For instance, a species with little to no navigable oceans or a fully aquatic species may find it difficult to develop the cultural skills necessary to run a ship because there isn’t a tradition of operating a ship the same way there is for humans.
For instance, a species with little to no navigable oceans or a fully aquatic species may find it difficult to develop the cultural skills necessary to run a ship because there isn’t a tradition of operating a ship the same way there is for humans.
Why would the yinrih pursue rocketry for religious reasons? Was there a drive to levitate themselves literally?
Thus said the Uncreated Light:
A nonsapient species of vulpithecin closely related to the yinrih ↩︎
Refers to the yinrih’s primordial written language, developed from a scent-marking behavior simultaneously with a spoken language. As such, the yinrih have a written history that stretches back to the dawn of sapience in their species, roughly contemporaneous with the advent of behavioral modernity in humans on Earth. ↩︎
“The fire of understanding”, or the faculties of language and symbolic thought ↩︎
to meditate on the mysteries of Creation, or to undertake scientific research, is regarded as an act of worship, and the accrual of knowledge plays an important role in Claravian eschatology. ↩︎
So when do they make their first hot air balloon?
Pre-space age yinrih history is somewhat messy right now, but current lore has them achieving spaceflight 5 millennia after achieving sapience. Given their much longer lifespans (~723 Earth years) this would be like humans going from crudely knapped flint hand axes to orbital flight in 500 years. So they’re in space before humans leave Africa. My (admittedly weak) justification for this is that they start the game with writing unlocked, there’s no ice age to impede the invention of agriculture, and religious zeal is one powerful motivator.
I don’t have any specific dates for hot air balloons, although it is the first thing they mess around with. I do have them playing with Jules-Verne-esque manned projectiles around the year 1406 AK (about 2000 Earth years after the first evidence of written language). This begins a period marked by high casualty rates among research monks and their lay assistants. These brave souls are known as the Cannonized [sic] Martyrs.