evilcat4000 wrote:You have been transported to the 50 BC Roman empire. You have all your knowledge but can not take anything with you. Can you take over the world ?
Take over the entire planet? Only if I was immortal. Otherwise, hell no.
What could I do, if I appeared naked somewhere near Rome in 50 B.C.? Well, if I tossed enough basic French or Spanish at them, I might be able to worm my way to a library and pick up Latin. I could give them a general idea where the oil and coal is. They can also produce gears and pulleys. And their tech ought to be up to snuff to cast boilers. So we could produce steam engines, once me and my apprentices were able to convince the powers that be, that steam was truly a useful idea.
Once we had steam and fossil fuels, we could start out building rail lines, which would eventually give the Empire solid cohesion and coordination. And at some point, we'd have a talk about replacing all those lead pipes with copper or iron pipes. And, when they develop the ability to reliably cast iron pipes . . . I'd use my basic knowledge of gunpowder and set an apprentice or two trying to figure out how to get the right formula. And then, eventually someone's going to get it right and figure out that gunpowder expands faster than steam in an iron pipe with one end fused shut . . . and that this expansion can propel a hunk of metal forward with great velocity . . .
And, if I remember right, they have some knowledge about electricity. Once we get the industry started, I could give them something that's useful and within their new reach. Though I don't know much about radio, we could get them started on the telegraph.
Of course, to ensure my own long life, I'd introduce them to the infectious agent theory of medicine. And, if I remember correctly, they had a clue what glass was. I'd show someone the basics of grinding and polishing glass lenses. This would immediately give them the ability to produce telescopes and microscopes. (Though the telescopes would give them an immediate advantage over most of their enemies.)
Would this allow me to take over the entire world? Hell no, not unless I could take a bunch of people back with me and some books. Would it give the known world a humongous leap in technology and sciences that would allow them to completely dominate the planet in my name? Maybe.
And, to satisfy the ancient need for mysticism, I would warn them that eighty to ninety years after my arrival, a Roman governor in Palestine will have the opportunity to put a wildly reviled self-proclaimed messiah to death. I will instruct them that under no circumstances is that governer to obey the locals and sentence the man to death. Instead, he is to be locked up somewhere, for as long as they can hold him, and maybe shoot him repeatedly if they've gotten around to inventing useable muskets by then. :twisted:
Now one might ask if I have any desire to promote equality in society. My answer would be, no, not in my lifetime. Though in my twilight years, I'd start writing books about modern economic theory and equality of the races and the sexes. I'd bank on the fact that the increasing industrialization and modernization would eventually force them into evolving more 'modern' concepts on how to treat women and minorities.
So, what could I, a well-read man of science do . . . provided I don't meet an early end?
A) Push them to industrialization.
B) Force them towards a more modern view of medicine. Though this would be an easier task than industrialization, since a lot of groundwork has already been laid.
C) Vastly improve the mobility of their military forces (through steam engines) and improve their intelligence gathering (through telescopes) and improve their coordination (through telegraphs.) And possibly increase their lethality (through gunpowder . . . and the correct usage of it)