What are the skills and knowledge you could actually bring & fully realize at some point in the past?

And we’re taking this in the strictest, nerdiest, materialist lense. I don’t care how smart you are you ain’t making a steam engine the in bronze age, for instance.

So what could you create, with just your knowledge & period tools? What kind of institutional, technological, philosophical innovations could you realistically recreate? How would you interface with the social fabric of society to not be some crazed pariah who never positively influences the place they went?

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6 points

It’s pretty trivial to make one or direct someone to make one if you already know it can be done (and, of course, have a common language)

Even the layperson’s understanding of a steam engine could lead to crude trains being developed in the classical era provided access to necessary materials and engineers

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provided access to necessary materials

That’s going to really limit the kind of places you could do it.

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5 points

Depends on time frame, but most places in the old world would have access to bronze from, well, the bronze age and onwards. New world would be trickier unless you know mining and metal refinement to teach, or rely on native metals.

But yeah if I’m sent back to the stone age I don’t think I’ll be able to do too too much

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I meant more access to large quantities of coal. I guess that would be easiest in the Roman Empire, but then you’d be giving the Roman Empire trains and that might just prolong it’s collapse.

Edit: New idea! Teach Carthage how to build trains instead!

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AFAIK, there were already sophisticated trade networks in place. To make bronze for instance, you need tin and copper, which are rarely found in the same place. The development of these alloys already required the extraction, smelting, and trade of these materials.

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10 points
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I meant the coal to use as fuel. I’d read that the industrial revolution happened where and when it did because of easy access to coal, and that coal wasn’t heavily used in Europe for like a millennium after the fall of the Roman Empire.

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