Did medieval people and people before them grasp technological advancement?

Later im kinda busy now. Dont be alarmed if cops pull up im sure they just want to talk about you wanting to burn a female.
Ahahhaha cops aint showing up here unless someones shooting, dork.
 
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Yall are just ignorant though.Mainly the convenience of function.
Cameras have been around since the late 1800s. The end of Mideval times was 300 years prior.

Give them. Credit though they. Were figuring out other shit. Cameras were the least of their worried I'm sure between 500-1500 BC.
AD not BC you going way too far back
 
They had micro advancement in technology, nothing like the 20th century. Although that's fascinating the evolution human technology just skyrocketed in the 20th century for some reason. It's like we opened pandora box.

Such a big change in advancement like no other in humanity.
 
going from the stone age to the medieval times was technological progress so yes.
It was just a slower pace.

Just go back +50 years and everybody thought we would have flying cars in 2024.
We still drive gas cars.
Flying cars exist (not in a consumer production capacity) . Idiots cant handle the shit we have at the civilian level already so a thing like that wont go into production any time soon.
Sure it might clear up traffic a bit but,
You're gonna have fools driving into peoples roofs and crashing into all kinds of shit in random spots. Plus drive bys would get insane.
 
going from the stone age to the medieval times was technological progress so yes.
It was just a slower pace.

Just go back +50 years and everybody thought we would have flying cars in 2024.
We still drive gas cars.
Don't talk about things you have no knowledge of you pretentious fuck!
 
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When I was a kid in the 1980s, I thought we'd have flying cars, cure for cancer, etc..

I also thought there'd be wireless telephones with TV screens on the so you could see who you were talking to. But that has actually happened. I also thought we'd have TVs that we can watch any movie or TV show in history. That happened, to.

But 1000 years ago, people were born, lived and died seeing no technological improvement. Did they actually grasp the concept like we do?

They did the same things pretty much every single day while praying they weren't raided by bandits or get some kind of illness.
You didn't think those things, you saw them in sci-fi flicks or read about them in books.

It took minds and imaginations of countless inventors, writers, visionaries to come up with those ideas.

In medieval times information exchange and distribution was very limited, so folks could/did not "imagine" those tech developments, however, visionaries like Archimedes, Pythagoras, DaVinci, etc. who had access to education could and did imagine, foresee, and invent technological advancements.

Also, there's evidence that some medieval societies had access to ancient knowledge, from possible prior civilizations.

All of the above is just my opinion.
 
I think they did if it had a direct positive impact on their lives. From caveman times to now there has always been people who like to tinker or are into art.
 
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