“We have had some such troubles, yes. I suggest, Mister President, that you tell your people what I told mine. In view of the circumstances, Britannia waives the rules.”
Oh dear… this series looks to be fun and really really bad.
“Good Omens” (Pratchett and Gaiman) is an excellent book along such apocalyptic lines.
Now that you mention it, this is kind of the premise of the Star Ocean series. It has “symbology” (as it’s called in the third installment, Till the End of Time), which is basically the ability to manipulate nature to do “magical”-seeming things by formation of particular symbols. The people in these worlds harness this capability for standard engineering purposes: they build air-conditioning units that draw their coldness from application of specific symbols.
The plot of End of Time revolves around a professor combining symbological powers with those of genetics.
TTEoT is a superb game, and that’s not the only LW-relevant theme it contains.
Spoilers:
Gur cynlre punenpgref ner NVf jub cebprrq, va gur pybfvat npgf bs gur tnzr, gb rfpncr gurve obk. Gur raqvat vf n Crezhgngvba Pvgl-yvxr fpranevb jurer gur “birefrref” fuhg qbja gur jbeyq-fvzhyngvba—ohg vg pbagvahrf naljnl qhr gb vagreany frys-pbafvfgrapl.
Oh, hush you. With my LessWrongian superpowers, I know what the game was meant to be about. It’s not our fault that the scriptwriters just had to be rephrased with the “sbhegu qvzrafvba” herpaderp so that lesser mortals could follow it. :)
(I’m now imagining a MethodsOfRationality!Fayt who had been expecting the plot twist based on ubj fhfcvpvbhfyl uhzna nyy bs gur “nyvra” enprf va gur tnynkl jrer...)
:D I was rather disappointed in Eliezer for not giving Star Ocean: Till the End of Time a mention in his ultimate crossover fanfic. My cat is named Fayt. (The other one’s named Lyra.)
The nearest example I can think of is the alchemical concept of transmuting one metal into another. This process is of course central to nuclear reactions, but pre-20th Century was considered physically impossible.
People have cited some very modern inventions, but ever since the first invention, people have been inventing things that were previously relegated to magic. I mean, what else is technology?
Some technology is for replacing things ascribed to magic. But most technology is fulfilling needs that a wizard doesn’t know he has, or is there to solve a need or problem that wouldn’t except for some other bit of technology.
Look at a few thousand (out of the millions of existing) patents. How many of them have a direct analogue in magic such that their utility really is something ‘previously relegated to magic’? - not vaguely falling in a general class of functionality which you once saw a spell kinda-sorta like.
For example. Recent news about an environmentally friendly rocket fuel made out of just nitrogen and oxygen. This is a very modern invention. It’s very useful. What magic does it replace?
‘Oh, rocket fuel replaces flying on a broomstick!’ Ah, but I wasn’t talking about rocket fuel in general and certainly not rockets+rocket-fuel, because this invention was not of ‘rocket fuel in general’. This invention was of a particular kind of rocket fuel. What magic does this particular kind of rocket fuel replace? The answer is none. Flying magic is conceived of as intrinsically environmentally friendly. Harry Potter never asks himself how he will pay for the bioremediation of the hydrochloric acid left in the wake of his broomstick.
Take a look at Kevin Kelly’s discussion of sparkcatchers. What magic is this technology replacing? This isn’t even particularly esoteric stuff like I could start pulling out from biology or chemistry. (What wizard—or author—ever had the imagination to think of bacteria glowing green like fireflies?)
This kind of statement reminds me of an upvoted quote here somewhere which went ‘since when has the majority ever been right about anything?’ This irritates me, because the majority is right. Of the infinite class of propositions the majority holds, most are right, and the ones the majority has been wrong about, like geocentrism, have approximately measure 0. It’s right about everything else. The majority in the room I am in think I have 2 hands; think I have 2 feet; think I have 2 lungs; think I am there; think.… etc.
For a group that’s supposed to be so awfully wrong, the majority seems to get things awfully right.
But most technology is fulfilling needs that a wizard doesn’t know he has, or is there to solve a need or problem that wouldn’t except for some other bit of technology.
Very much agreed. By the way, this one one of the points W. Brian Arthur makes in
The Nature of Technology which I recommend as a well written exposition of quite a number of the dynamics in technology development.
One very broad range of technology which has no analog to magic is high precision
instrumentation. There are very few situations in daily life when I need to know a
measurement to within 0.1%, and they are many technological and scientific
situations where that knowledge is necessary.
Actually, Arthur is already on my reading list. ;) I think I must have seen him recommended before by Kevin Kelly or perhaps Don Ihde.
One very broad range of technology which has no analog to magic is high precision instrumentation.
I was going to point out that another good example is all the sensory modalities that science knows of, like electromagnetism in all its forms and frequencies, or gravity itself, but I thought that they were too arguably close to magical ‘second sight’ or chi skills like sensing someone nearby.
You have to be careful that you don’t go from “the majority is right in most cases” to “the majority is right in this case” without good reason. Prior to any information about this case, sure, it’s a good guide. But if you have reason to believe that this case isn’t a trivial inference from overwhelming direct observational evidence, then the majority is much less of a guide. When it comes to a socially-accepted conclusion, a severe dearth of evidence, and motivations to hold a certain point of view, 70-90% - the majority—get it wrong.
On the phrase “since when has the majority ever been right about anything?”: on most points of difference, the majority has been wrong first and right only later. It is easy to look at only the points of difference: when it comes to points of similarity, you are part of the majority, and so you’re not really interested in knocking them down. Perhaps a better formulation would be “since when has the majority ever been right about anything that isn’t simultaneously important and obvious ?”
The problem with saying
of the infinite class of propositions the majority holds, most are right
is that most are boring. On the class of interesting propositions, the majority does not have a good track record.
Voted down because of epistemic strutting. Not citing examples in your first comment is one thing, but you could at least have done so in your follow-up.
-- Steve Gilham
The Salvation War Web Original trilogy is based on this premise. And boy does it makes good use of it.
I’ve just been reading it.
Oh dear… this series looks to be fun and really really bad.
“Good Omens” (Pratchett and Gaiman) is an excellent book along such apocalyptic lines.
I’ve been finding it to be rather terrible, in terms of plausibility. I won’t rip into it at length, since the tvtropes link seems to do a decent job.
Relevant xkcd: http://www.xkcd.com/808/
Now that you mention it, this is kind of the premise of the Star Ocean series. It has “symbology” (as it’s called in the third installment, Till the End of Time), which is basically the ability to manipulate nature to do “magical”-seeming things by formation of particular symbols. The people in these worlds harness this capability for standard engineering purposes: they build air-conditioning units that draw their coldness from application of specific symbols.
The plot of End of Time revolves around a professor combining symbological powers with those of genetics.
TTEoT is a superb game, and that’s not the only LW-relevant theme it contains.
Spoilers:
Gur cynlre punenpgref ner NVf jub cebprrq, va gur pybfvat npgf bs gur tnzr, gb rfpncr gurve obk. Gur raqvat vf n Crezhgngvba Pvgl-yvxr fpranevb jurer gur “birefrref” fuhg qbja gur jbeyq-fvzhyngvba—ohg vg pbagvahrf naljnl qhr gb vagreany frys-pbafvfgrapl.
So it’s the same as the plot of Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality? >.>
Oh god, I hope not. You can see in my above comment what that would actually entail.
As it was presented in the game, I personally found that to be among the worst plot twists I had ever experienced.
Fnlvat gung gur znva punenpgref ner nyy NVf fbhaqf n ybg pbbyre guna gur zber cerpvfr eriryngvba, gung gurl’er nyy ACPf sebz na ZZBECT cynlrq ol orvatf sebz “4 qvzrafvbany fcnpr” juvpu gheaf bhg gb or culfvpnyyl nyzbfg rknpgyl yvxr gurve bja havirefr.
Oh, hush you. With my LessWrongian superpowers, I know what the game was meant to be about. It’s not our fault that the scriptwriters just had to be rephrased with the “sbhegu qvzrafvba” herpaderp so that lesser mortals could follow it. :)
(I’m now imagining a MethodsOfRationality!Fayt who had been expecting the plot twist based on ubj fhfcvpvbhfyl uhzna nyy bs gur “nyvra” enprf va gur tnynkl jrer...)
:D I was rather disappointed in Eliezer for not giving Star Ocean: Till the End of Time a mention in his ultimate crossover fanfic. My cat is named Fayt. (The other one’s named Lyra.)
It does, and it is.
Are you referring to psychology?
I posted without having thought of any examples, still confident that the statement is true.
The nearest example I can think of is the alchemical concept of transmuting one metal into another. This process is of course central to nuclear reactions, but pre-20th Century was considered physically impossible.
Lightning was the weapon of Zeus. Now it can be controlled by electrical engineers.
The Aztecs thought the sun was a god. Now plasma physicists can produce light via similar means.
Those are good examples.
Magnetism?
People have cited some very modern inventions, but ever since the first invention, people have been inventing things that were previously relegated to magic. I mean, what else is technology?
Some technology is for replacing things ascribed to magic. But most technology is fulfilling needs that a wizard doesn’t know he has, or is there to solve a need or problem that wouldn’t except for some other bit of technology.
Look at a few thousand (out of the millions of existing) patents. How many of them have a direct analogue in magic such that their utility really is something ‘previously relegated to magic’? - not vaguely falling in a general class of functionality which you once saw a spell kinda-sorta like.
For example. Recent news about an environmentally friendly rocket fuel made out of just nitrogen and oxygen. This is a very modern invention. It’s very useful. What magic does it replace?
‘Oh, rocket fuel replaces flying on a broomstick!’ Ah, but I wasn’t talking about rocket fuel in general and certainly not rockets+rocket-fuel, because this invention was not of ‘rocket fuel in general’. This invention was of a particular kind of rocket fuel. What magic does this particular kind of rocket fuel replace? The answer is none. Flying magic is conceived of as intrinsically environmentally friendly. Harry Potter never asks himself how he will pay for the bioremediation of the hydrochloric acid left in the wake of his broomstick.
Take a look at Kevin Kelly’s discussion of sparkcatchers. What magic is this technology replacing? This isn’t even particularly esoteric stuff like I could start pulling out from biology or chemistry. (What wizard—or author—ever had the imagination to think of bacteria glowing green like fireflies?)
This kind of statement reminds me of an upvoted quote here somewhere which went ‘since when has the majority ever been right about anything?’ This irritates me, because the majority is right. Of the infinite class of propositions the majority holds, most are right, and the ones the majority has been wrong about, like geocentrism, have approximately measure 0. It’s right about everything else. The majority in the room I am in think I have 2 hands; think I have 2 feet; think I have 2 lungs; think I am there; think.… etc.
For a group that’s supposed to be so awfully wrong, the majority seems to get things awfully right.
Very much agreed. By the way, this one one of the points W. Brian Arthur makes in The Nature of Technology which I recommend as a well written exposition of quite a number of the dynamics in technology development.
One very broad range of technology which has no analog to magic is high precision instrumentation. There are very few situations in daily life when I need to know a measurement to within 0.1%, and they are many technological and scientific situations where that knowledge is necessary.
Actually, Arthur is already on my reading list. ;) I think I must have seen him recommended before by Kevin Kelly or perhaps Don Ihde.
I was going to point out that another good example is all the sensory modalities that science knows of, like electromagnetism in all its forms and frequencies, or gravity itself, but I thought that they were too arguably close to magical ‘second sight’ or chi skills like sensing someone nearby.
You have to be careful that you don’t go from “the majority is right in most cases” to “the majority is right in this case” without good reason. Prior to any information about this case, sure, it’s a good guide. But if you have reason to believe that this case isn’t a trivial inference from overwhelming direct observational evidence, then the majority is much less of a guide. When it comes to a socially-accepted conclusion, a severe dearth of evidence, and motivations to hold a certain point of view, 70-90% - the majority—get it wrong.
On the phrase “since when has the majority ever been right about anything?”: on most points of difference, the majority has been wrong first and right only later. It is easy to look at only the points of difference: when it comes to points of similarity, you are part of the majority, and so you’re not really interested in knocking them down. Perhaps a better formulation would be “since when has the majority ever been right about anything that isn’t simultaneously important and obvious ?”
The problem with saying
is that most are boring. On the class of interesting propositions, the majority does not have a good track record.
Voted down because of epistemic strutting. Not citing examples in your first comment is one thing, but you could at least have done so in your follow-up.