Ideas for a Babel Exclusion Zone
Hive Bitch
May 8, 2020
::: foreword
After I shared the old Black Nerve exclusion
zones, it sparked conversation in a chatroom, which lead to this stream of ideas.
:::
::: related
- Worth the Candle: The Exclusionary Principle, 9th
Edition
:::
just realized you could probably do some tower of babel exclusion. that would be kinda neat
> That would be cool! Do you think you'd want to emphasise the
> universal primordial language like the speaking in tongues from Snow
> Crash, or the tower that reaches the heavens like that Ted Chiang
> short story?
not sure. it was a random brainwave, and im not yet sure where i
would take it
the big hurdle with fauxclusions is you shouldnt just slap a magic
effect inside a zone. ideally there should be some interesting nuance
or knock-on effect to it
AW's done this pretty well with the exclusions we've seen. so we'd
have to figure out what the straw that brought the exclusion was, and
ideally avoid the obvious ones
so, let's brainstorm the Tower of Babel Exclusion Zone (TBEZ).
obviously, the core idea is a language that everyone speaks.
so there's three ways to handle this, either:
1) it's completely mundane, just an Ur-language that was extremely
widespread, and the exclusion zone made it (temporarily, or
continually?) antimemetic; or
2) it's a universal translation effect, and the exclusion
broke/contained it; or
3) it was a magically created language
now, there's a few things you'd have to decided about the way the
exclusion works. if it's 1 or 3, is it possible to go into the zone,
learn the language, and come back out knowing it? can you speak to
other people who know it outside of the zone? and for all three, why
was it excluded? it would have to have been A) just the fact of the
universal language itself caused it (boring), or B) some interaction
of the language with another effect (probably memetics)
#1 is pretty interesting on its own — i find the idea of a completely
mundane language like english getting excluded funny. "latin didn't
die, it was MURDERED". there are a few ways you could pull this off.
maybe someone managed to enchant the language, or connect it some
magical effect.
maybe, saphir-worf style, there's a mental hazard concept only
articulate in this language, or most ably articulable. ooh, or maybe
someone went to war with the empire that spoke this language, and
caused the exclusion as a way to undermine it!
#2 is perhaps the most boring. (it's also sort of (WtC spoilers) [the
eventual Li'o exclusion]{.spoiler} without any other fun stuff). you
could still pull an interesting exclusion out of it.
maybe there was a R&D center pushing the boundaries of the translation
magic, and found a way to translate the wind, or earthquakes, or the
screaming of stars. maybe they translated the equations of reality
into some mind-warping insight, or maybe an mental hazard was found
and the translation effect allowed it to spread too readily.
there's also some free variables here. was it just a spell people
cast from time to time, in specific locations, or was there a
universal translation engulfing all of babel? or was the universal
translation extending over the whole world, excluded to babel to
contain something?
#3 i also like. there's a few things you can do with a magical
language. did the language augment speaker's mental faculties? did
it allow access to some powerful magic? was someone using the
language as a vector for controlling people? (this might be more (1)
territory, but maybe it was a kind of fantasy newspeak which
restricted thought?)
or here's a wacky way to handle the idea, maybe people had different
ideas about how to use the language. maybe some people wanted to make
the language easier to speak for themselves, maybe some wanted the
language more adapted for certain kinds of spells. the language
underwent natural drift and bifurcation, and babel is just the last
place people still speak the ancient form.
and one shouldn't neglect the knock-on effects.
1) are there still ancient ruins with knowledge sealed away in the
ancient language? are there classicists who travel to the TBEZ to
learn the language and decrypt the crypts? or are speakers of the
language persecuted by those who originally destroyed the empire?
2) is the TBEZ a neutral site of diplomancy where wildly different
cultures go to speak to each other? or do the current denizens make
this perilous? will the party brave those dangers, bringing their
mysterious dead language scroll to where they can read it?
3) does whatever effect which caused the TBEZ still run rampant? are
there beings given form by this magical language? does anyone try to
access to the zone in hopes of mastering whatever power was wielded by
speakers of the language?
---
as for TBEZ specifically as a big-ass tower, there are less
possibilities there. you'd probably want some big risk incurred by
building a tower that big.
although, i do have something in my setting that could be a twist on
the idea. my world has so-called "tetratowers",^[Future note: I have
no memory of this.] created by engineering around a similar effect
which had allowed Total Banishment. the tetratowers extend
extradimensionally fourthward, but if you built one "tall" enough, you
might catch the eye of whatever it was the pulled on the Endless
Perpendicular, or its conspecifics
altho i worry that would just be a rehash of the endless
perpendicular
Discussion in the ATmosphere