(urth) Wall of Nessus
Jeff Wilson
jwilson at io.com
Tue Jun 15 20:38:44 PDT 2010
On 6/15/2010 1:42 PM, Jerry Friedman wrote:
>> Then again , there are some number of hungry folk who come into possession of energy weapons in the course of any number of wars,
>
> There's more than one war?
Between the Age of Myth and Severian's time? Probably at least 2-3.
>> and their line-of-sight range may indeed make high flight a survival liability.
>
> I don't think high flight would ever be a liability for waterfowl. It just wouldn't help anywhere near as much against energy weapons as against bows.
It's the same math as the wall's height vs sight distance; the higher
they fly, the more acres of hungry infantrymen, impoverished dimarchi,
or mounted dwarves can draw a bead on them.
> It's not clear to me that the poor could recharge ex-military energy weapons enough to use for much hunting, or that the weapons would leave much edible meat on a bird.
There seem to be any number of places where still-running machinery
indicates the presence of electrical power, assuming the weapons require
it. Meanwhile, the low edible yield encourages more to be killed to
produce a given amount of food, and even a sooty drumstick is a feast to
someone who hasn't eaten in days. Besides, they might be anpiels posing
as geese while spying for the enemy.
--
Jeff Wilson - jwilson at io.com
IEEE Student Chapter Blog at
< http://ieeetamut.org >
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