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Or to put it more nicely, knowing how to make something is not knowing the fundamental science behind the thing.

Romans made self-healing cement without any knowledge of chemistry and materials science. Surgeons performed tumor removals without knowing why they formed. Etc.



Those things do show an intergenerational evolution of complex techniques, though, if only by trial and error. Certainly at some level they must have understood the tumor to be the cause of a malady, for instance. Even now we know of drugs whose biological pathways are poorly understood. Scientific understanding often follows rather than precedes the discovery of a technique. Which is fine! Someone, somewhere, makes a discovery or an incremental improvement to a technique that works in practice. Eventually someone else comes along and tries to reason about how that works. Both add to the body of knowledge. I dsiagree that something can only be characterized as "advanced" if it is fully understood. Advancements also build upon practical knowledge.


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The Mayan cavillation collapsed way before that.


Yes, long before basically their books were burned by the Spanish.


It is silly to assert that ancient peoples might have known quantum physics but "we just don't know!"


Especially silly since we don't know now either. Oh well, good luck.


Sibling comment's strawman aside, we don't know what we don't know about what we don't know about. It's easy to forget.


No, really, forgetting is built-in to every conquest, including generational drift and downvotes.

Where do you think all the New World libraries and gold instruments went?

Don’t forget the levels of human sacrifice in modern days when you cast your superior symbolic knowledge.




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