Its the 14th century and you’ve had no time to prepare, after you’re done reading this post you are snapped. What do you do?

    • @CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Yeah, this. I have medications I need. When the pair of contacts in my eyes fall out eventually, I’m functionally blind. All that aside, I’d probably starve quickly since I don’t know how to make weapons and other humans haven’t made it to where I live yet in 1375 nevermind, I’m high. The humans that are there would probably kill me on sight though.

      I’d probably look around for a couple days and then when I got super hungry just find a cliff to jump off.

    • @adarza@lemmy.ca
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      122 months ago

      and if you manage to evade physical harm, sickness will surely catch up with you. the black death was not a ‘one and done’ pandemic. it lingered and persisted here-and-there for centuries after the widespread pandemic (known today simply as ‘the plague’) that claimed 50m+ lives, including half of europe’s population at the time

  • tiredofsametab
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    412 months ago

    If I snapped you back in time 650 years

    2025 - 650 =1375

    Its the 12th century

    1375 is the 14th century. Which do you mean?

    Answering the actual question, nothing good would come of it if my location on earth didn’t change. Being the only white person in rural northern Japan well before Europeans came in the 1500s would probably not be a good situation for me. The language, at least the written one, was very different. Being the Nanboku-chō era, things would probably be not great since it was in the midst of 60ish years of war with two different people claiming to be in charge. I can’t find, at least before my coffee kicks in, exactly what kinda state Mutsu Province, as it was then called, was in at the time.

    • @otp@sh.itjust.works
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      262 months ago

      English would also be unrecognizable in 1375. At a glance, it seems like it was Middle English, which means you’d probably get as much intelligibility with any other English speakers as a monolingual Dutch speaker would have with a monolingual English speaker today. Maybe a bit closer, but still.

      Shakespeare was still hundreds of years away.

      …Not that any of this would matter to anyone living in North America.

      • @yoevli@lemmy.world
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        142 months ago

        Middle English is certainly difficult to understand, but most words still bear some resemblance to modern English. I think it would probably be more like a native German speaker trying to understand a heavy Bavarian dialect, or at worst a Dutch speaker trying to understand the same.

      • tiredofsametab
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        32 months ago

        In my case, I’d probably be OK having studied French and German (and reading things by Chaucer and Gauer). Though French != Norman French, so that may cause some issues.

    • @Kookie215@lemmy.worldOP
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      52 months ago

      Yeah, I did it backwards. Like I knew it was the 1300’s but when I said the century, I went back a diget instead of forward.

    • @Hylactor@sopuli.xyz
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      12 months ago

      Well, strictly speaking, if your location didn’t change you’d be transported into empty space. So you wouldn’t have very much to worry about for long.

  • southsamurai
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    392 months ago

    Well, I would give you the answer, but since I snapped back as soon as I read the post, I’m now responding what has been 650 years later for me, and I’m too fucking old for this shit a second time. I bypassed getting snapped back this time by just not reading the post and coming straight in to comment.

    Now, what will happen if I read the

  • Captain Aggravated
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    312 months ago

    I’m on the Gregorian calendar, 650 years ago is the year 1375. I’m in North Carolina, so if I were to snap back in time at my present location I would be a blue eyed white guy in pre-contact North America. And while I think I’m an above average candidate for the Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court scenario I’m not realistically able to start “from scratch.” I’d probably make it the summer on forage and my own body fat. I don’t picture encountering the natives going particularly well, for me or them. I’m not sick and I’m vaccinated against a lot of shit but watch I’ll give them 6 centuries worth of influenza updates.

    I don’t think it would help that much being plunked down in 14th century England; we’re talking Geoffrey Chaucer’s lifetime here, to them I’d sound insane. Modern English is a few hundred years off. If they didn’t trepan me to let the demons out of my skull and I didn’t die of smallpox, I’d try to invent the electric motor 500 years early and be burned for heresy or some shit.

    • @RebekahWSD@lemmy.world
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      62 months ago

      Yeah, I’m here thinking my ass in America pre Columbian exchange is not doing well. Maybe if I make it clear somehow I do not want to do anything but help I could…idk, be part of a native tribe and maybe give them a slight help to the upcoming horrors for them?

      It’s not going well for anyone.

    • @ptu@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      I would imagine the east coast / tasmania could be interesting. There used to be hundreds of different peoples that are now extinct and we know nothing about. A struggle nevertheless.

    • @Agent641@lemmy.world
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      42 months ago

      Fuck I think I could just vibe with the Noongars, hunting, fishing and sleeping til I died of old age.

      Maybe use basic science and chemistry to improve sanitation and quality of life. Not too much, just enough to be regarded as a clever fella, not a warra wirrin bad spirit.

  • @rumschlumpel@feddit.org
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    292 months ago

    I’ll probably die of dysentery. Just because I know modern hygiene rules doesn’t mean I’ll survive interacting with all the other people who don’t but are used to local bacteria and viruses.

      • @biofaust@lemmy.world
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        32 months ago

        Given the rate at which people would become mentally or physically disabled because of diseases, you could argue it would have a network effect (probably a better term exists): I would have more chances to meet people and influence them, to learn something useful, to accumulate and use wealth for the above, so yeah…

      • nickwitha_k (he/him)
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        12 months ago

        Everyone dies. You just get to try to make the leaderboards, if that’s your thing. There isn’t a killscreen that we know of.

      • @Soggy@lemmy.world
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        32 months ago

        Crude soap is easy to make. Wood ash + water + fat. From there you just fiddle with ratios and timing while trying not to burn your skin off with strong alkalinity.

          • @Soggy@lemmy.world
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            12 months ago

            It can also just be a fun hobby. Old-fashioned soap making is a very approachable historical craft. (Modern soap making is also very approachable if you’re comfortable handling lye)

      • @biofaust@lemmy.world
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        32 months ago

        Running water would allow for 30% reduction in bacteria, according to some sources.

        Also, in that time period soap was known in Spain, France and Italy, and I personally made it in the summer using either olive oil or pork fat.

  • @ultranaut@lemmy.world
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    272 months ago

    Assuming I am physically in the same place, I will fall to my death. If I somehow survive the fall I would be severely injured and alone in the wilderness. Within a few days I would probably die of either my injuries, dehydration, or hypothermia.

    • @SendMePhotos@lemmy.world
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      202 months ago

      Scientifically speaking, the earth is constantly moving in an upward spiral. Your exact physical location would put you in some random outerspace area without oxygen or any protection. Just floating in space until you die.

      • JackGreenEarth
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        182 months ago

        Scientifically speaking, there is no absolute reference frame. So you can be wherever you like depending on what reference you choose.

  • @Bieren@lemmy.world
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    242 months ago

    Nothing. I’d sit under an tree and enjoy the peace and quiet. No trump. No DC. No MAGA. No reporters. No non stop ads. No social media. No Google. No Elon. No bezos. The list goes on. Sure I’d probably die of some random disease or bandits. But I’d be okay with it at that point.

    • @jj4211@lemmy.world
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      172 months ago

      Well you can do that today. Find a tree out in the middle of nowhere and sit under it without any electronic devices. Then you are oblivious to all that stuff. You may be bothered by the fact that the things are still happening, but there are also plenty of horrific things happening in that time period you went to, you just won’t be keeping track of them.

      • @Zink@programming.dev
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        42 months ago

        Well you can do that today. Find a tree out in the middle of nowhere and sit under it without any electronic devices. Then you are oblivious to all that stuff.

        There is much wisdom buried in what seems like a simple comment here.

        Even if you aren’t in the middle of nowhere, you can find or create your oasis.

        • @zenforyen@feddit.org
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          2 months ago

          Absolutely. In these times it is probably the only way to survive and stay sane. Being terminally online and informed is just leading to overdose of the shittiness of like everything. Create a soft bubble of bliss and steer away from noise and trouble. Before, I always thought that escapism is despicable but it feels increasingly like I’m not strong enough mentally to look in the face of reality for prolonged times these days. It’s like staring into the sun, it burns you.

  • @null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    222 months ago

    Double entry accounting system.

    I’m an accountant by trade. The double entry system wasn’t invented until the 15th century.

    I could account for any lords various assets, goods, and livestock in an efficient, reliable and accurate manner

  • FlashMobOfOne
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    192 months ago

    I would pretend to be super-religious. Throughout the whole of human history, pretending to be super-religious has always been a viable path to survival and personal advancement.

    Apart from that, I’d probably just die.

    • @Kookie215@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 months ago

      Oh! You could start Mormonism! Its super new as far as religions go, and it was mad easy to convince the masses it was real, all you do is say you have special tablets of text that only you have been given the ability to read by God, and BAM new religion just launched and you’re the leader.

  • @xylogx@lemmy.world
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    192 months ago

    You would die. There are many, many examples of explorers from “advanced” civilizations getting shipwrecked or stranded in an area where primitive hunter-gatherers live. Unless they are saved by the hunter gatherers, they are doomed, despite their knowledge of science and technology. Joseph Henrich talks extensively about these examples in his book, “The Secret of Our Success”

    Check out this video to get an idea -> https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=jaoQh6BoH3c

      • @xylogx@lemmy.world
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        12 months ago

        Of course I want to think I would do better. Maybe I would manage to integrate with the local indigenous people, but the reality is I would likely die. Either way my knowledge of science and “advanced” civilization will benefit me not at all.

  • Count Regal Inkwell
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    2 months ago

    612 years in the past
    In Brazil. So almost a century before the first europeans landed here. I’m assuming I just plop exactly in my relative earth-location, but in the distant past. (… It would be really funny if this was overly literal, because I’m currently in the 12th floor, so I’d thanos snap into the past and immediately fall to my death)

    Well

    As a person from modern times – From AFTER the Americas came into contact with Europe, if I went near a person here in the Land of Palms (that’s what the natives called Brazil!) from those times we’d both get horribly infected and die a lot due to how antibodies work. Viruses did a lot of the legwork in genociding the natives. Euros would deliberately do things to infect natives so they’d die of illness.

    The place I currently live in is slowly turning into a desert, but was a deep jungle back then (… It was still a deep jungle in the 1910s tbqh).

    … I think I’d just die? Become food for a jaguar or eat a poisonous fungus or sth.

    Would love to indulge in the fantasy of giving the Guarani people guns and a warning to shoot white people on sight just to see how history would change, but that ain’t happening.

  • can_you_change_your_username
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    192 months ago

    I’m in the US and in a place that native Americans didn’t have settlements. I’m very familiar with the area and have hunted, hiked, and camped here my entire life. With no preparation or modern equipment I give myself about a week before I get eaten by wolves or a bear, maybe gored by an elk or bitten by a venomous snake. I don’t expect that I would see another human during that week. Native hunting parties visited the area so it’s not impossible that I would see someone but it’s very unlikely.