You're looking at Less Wrong's discussion board. This includes all posts, including those that haven't been promoted to the front page yet. For more information, see About Less Wrong.

djcb comments on How would you take over Rome? - Less Wrong Discussion

25 Post author: Yvain 14 March 2012 04:24PM

You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.

Comments (200)

You are viewing a single comment's thread. Show more comments above.

Comment author: djcb 15 March 2012 06:28:50AM 1 point [-]

Ah, that sounds like an interesting book -- would you recommend it?

Comment author: NancyLebovitz 15 March 2012 11:23:41AM *  5 points [-]

I'll give it a moderate recommendation-- it's been at least twenty years since I've read it, and I don't know how it would look to me now.

However, I've read it several times, and enjoyed it as a light-hearted and moderately realistic (not everything Padway tries succeeds) account of rationality winning.

One other reason to read it if you haven't read golden age sf-- it moves. It's quite a short novel, and compared to modern sf, it's astonishing how much story can be well told in how few words.

Comment author: djcb 15 March 2012 11:19:57PM 0 points [-]

Thanks -- any other alternative-history involving classic times you would recommend?

Comment author: NancyLebovitz 16 March 2012 02:11:27AM 1 point [-]

I'm exceedingly fond of Richard Garfinkle's Celestial Matters about an AH where the Greek theory of elements is true. Greece has become a superpower (the background is still pretty classical, but I think it's set five or six centuries later) in opposition to China, because feng shui is also true. Unfortunately, the feng shui isn't worked out as well as the elements, but who can argue with an expedition to the sun to get some primal fire?

Not quite AH, but David Drake's Birds of Prey is fun. It's a noirish story about the last honest man is corrupt Rome. It's kitchen sink science fiction, full of good things. To list them would be spoilers, so I'll rot13. Gurer'f n cyrfvbfnhe va gur Gvore, n fvqr rssrpg bs gur gvzr geniry sebz gur sne shgher jub'f pbzr gb Ebzr gb fgbc na nyvra zranpr.

Comment author: Luke_A_Somers 15 March 2012 06:57:50PM 2 points [-]

Yes. It's not perfect, but good.

Comment author: djcb 15 March 2012 11:16:38PM *  0 points [-]

Thanks -- perfection is too much to ask for anyways.. I really like the description of injecting some 'simple' concepts like base-10 arithmetic are so important - I can see really see changing such a 'simple thing' changing many, many things.

Just think about multiplying XCV by MCII...