sincere existential movement, rather than being a slinking tinpot schemer with a closet full of skeletons waiting to be kicked in.The Vortex Empire wrote:Goddamn, that was one intricate, overcomplicated plan. However, I'm pretty sure it will all come falling around Michael's ears. I see Lemuel ending up in command.
He is rather clever isn't he?Peptuck wrote:Michael, you magnificent bastard.
Anti, don't be absurd.ANTIcarrot wrote:Then you are being overly skeptical. No one in the world today posses a supersonic passenger transport. Do you honestly believe that because we don't have any today, they couldn't have been built in the past?Simon_Jester wrote:ANTIcarrot, I am very skeptical when people talk about technological capabilities "more advanced" than what we have today in some sense that can be done feasibly using old technology.
Heh. I'd talk to Tesla, no problem. I just wouldn't give him money if he couldn't give me a convincing design concept.ANTIcarrot wrote:Well that's the difference. I'd be willing speak to him before he was able to comply with your requirements; and thus I'd get a six month lead on you in deciding if the idea was genius or crackpot. Worst outcome for me is losing half an hour. Worse for you is losing a multi billion dollar contract. I'm sure you're happy with that risk. I know I am with mine.And because it's very easy to talk big about something no one really expects you to build. Like the Tesla death ray. So no, I would not give him money without a detailed description of how, exactly, his device works, with equations. Which he isn't going to be able to provide, because he never did learn the requisite material.
I liked Louise's one more.
Well, if we're going to have a plane with sunglasses wearing flameskull Union Flag, can we just swing for the fences and have Bruce Dickinson fly it?Spekio wrote:I love this chapter, I hate this cliffhanger.
Want to know the flag of the first aircraft to enter heaven?
From: Here
That is not a complete sentence, and can be read in multiple ways. Specifically you are missing either the word 'do' or 'could' before the word 'have'.Ilya Muromets wrote:How does any of the examples you point out refute his skepticism about technological capabilities "more advanced" than what we have today done with older technology?
Oh but why not be absurd? It seems to be one of those conversations...Simon_Jester wrote:Anti, don't be absurd. It's one thing to talk about technological capabilities that existed in the past and do not now exist. It's another, much more tenuous, thing to talk about capability that did not exist, arguing that it "could have existed." Even though no one ever actually bothered to build it. Moon rockets are the former; fusion reactors are the latter.
"I want to build a submacopter!"
If it involves electricity, magnetism, and the death ray designs he actually patented, then no, no it is not possible. We know what the laws of electromagnetism are, and the Tesla Death Ray doesn't perform as advertised in a universe where they hold true. And we knew this back when Tesla proposed the idea, which is why the military (rightly) turned him down. Only trouble is, Tesla didn't know, or didn't care, what the laws of physics governing the phenomenon he was trying to exploit were.ANTIcarrot wrote:Simon_Jester asserted with apparent absolute conviction that Tesla's death ray was bogus. He is almost certainly right. But it remains remotely possible that in his final years Tesla had one last great idea that he didn't write down and which no one else has duplicated yet.
If the US can build something, I wouldn't be surprised to learn that the French or the Russians could build it too. Those are technologically advanced nations; one might fail to duplicate another's project, but it would not be beyond the bounds of sanity for them to succeed.We seem to be disagreeing not so much about technology but philosophies for Alternative History. You seem happy to ask What If about (say) the SASSTO being built and actually working as advertised (even though it almost certainly wouldn't have IIRC) because that was a historical proposal. But it sounds like you would baulk at the idea of the French building it, because that is not an idea from recorded history. That seems a very tenuous distiction to me. (Sorry if I keep coming back to space based technologies. But that's what I know about.)
And yet, this is very much the situation with the Tesla death ray. Tesla never managed to answer the obvious questions about how his device could work, given that it seemingly ignores the laws of physics. Indeed, he may not have even realized that the questions needed to be asked; he wasn't very stable in his declining years."I want to build a submacopter!"![]()
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Quite agree.
Things could still go very wrong if we decide to shoot first...JonB wrote:That portal had better open up to a hospital, civilian or military, otherwise things could go very, very wrong.