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@Imperial Fister
Hey Blackhand, have you ever heard about the Rheingold and if so what do you know about it?
Hey Blackhand, have you ever heard about the Rheingold and if so what do you know about it?
'I have no idea what you're talking about.'Hey Blackhand, have you ever heard about the Rheingold and if so what do you know about it?
Oh wait, the Rheingold is from Wagners operas, not the orginal myth. My fault.
So when humanity arrived, the land had like, a 'lock in' to when humans were present? So first the land has to go back to 'normal' and then only after that you can have continental drift and such?
Does a steam engine work in this setting?How does a Steam engine (or anything else with a lot moving part) work in a setting where the laws of physics change based on what time zone you're in!
Matter can be made of atoms, in the sense of "there are tiniest indivisible parts of matter," without physics working the way we expect.Edit 2: Blackhand knew what atoms were which the Norse most definitely didn't implying that physical laws are not based what the local dominant culture believes.
We have reason to think there were intelligent species before humanity.I mean, the world must have worked some way before there were people to have a culture.
It kinda seems like when something is made (by humans?), that something has 'cultural inertia' imbued in it, allowing it to function regardless of the prevailing culture it's in. So if the culture believes that they can make steam engines, then they make one, and the steam engine subsequently operates on the 'Steam engines work' paradigm.Does a steam engine work in this setting?
Alternatively, maybe a steam engine works in some places, but not in others, same as how Norsemen can stick their severed limbs back on and reattach them and most other folks can't.
There are loads of pretty smart animals, honestly. It could be that humans in this setting are uniquely special with their ability (or perhaps degree of their ability) to impose culture, however.We have reason to think there were intelligent species before humanity.
It's entirely possible that the world we know was genuinely created by something that also created the first races to populate it. The base state may well have already been colored by people's expectations.
Does a steam engine work in this setting?
Alternatively, maybe a steam engine works in some places, but not in others, same as how Norsemen can stick their severed limbs back on and reattach them and most other folks can't.
Matter can be made of atoms, in the sense of "there are tiniest indivisible parts of matter," without physics working the way we expect.
We have reason to think there were intelligent species before humanity.
It's entirely possible that the world we know was genuinely created by something that also created the first races to populate it. The base state may well have already been colored by people's expectations.
I can think of ways for magnetism to work recognizably on the level of "compasses are a thing and lodestones attract ferrous metals" without physics on the level of "relativity and quantum mechanics" being recognizable.There was also some discussion of magnetism,IIRC. It strongly indicated that physics were familiar if you ignored magic.
I can think of ways for magnetism to work recognizably on the level of "compasses are a thing and lodestones attract ferrous metals" without physics on the level of "relativity and quantum mechanics" being recognizable.
You frown as you consider his musings. As you do, a question springs back to mind, a question that you'd been meaning to ask for some time now, "So, how does the North-Knowing trick work, anyways?"
'It works by connecting to something called a 'magnetosphere',' he hums to himself as a light frown graces his 'features'. 'This was once explained to me by a friend in my youth, a friend whose name now escapes my traitorous memory.'
It indicates understanding that somewhere up or out there, there's a sphere that is in some way, shape, or form "magnetized."Specifically, Blackhand remembered the word 'magnetosphere'. This is the quote:
That's, I think, indicative of a somewhat more advanced understanding of magnetics.
It indicates understanding that somewhere up or out there, there's a sphere that is in some way, shape, or form "magnetized."
Believe me, I could bullshit up something that doesn't run on physics as we understand it at the deep level, but which still matches that description.
Imagine going to NQ and explaining IRL science in Norse terms.Sure, but every other thing we know about the world also supports it working how ours does for the most part except when magic gets involved. It's not impossible for all that to be wrong, but it's sure unlikely given what we've seen, and everything IF has ever said on the subject supports reality having a base state which culture and cultivation then effects.
Gotland isn't ready yet. What that means, you don't know, but it feels correct.This Gotland you're seeing now, is, alive, like, fully alive like the Hading? Or is it like half-alive, like Wessex, or even possibly, more 'alive' than the Hading?
No
classic hero momentWould it be.. wrong or otherwise feel incorrect/inproper for you to take some of Gotland's soil (or plants) back home, or even to leave behind in your Soulscape?
noYou remember the Aspect-sharing experiment, did you feel anything weird when I stoked your Aspects?
people smell like their fylgjaDo Fylgjur smell like the animal they resemble, or like the person? Did my Owl Fylgja smell like me, or like, well, an
So Gotland is like, recovering after being killed.Gotland isn't ready yet. What that means, you don't know, but it feels correct.
...
Hmmm....Not only islands, for the record. All land will, eventually, return back to its original state.
..oh, my.... That would definitely be a great resource management if it could be harnessed.
It just wants 5 more minutes!Gotland isn't ready yet. What that means, you don't know, but it feels correct.