@HDE226868 it wasn't a question on the main site. A guy named Pete showed up in chat and wanted someone to look over his world map. One thing led to another and I was trying to build a global climate model with it.
Recently, when thinking about metaphysics and in particular the notion of abstract concepts, while also reading various settings of movies, games and books, I noticed that usually, entities that are often branded as mysterious and unknown have the terms similar to what is described in the title.
...
Perhaps that will get me closer to the true nature of ???
Other notes:
Abstract algebra gives a really good guide on how to formulate RPG magic combinations (possibly even those that are non projectile too) because part of it is about what happens when A + B
Whereas metaphysics deals with the highly mysterious concepts such as god, the stuff above, death, life etc. and teach you the best way to formulate them in terms of magic
Art, being a non verbal language, allows you to understood some of these concepts that will otherwise took a whole book just to describe it
Culture then allows you to figure how it can be weaved into the setting and/or the plot
and finally, science also give unintuitive concepts to play with, and also highly formula type magic
(Above notes sidesteps the issue of true magic for now, as it is a much harder question that requires reading certain fictional works)
Materials would be constant where ever is being built back up. How many people are you going to spare, and how long you would work them and pay them are other things. Look at rebuilding after WW1 or WW2 for example.
Well, 3.9 billion human lives are dead, along with 1.9 billion extra dead humans from other factors in the aftermath of the Invasion.
So, 2.1 billion human survivors, many of which are either trying to migrate into the city centres as they are built from the ashes or trying to resist the GPI and their Visitor masters.
So, @FerretCivilization? 2.1 billion human survivors, and about 900 million of them already living in the city centres by 2034.
The rest are either in neutral settlements or fighting for the Resistance.
How much of a reconstruction effort can I expect anyway?
@FerretCivilization? With that in mind, 10 years is unrealistic for reconstruction, hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm?
It would be up to you. Just going off of large scale rebuilding projects. This would be a global effort, with the lack of logistics and the supplies that built the world the first time. For 10 years unless you realistically put 2 in 9 people in the construction field for those living in cities, which would be terrible thing to do, probably need longer.
Took a year for a city that was turned to dust to rebuild, took a continent ravaged by war a second time thirty. That was with aid, remove that, figured fifty is my ballpark, then add some for reality.
Back to their pre-bombed levels of output probably, could say sooner with just the framework being built. Like I said though, this is up to you. You could say ten with the fancy technology out there and the aliens rebuilding what they want.
...if you have any difficulties with English, please be up-front about them, and I can clarify words for you. But the context of the writings made it very clear I was not asking about the dragons' chances of winning elections - how does that not drip of arrogance and daftness?
I have hit the 2k-rep threshold recently, and hence my edits should now be automatically accepted without a peer review. However:
My English, though fluent, is very far from perfect. I can't edit a post written by a native speaker if I don't want to spoil it by a stupid mistake, even if I have ...
I get that, but do I use English names (and acronyms) or is there a way to make acronyms out of languages native to Africa?
Like Zulu, or Swahili or Yoruba, you get the point.
Besides, Africa combined has ~1,500 - 2,100 languages, with some estimates putting them over 3,000 languages.
Do I just use the acronyms for the various resistance groups that the European colonisers used during their grip on Africa in terms of linguistics or should I use local languages to make acronyms/names for the group out of?
You can say it fell, but saying they lose their military straight out misunderstands just how most of those nation's operate. Many of them are fighting asymmetrical warfare with up to six seven different local rebel groups. South Sudan is a prime example of this. Whereas the wealthier nations like South Africa, Nigeria, and Ethiopia help maintain efforts of peace through AU operations. Being hit by a superior force, like from the European nations, would be nothing new for them to deal with.
@FerretCivilization. Oh. Well, what about the conventional military forces?
Would any military divisions in the continent be able to survive the Visitor onslaught during the Invasion?
Or even their national governments for that matter.
Oh wait.
They do not HAVE some Cold War era bunker to hide on.
@FerretCivilization? Which conventional armies in Africa do you feel would survive the longest?
Most of Africa was already overrun by the end of day one, but conventional military engagements in Africa still carried on.
But who would do it?
Looking at Global Firepower, would you say that Nigeria, South Africa, Ethiopia, and most of North Africa could withstand the initial landing of the Visitors following their bombardment of Earth?
At least in terms of which nations survive the Invasion in Africa for the longest time period before RIP.
African conventional military power is all about being as asymmetrical as the enemies of the state they end up fighting. With a strong web of international affairs with the AU, which would probably be the thing largely carrying on as a small united front. Also, major languages of Africa go French, English, Portuguese, and Arabic.
@FerretCivilization? So, militaries aside, what about their governments?
You know: the governments of the nations of Africa?
Which could survive the longest before RIP?
Besides, how are you going to get Nigeria’s President, for example, to NORAD without getting shot down, killed or sunk, since.......well, the few heads of state that managed to survive are in Cold War era bunkers like Cheyenne Mountain/NORAD?
Many nations in Africa are ruled by the military in some way or all out, others are 'corrupt dictators' by our standards. Probably just move about with the military or resistance. Why go to the US?
Probably what you said, the north has a giant desert to operate out of, the center has a giant rain forest to operate out of, the south has a little bit of everything.
@FerretCivilization? Remind me again what you pointed out about post-GPI political borders being different?
Because I kind of forgot the specifics, except the general idea that cultural divisions will be the new factor for political borders rather than European-style artificial borders.
@FerretCivilization? How did you say post-GPI Earth would be like again?
Based off culture, with major Islamic borders split between their two sects in the northern deserts, local borders between community ties in the center and south. Maybe a united South Africa again.
In the Only Three Books Series, I've been asking for WB to cite three books to send forward in time to be a kickstarting reference for a civilization recovering from collapse. Given the complaints of too-broad and opinion-based, I'd like to firm up the somewhat nebulous nature of the series. My h...
As for the rest of the world, North America would probably get split between English and Spanish. Portuguese Brazil would probably shrink. Europe pretty much already has their borders settled. Maybe a more united Germanic cultural nation. Slavs kind of proved that does not work for you Europeans. Could say the same with the Romance nations to the west. Do it like that and Finland finds itself more lonely with Estonia and faraway Hungary, which would just be hilarious since it would be stretch
Asia, Islamic middle east and their two sects, Israel would be a mess of whose who. Imagine the Jewish Israelis would keep their grip on the area. Asia, China and India would probably split up more with their different people. Indonesia might find more island nations being formed in their old borders. Australia and New Zealand would probably do what USA and Canada would do and merge into one cultural area with more islands included. As they would be the base of the Pacific over Japan.
Take a closer look at that map, most that Spanish area is around 10%, not exactly a lets take over the local people marker.
At the end the border would probably shift up yes. However you bombed out the populated areas were the culture has a foothold and left the largely unpopulated but highly Spanish areas to wither out. So there would probably be funny areas of the lines shooting out and back down again on the map.
The Americans may as well take full control of their former territory, even though there would probably be a few guerrillas by the Spanish-speaking areas of America that were not completely affected by the Invasion.
@FerretCivilization? Question about one of the characters now: do you feel that Sgt. Sikes having a daughter and ex-wife would make him feel more alive?
Oh and NOTE: They both die in the Invasion (which could serve as an extra motive for continuing the fight: avenging his child's death).
As in: would you say you could get more attached to the character with a family pre-Invasion with him?
Probably if you wanted hard borders yes, I would imagine it would really just be a gray fuzzy zone since neither side would really have the logistics or the need to be like, "This worthless desert here with shells of cities that would cost more to build up again than they would return, this is mine"
Maybe, character development is not my thing. I would imagine some might connect with that more. Personally if you are just adding that to kill them off, seems like a trope that has been done a lot.
Anyone would be better than me at this, waiting for Terrible Writing Advice to cover it myself. And tropes are not bad, they are tools. Killing them off for motivation is one thing that is done poorly a lot. You could keep them alive is just as popular.
@FerretCivilization? So it still applies, even if a few books later, he is already dead?
Besides, he is the main protagonist (for this part of the series, at least).
I probably should have the first few books focus on the North American story arcs in particular, then develop the sidequels to work on the situation elsewhere on the planet.
That way, I do not need to cram multiple story arcs (9 of them in particular) into the span of four days.
I get that, but how long before humanity has any basic way of defending itself in space?
Say.......setting up nuclear-tipped satellites, having military spacecraft in orbit, ready for a time when the Visitors return (if they return), and preparing to get a few colonies elsewhere in the Solar System?
@HDE226868 all the people currently hating the Principia have evidently never experienced the epic feeling of reading Newtons laws on a centuries old second edition ;)
It is never mentioned just what the point of being there was. Could have been the scout force for one, could have been a botched attempt. Who knows, just have that one alien there that emotionally bonds with some kid.
@Gryphon? Question: which would be more interesting: War of the Worlds but from the Martian perspective or Independence Day from the Harvesters' perspective?
@Mithrandir24601 Ah, reading the words of the master himself! It's not necessarily the greatest for bedtime reading, to put it one way. I view reading Principia as more of a "for fun" project - or else to better appreciate modern scientific writings (and textbooks)!
In less than an hour, aircraft from here will join others from around the world, and you will be launching the largest aerial battle in the history of mankind. [pauses] Mankind. That word should have new meaning for all of us today. We can't be consumed by our petty differences anymore. We will be united in our common interests.
Perhaps it's fate that today is the Fourth of July, and you will once again be fighting for our freedom. Not from tyranny, oppression, or persecution… but from annihilation. We're fighting for our right to live. To exist. And should we win the day, the Fourth of July will no longer be known as an American holiday, but as the day when the world declared in one voice: We will not go quietly into the night!
We will not vanish without a fight! We're going to live on! We're going to survive! Today we celebrate our Independence Day!
In memory of President Stephen Whitemore; hero of the War of 1996. You will be missed (unless it is the sequel, which is terrible).
Because I would like to see how much TNT equivalent alone out of the total cities destroyed by nuclear strikes in the Invasion would be in China's obliterated coastline.
@FerretCivilization? PR nightmare?
Oh........................
Well, just what parts of China would you say are better off nuked in the coastline of China?
None?
Because Tibet is probably something the CPC would rather see gone, but.....you know.....Tibetans are going to be very bloody angry if Lhasa gets nuked.
So, if the PLA had to choose between sacrificing Tibet and the Chinese coastline (where most of the Visitor forces are landing in the nation anyway), which would it be?
They have a choice of which case they want to fight for. You seem like you really want the military to fall apart. Desertion would be a thing. Leveled, something that we have done to our own cities in wars, can still be retaken. Russia is pretty good at showing this.
I mean the nuclear option was the sign that we gave up in the long run. Like with the Cold War, it was the last option, for both sides it was to be used to slow down the enemy and take as much out as possible before dying.
China’s coastline covers approximately 14,500 km (around 9,010 mi) from the Bohai gulf on the north to the Gulf of Tonkin on the south. Most of the northern half is low lying, although some of the mountains and hills of Northeast China and the Shandong Peninsula extend to the coast. The southern half is more irregular. In Zhejiang and Fujian provinces, for example, much of the coast is rocky and steep. South of this area the coast becomes less rugged: Low mountains and hills extend more gradually to the coast, and small river deltas are common.
China’s coasts are on the East China Sea, Korea Bay...
This is a list of contiguous urban areas of the world ordered according to population as of 2014/2015. The figures here have been taken from Demographia's "World Urban Areas" study.
== Definitions and issues ==
Demographia defines an urban area (urbanized area agglomeration or urban centre) as a continuously built up land mass of urban development that is within a labor market (i.e. metropolitan area or metropolitan region), without regard for administrative boundaries (i.e. municipality, city or commune). Except in Australia, the authorities use a minimum urban density definition of 400 persons...
@Mithrandir24601 Mathematical Methods - the book you mentioned on meta - is actually one of my textbooks for next semester. It's just a half-semester course, but I intend on keeping the book for a while.
I'm now imagining post-apocalyptic science classes: "Now, back before the nuclear winter set in, we studied photosynthesis, which was important the world over." *pauses* "Since then, the science of ecology has undergone some changes."
@HDE226868 By the way, you got totally jobbed on that 3 books physics answer. Half the people above you didn't even answer the question properly, and no one else took the time to talk about what is or isn't in the books
@kingledion? How many JL-2s with 3 90 kt warheads would be needed to wipe out 62 out of 100 major cities, and many of those cities in China, especially the southern coastline are literally next to each other.
@kingledion Yeah, I know. I think the best answer on that one was the one suggesting the Feynman lectures; I upvoted maybe one other because it had a decent argument.
@HDE226868 I think the feynman lectures are the worst ones. I bet you a dollar written word translates better than spoken word over the eons. Anything designed to be spoke won't translate well to another, possibly vastly divergent, culture.
@kingledion Like I wrote in a comment, I think they're better as supplementary material rather than as the sole source of knowledge. They provide slightly better intuition in some cases.
And now I should head out. I'll be back in here in a few hours.
However, the Type 096 is scheduled to replace the Type 094, so by then.....assuming they have at least one in active service, they could have 4 Type 094s that launch 12 JL-2 SLBMs and one that launches 24 of them.
And not even JL-2 SLBMs.
The newer JL-3s would be carried by the Type 096-class nuclear submarine China is currently developing.
And based on the 2013 announcement, assuming the PLA has had very little delays in the development of the Type 096, I could see the first finish construction in 2023 and then months before the Invasion, it enters active service.
I am going to assume a Type 096 enters active service on the 19th of April of 2024.
Just a few months before the Visitor spacecraft enters orbit on the 29th of July and the Invasion begins on the 17th of August of that year.
So, 24 JL-3s + a total of 48 JL-2s ready to obliterate the 64 designated targets.
And ONLY if the PLA determines that the city has been overrun.
Aka: if there are still a lot of civilians or PLA forces in the city, the PLA conventional assets could still help evacuate the surviving civilians or get out of the city before the warheads descend on their target.