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 . It is amusing to be accused of a belief by ideologues, without an opportunity to state one's actual beliefs, and more importantly, the observations that lead to working hypotheses, Which belief-driven ideologues may not believe in.  . It is amusing to be accused of a belief by ideologues, without an opportunity to state one's actual beliefs, and more importantly, the observations that lead to working hypotheses, ... which belief-driven ideologues may not bother with. Fire, ready, aim.
 .261 [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interchangeable_parts | Interchangeable parts ]] - attributed by the authors to the US Army Ordnance department. Actually appeared many times in history, Carthagenian standardized ships, and Qin dynasty crossbow mechanisms in the third century BC. Interchangeable type (China, then Gutenberg), French standardized-bore cannons in the late 18th century, inspiring Eli Whitney's guns, Brunel's sailing pulley blocks, Henry Maudslay's locks and standardized threads ...
 
 . What made these innovations possible was social and economic stability. You don't build tooling for one-off tasks, if your shop can be burned in an invasion or seized by the "nobility" (3rd+ generation bandits).

Merchants Of Doubt

How a Handful of Scientist Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming

Naomi Oreskes & Erik M. Conway 2010 Beaverton Library 174.ORE


Smoking, Climate, Acid Rain, Strategic Defense, Ozone Hole, DDT/Rachel Carlson, Dixie Lee Ray

  • 260-1 "Moreover, the Soviet Union, for all it's failures, was a technologically innovative society. Most famously, they launched an artificial satellite into space -- Sputnik -- before the United States did."

    • The authors' ideology (and lack of historical research and technology savvy) is showing. The Soviet Union built much larger nuclear warheads, because their aim was poor; the US deployed smaller warheads and smaller strategic missiles because accurate aim could destroy a hardened target at lower cost with less unnecessary damage and fallout. That meant the US did not have giant rockets to launch heavy, unsophisticated battery-powered satellites like the modified 280 metric ton R-7 ICBM that launched the battery powered, 22 day, 184 kilogram Sputnik 1.

    • The US was public about its program and progress, and developed a separate non-military Vanguard launch vehicle to launch the tiny solar-cell-powered Vanguard 1 satellite. The Vanguard rocket failed on the first and second attempts (as did many of the Soviet R-7 ICBMs).

  • 261 Cornucopians hold to a blind faith in technology that isn’t borne out by the historical evidence. We call it "technofideism."

  • It is amusing to be accused of a belief by ideologues, without an opportunity to state one's actual beliefs, and more importantly, the observations that lead to working hypotheses, ... which belief-driven ideologues may not bother with. Fire, ready, aim.
  • 261 Interchangeable parts - attributed by the authors to the US Army Ordnance department. Actually appeared many times in history, Carthagenian standardized ships, and Qin dynasty crossbow mechanisms in the third century BC. Interchangeable type (China, then Gutenberg), French standardized-bore cannons in the late 18th century, inspiring Eli Whitney's guns, Brunel's sailing pulley blocks, Henry Maudslay's locks and standardized threads ...

  • What made these innovations possible was social and economic stability. You don't build tooling for one-off tasks, if your shop can be burned in an invasion or seized by the "nobility" (3rd+ generation bandits).

MerchantsOfDoubt (last edited 2023-04-15 23:34:09 by KeithLofstrom)