Message from @Lucienne d'Anwyl

Discord ID: 695132691095486464


2020-04-02 04:47:36 UTC  

And truth.

2020-04-02 04:47:43 UTC  

Writing as a craft

2020-04-02 04:47:43 UTC  

but anyways

2020-04-02 04:47:46 UTC  

Then

2020-04-02 04:47:52 UTC  

most of our european ancestors came from barbarian tribes

2020-04-02 04:47:54 UTC  

like the germans

2020-04-02 04:47:56 UTC  

the polish

2020-04-02 04:47:56 UTC  

Like other craftsmen

2020-04-02 04:47:59 UTC  

the mongols

2020-04-02 04:48:00 UTC  

etc.

2020-04-02 04:48:05 UTC  

they never had a written langauge

2020-04-02 04:48:09 UTC  

Writing is a witchcraft!

2020-04-02 04:48:10 UTC  

until missionaries gave them one

2020-04-02 04:48:30 UTC  

Yes most people in history were illiterate

2020-04-02 04:48:35 UTC  

Or at least it's what our *svyatoi otets* said.

2020-04-02 04:48:37 UTC  

Some did have some basic comprehension

2020-04-02 04:48:41 UTC  

the norse adopted the roman writing system

2020-04-02 04:48:42 UTC  

Like that of a child

2020-04-02 04:48:46 UTC  

because nordic runes were retarded

2020-04-02 04:49:05 UTC  

We treat people from history like they were just apes

2020-04-02 04:49:08 UTC  

@retxirT you know whats really stupid

2020-04-02 04:49:12 UTC  

in mesopotamia

2020-04-02 04:49:14 UTC  

They're so retarded we basically still use a lot of them

2020-04-02 04:49:19 UTC  

Give them a bit of credit we can only infer so much

2020-04-02 04:49:20 UTC  

writing stuff down was such a big deal

2020-04-02 04:49:22 UTC  

In Pathfinder Golarion setting, the goblins consider writing taboo b/c they think it *steals your thoughts.*
They're not necessarily *wrong* tho, *technically.*

How many phone numbers can you remember off the top of your head? How many pieces of famous literature?
<:hyperthink:462282519883284480>

2020-04-02 04:49:23 UTC  

for commercial transactions

2020-04-02 04:49:26 UTC  

theyd write stuff down

2020-04-02 04:49:33 UTC  

then seal it inside clay

2020-04-02 04:49:34 UTC  

Like we think of history so sterile

2020-04-02 04:49:36 UTC  

Yes, I know.

2020-04-02 04:49:38 UTC  

so no one could know what was written on it

2020-04-02 04:49:54 UTC  

Yes they weren't as educated but they could still use and infer they're human

2020-04-02 04:49:54 UTC  

Writing is super important for trade yes

2020-04-02 04:49:55 UTC  

ostensibly to prevent tampering but it obviously doesnt

2020-04-02 04:50:05 UTC  

IIRC, the oldest example of human writing is a *beer tab.* <:slurpgon:583424900732157956>

2020-04-02 04:50:13 UTC  

Some ancient places have graffiti

2020-04-02 04:50:15 UTC  

First commercial secrets protection ever.

2020-04-02 04:50:17 UTC  

I'd look into it

2020-04-02 04:50:34 UTC  

Shows at the very least even soldiers could write to some extent

2020-04-02 04:50:49 UTC  

or that the scribes were malcontent