M
Malenfant
Guest
Just something to keep in mind at high TLs - please make it consistent!
Also, this may be worrying about things that are far beyond what you were thinking of, but I hear a lot of Ancient handwaves that just assume that Ancients could do whatever they liked - particularly when it comes to terraforming or moving planets or stars, etc. They still have to overcome whatever problem they're facing by applying technology to it though - for example, to move a planet means you either somehow have to be able to totally change its momentum vector or negate its mass, or just plop it through a wormhole that is wide enough to accommodate it (or even just teleport it) - all of which requires a vast amount of energy that has to be imparted to the planet or system moving it, without destroying it.
So while the adage may say that "any sufficiently advanced technology will seem like magic" to a lower tech civilisation, bear in mind that the operative phrase is highlighted in bold - it's NOT magic, it's just so advanced that it looks like it is. But even with the Ancients, or even TL 15-20, I don't think that's so advanced that we don't have a clue about the principle it operate under.
So for me at any rate, it's not enough to say "OK, the Ancients moved the planet to 3 AU further out using their Unspecified Ultratech Armwave Device". They still have to have the means to move the planet somehow, based on everything that's been specified before. If they have planetary-scale teleportation or wormholes (I think that matter transference does show up at high TLs doesn't it?), then fair enough. But if not, and they don't have the obvious means to do it without destroying the planet in the process, then that means that they still can't do it. That's how I'd approach it anyway - YMMV
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Also, this may be worrying about things that are far beyond what you were thinking of, but I hear a lot of Ancient handwaves that just assume that Ancients could do whatever they liked - particularly when it comes to terraforming or moving planets or stars, etc. They still have to overcome whatever problem they're facing by applying technology to it though - for example, to move a planet means you either somehow have to be able to totally change its momentum vector or negate its mass, or just plop it through a wormhole that is wide enough to accommodate it (or even just teleport it) - all of which requires a vast amount of energy that has to be imparted to the planet or system moving it, without destroying it.
So while the adage may say that "any sufficiently advanced technology will seem like magic" to a lower tech civilisation, bear in mind that the operative phrase is highlighted in bold - it's NOT magic, it's just so advanced that it looks like it is. But even with the Ancients, or even TL 15-20, I don't think that's so advanced that we don't have a clue about the principle it operate under.
So for me at any rate, it's not enough to say "OK, the Ancients moved the planet to 3 AU further out using their Unspecified Ultratech Armwave Device". They still have to have the means to move the planet somehow, based on everything that's been specified before. If they have planetary-scale teleportation or wormholes (I think that matter transference does show up at high TLs doesn't it?), then fair enough. But if not, and they don't have the obvious means to do it without destroying the planet in the process, then that means that they still can't do it. That's how I'd approach it anyway - YMMV
