... and many more ninjas...
Back on topic please.
1. What we have been discussing is about how technology should be implemented for the purposes of getting out of the Medieval Stasis that is the exact topic of this thread.
2. You're not helping, nor are on topic, yourself.
This is not correct in the latter statement, but correct in the first statement. The fault is that you believe that I am asserting that books can convey SKILL. I have argued against this multiple times, but the weight of those protests against your arguments seems to be lost in translation. A book is able to convey information. On this we agree. The disconnect is that you seem to view structural plans, and information about how to adapt those plans as being incapable of being conveyed by a book. That information, along with the rationale of why, would fall into your mnemonic category of "philosophy". I would remind you that books containing nothing BUT philosophy exist, and have existed for centuries. Books need to be able to convey this. Conveying this does not confer skill, nor discipline. One can teach themselves the skill, through practice and determination, if given a sufficiently detailed education on process and purpose, however.
This is the exact problem.
My argument isn't that books don't convey philosophy, it's that a philosophy is
exactly what those books convey. It's just that philosophies are products of culture, and cannot be transplanted by book.
There is cognitive dissonance in what you are arguing.
You say in one sentence that you agree that books do not convey a skill, but then in the next sentence say that books convey the ability to have a better understanding of a topic, and enable use of a better technique...
and that is exactly what skill abstractly represents.
It's also not "structural plans" that are lacking, it's
the structure. You cannot build a porcelain-firing furnace the way that the Chinese did with just texts that tell you how to build them - those took armies of woodcutters to feed the furnaces. You cannot build air-tight devices with precision just by reading a book about them. You cannot build modern Pentium Quad-Core processors by just reading a book. It takes technological development, and that's not something you get from a book --
and you know it.
This is a faulted premise: somebody that doesn't understand a modern glassworks, cannot make the mental leap from what they currently do know, to what the book is instructing, no matter how well written the book is.
[...]
A complete, fully inclusive comprehension of the subject can be conveyed by such a book, because it does not make any presumptions about the background of the reader. Only that they are literate. This example was completely ignored, and is still being ignored.
It is not ignored, I argued why it was wrong.
That's why I talked about there never being a single historical case of what you are proposing
ever happening. Because it cannot happen.
Just having a book out of Alexandria wouldn't spring Europe out of the Dark Ages. There's proof - they
did have many of the books out of Alexandria, kept safe in monasteries, discussed by some theologians and intellectual elites of the church (that did the safekeeping), but it couldn't actually bring about real changes because their society wasn't capable of acting upon them. They couldn't, and wouldn't, turn into recreations of Ancient Greece.
A single book, no matter how well-written cannot change a culture that wasn't already on the verge of being able to change that way, itself. (Basically, at a tipping point.)
That is why technology and culture can be copied through contact, as with the Europeans and Arabs, or with the Japanese and Americans, where there is an impetus to change the culture of the society into accepting these ideas, but where it will never happen in a
You are also ignoring the whole philosophy I've been pushing this whole thread - even while agreeing to the information it conveyed frequently - that
ideas don't drive technology, and therefore, books that carry ideas cannot drive technology.
Economics drives technology. Cultural acceptance drives technology. The demand for newer or better products drives technology.
This is the problem I'm underlining - you're only looking at the surface-level information, not looking at the drivers of the changes you are talking about.
And this is what this whole thread is about - modeling those drivers of technology.
I've described a model for how technology advances or recedes, along with the industrial capacity, labor skill, and cultural willingness to push a technology along, or let it backslide into obscurity, only to be re-discovered again. This model is based upon what actually happened in history (where things did backslide and were re-discovered later), not just a commonly-accepted theory that feels "truthy". Books that reveal unto a whole society how to remodel themselves into the societies of the past, and give them the will to do so don't exist.