Jiyo Sora wrote: ↑Fri Apr 09, 2021 5:01 pm
Togashi Satsuki wrote: ↑Fri Apr 09, 2021 3:16 pm
But it is an interesting thought though...
Because, at this point in time, people are able to specialize. Food supplies and food security is probably at this point at an unprecedented high, due to the fact that many people can focus exclusively on agriculture, another group can focus on crafting/repairs, and none of them have to have their work ruined or halted because they need to fight off raiders - you now have a specialised group for that. Literacy is also spreading because you have people who have time to study it and then teach it to others.
So for groups that are "refusing" this Order, they are seeing less advancement overall.
Eh... the issue with a caste system is that if you have someone born to a warrior family, but they're absolute shit at being a warrior, the disappointed expectation is going to be more of an issue than if you have people take jobs by aptitude.
Birth does not determine aptitude- and since we have libraries to let everyone (and they do educate everyone) know what possibilities are out there?
And when it comes to fighting... it's all well and good when you have samurai on hand, but the Empire is, well, big. Being avenged by samurai later is cold comfort to a farmer who might have done all right if he and his fellows had known how to use spears.
Also, I wouldn't stifle the next great architect simply because their parents were both farmers.
Hmmm.
*Begins pondering a mandarinate-style civil service examination*
At this point, I think there is more social mobility because the Celestial Order has been around for like... 15-20 years. People still remember the time before it, and it's now that we're seeing the first generation born into it. Even in canon, we have things like Hantei marrying a fisherman's daughter, crafters being elevated to daimyo, and so on.
The Celestial Order has been established, but it takes time before it becomes the solidified structure that we know from canon L5R. At this point, it is more separation of leadership and labour. Samurai isn't exclusively warriors, considering how many of the Kami's direct followers (and thus founding Daimyo) aren't warriors, but from what Canary wrote in the section on Social Classes, we are now seeing that warriors are becoming a distinction from those who do labour, with the warriors "ranked above" those who do labour (probably because they are the ones risking their lives to defend the clan and its resourecs from bandits, raiders, those who still oppose the Kami, ogres, maybe goblins - so it is a different form of responsibility in the clan).
In this early stages of the Empire, founding proper agricultural developments is critical to move beyond "just being sustained". Once food security is higher, it allows society to explore other things, like technology, literacy, culture. Having people who can focus on this is a huge benefit for establishing better resources.
Canary mentions this too in the timeline write up:
Year 5
The Kami return from their wandering to discover that the population of the area around Seppun Hill had grown from a village into a bustling town. They decide to settle down there for a few days to talk to the visitors while they talk about what they discovered.
Dawn of the Empire: The Tournament takes place here.
After several days of discussion and meeting with the tribespeople, the Kami have a discussion on the hill, deciding to organize the tribes and offer their knowledge to improving things after seeing the subsistence-level existence they were maintaining, stuck in an endless loop of rebirths without the Celestial Order to guide them to greater destinies.
EDIT: To make myself clear, since I think a lot of RL opinions are mixing in here, from myself included. The Celestial Order is clearly here in this setting, but I don't think we're into full on Caste at this point. Things like this needs to be eased into it, and for the Kami, who are practically immortal (none of them will die of old age), they can also afford to "play the long game", so to speak, to see society develop. They don't have to squash people into rigid castes with no hope of change without reincarnation, but they can lay the groundwork for it, which we are seeing now as per the Almanac-writeup.
Moderation in everything. It's not 100% or 0% (yet).