this post was submitted on 17 Aug 2025
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I thought part of the premise is that this technology is so far beyond our comprehension that we couldn't even begin to contemplate replicating it.
Imagine gifting a modern jet aircraft to the Roman Empire, a nuclear reactor to the Egyptian empire, or a modern computer to a caveman: How much do you think that would speed up the development of said technology? My guess is: Not a lot, if at all. The tech is so far beyond what they had in the era, and there are so many intertwined developments in science and engineering needed to replicate it, that it might as well be magic to them.
Even for the Romans to replicate a jet, they would first need to make around 2000 years of progress is fuel refining and metallurgy. Not to mention that they would need to understand fluid dynamics and thermodynamics that weren't developed until the 1800's. This again relies on mathematics that weren't developed until the 1600's-1700's.
Now imagine this "perpetual 1 W source" relies on stuff we won't develop for the next 20 000 years. We wouldn't even know where to start if we were to replicate it.