Mark:
You are right, there are religious people who are great inventors and scientists but in general I think that it is essential and logical that religion has a negative effect on research. Religion is not only modern abstract believe in god, religion is also what we find in the history of religion: myths of gods and demons, forbidden places and forbidden thoughts. Ancient cultures did repress discovies because the new technologies could prove that on that certain mountain there are no gods and ghosts. The could prove that the earth runs around the sun and not the sun around the earth.
And so on.
I think you should have religions that are supporting science but are weak for military or integrating conquered cities (f.e. old greek polytheism) and religions that are very rigid (nearly no science) but fanatic (good for war) (f.e. Christianism, Islam).
But before you have to argue again: I know, these features do not depend only on religion.
Blade Runner:
I agree it is nice to have more than one path leading to the same technology but we should ask us: are the technologies still the same. In your Example: is technological antigravitation the same as levitation? Can I build levitated tanks and spaceships?
manurein:
This is true, scientists seldom research for military interest only, but the opposite is also true: Many discoveries have a militaristic origin and were used for peaceful purpose only later. The A-Bomb is an excellent example! And the H-Bomb even more: What else use do we have from nuclear fusion yet? We even can't build fusion power plants.
We should not forget: military can have own research facilities but it is no must.
Peter
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3DTT - the 3D sequel to Transport Tycoon - demo 4.0 coming soon
Path of Mankind. Turnbased Civ-like game - demo 15 coming soon
You are right, there are religious people who are great inventors and scientists but in general I think that it is essential and logical that religion has a negative effect on research. Religion is not only modern abstract believe in god, religion is also what we find in the history of religion: myths of gods and demons, forbidden places and forbidden thoughts. Ancient cultures did repress discovies because the new technologies could prove that on that certain mountain there are no gods and ghosts. The could prove that the earth runs around the sun and not the sun around the earth.
And so on.
I think you should have religions that are supporting science but are weak for military or integrating conquered cities (f.e. old greek polytheism) and religions that are very rigid (nearly no science) but fanatic (good for war) (f.e. Christianism, Islam).
But before you have to argue again: I know, these features do not depend only on religion.
Blade Runner:
I agree it is nice to have more than one path leading to the same technology but we should ask us: are the technologies still the same. In your Example: is technological antigravitation the same as levitation? Can I build levitated tanks and spaceships?
manurein:
This is true, scientists seldom research for military interest only, but the opposite is also true: Many discoveries have a militaristic origin and were used for peaceful purpose only later. The A-Bomb is an excellent example! And the H-Bomb even more: What else use do we have from nuclear fusion yet? We even can't build fusion power plants.
We should not forget: military can have own research facilities but it is no must.
Peter
------------------
3DTT - the 3D sequel to Transport Tycoon - demo 4.0 coming soon
Path of Mankind. Turnbased Civ-like game - demo 15 coming soon
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