The Ottoman Empire made use of European technology to great effect throughout the 19th century, and most particularly in WWI.Junghalli wrote:The Ottoman Empire: started out with a considerable technological leg-up on Europeans but never bothered to industrialize and copy European technological advances until they were so far behind it was pretty much too late.Frank Hipper wrote:Examples?
Their collapse was centuries in the making, and attributable as much to internal forces (if not moreso), than to external. Not to mention the fact that Turkey exists today, in reasonably recognisable form.
The Inca were never culturally stagnant, they were a vibrant and extremely young civilisation barely more than a century old when Pizzaro landed.The Inca: they were in pretty much the same position we're in now; they didn't believe any civilizations existed that could threaten them. They called their empire "The Four Corners" because they thought they controlled most of the planet. Until they became acquainted with the Spanish that is.
Isolation and unforseeable invasions do not equate to stagnation.
You can only prepare for the most likely occurances: in the case of the Inca the existance of the Spaniards was more than unlikely; it was literally unthought of.Admittedly running around worried about an impending alien invasion is crazy, but assuming that no external threat will ever materialize doesn't strike me as the smartest assumption either.
This hypothetical human civilisation would assumedly incorporate the knowledge of current civilisation; if we are aware of the ridiculously remote possibility of alien contact, why would this genetically manipulated future civilisation forget it?