Your trip will end quite abruptly. On top of that you will lose any chance you had to do any good.Gardenia said:"There is no god."
I'm sorry if this ignites a flamewar, but I had to.
I, on the other hand shall claim that the good lord did send to me a holy vision of how to fight the illnesses which plague the land and that he sent me to spread this knowledge for the good and glory of the just mother church. Saints be praised. Amen.
You may be amazed to know that they already had the flameproof suit. While they may not have known how bad asbestos fibers were for you, it was already being made and used. They called it "stone wool".DazBurger said:Invent the flameproof suit first ofc.!
For that matter, religion was not really a technological sink. Islam unified an entire sub continent bringing about a scientific explosion and Christian monks did much to preserve and advance the sciences (you can thank them for genetics and music). Your real technological sink was the invading barbarians that leveled thriving civilizations on a regular basis. You would do more to advance progress by defending the Arab Caliphate from the mongols than by trying to get them to abandon Allah. In my opinion anyhow. It seems to me at any rate, as a moderate and pragmatic man, that even if you're such a gung-ho atheist that you can't see a way to co-exist with religion that you could acheive your aims more effectively by bringing people prosperity and separating them from superstition in the working of the natural world than you could by attacking it directly and then allow them to form their own conclusions and opinions over time without ever making yourself a target.
Well for starters, perhaps it's wasting my breath to say this but it wasn't Christianity that brought the fall of Rome, it was ineffectual governance and mismanagement. It would have fallen and created the post apocalyptic existence and savagery of the feudal era anyhow. An era not known for intellectualism, what with the highest form of humor being "a hop, a whistle and a fart". After the fall, people did a fine job inventing their own superstitions to persecute others. The existence of witches for instance was propagated by villagers and was actively denounced by the church until the corrupt reign of Medici pope Leo X who only recognized them to sell protection from them. For that matter, technological and scientific oppression existed well before the church. Nerva as roman emperor, when presented with the steam engine by Hero was told it could "allow one man to do the work of 100 slaves.", Nerva, before he forbade it's use responded "Then what would we do with the slaves?" Furthermore, the "dark ages" had a few bright spots as well. Christianity emphasized the sanctity of human life, a concept all together absent in Rome and Pagan lands and the Magna Carta did much to advance the causes of the rule of law as well as human rights and established precedents for the limits of power granted to rulers. I would say to you, good luck getting any ruler of the time to accept that one.Bluntman1138 said:I always like to wonder what our world would be like if Christianity hadnt stifled the growth of Europe during what we call the "Dark Ages". And it is an apt description as well. We could quite possibly be 100's of years more advanced technologically. We could have landed men on the moon 300 years ago instead of 50. But the "Christian Age", i mean "Dark Age", really isnt a time i would like to travel back into time to.