@spryllino: If, hypothetically, Capto Iugulum were to become a world without nuclear weapons, I would not go so far as to changing the laws of physics. I would just say that perhaps the inspiration for splitting atoms may not be found among the scientific community. Or perhaps if it is, the scientist(s) involved decide that such power does not belong in the hands of man, and thus keep quiet. Perhaps this isn't a plausible scenario, though personally I'd like to think it was. Other than that, I'm not going to say when/if nuclear weapons or even the concept of nuclear weapons will appear in CI at all. Just the following two statements, which you all can take as you'd like, though personally I'm just making them to fuel paranoia:
1. A world without nuclear weapons in the latter half of the 20th century would certainly be a less static one than OTL. Probably bigger and bloodier wars, and if anything, there'd probably be a variation of WMD that's not a nuclear device.
2. If nuclear weapons could appear in CI, there's always the chance that someone already is working on them.
Y'know, I'm a big enough man to actually say that I've not thought about the cultural ramification of such science. I'd wager that as of 1932, it's not really omnipresent in society, if such concepts have been theorized. I'm sure, as in OTL, science fiction writers would be intrigued, but for the purposes of the masses, I doubt anyone could say anything about what's ongoing or relevant in the scientific world.
1. A world without nuclear weapons in the latter half of the 20th century would certainly be a less static one than OTL. Probably bigger and bloodier wars, and if anything, there'd probably be a variation of WMD that's not a nuclear device.
2. If nuclear weapons could appear in CI, there's always the chance that someone already is working on them.
Not actually where I was going. I was interested in fact on the philosophical impact of the Uncertainty Principle, the ideas of wavefunction collapse and say also the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum physics. They had rather powerful impacts on art, literature and self-identification with the universe in our timeline, so I suppose the weight of my question is how much does the public care about these ideas (particularly writers)?
Y'know, I'm a big enough man to actually say that I've not thought about the cultural ramification of such science. I'd wager that as of 1932, it's not really omnipresent in society, if such concepts have been theorized. I'm sure, as in OTL, science fiction writers would be intrigued, but for the purposes of the masses, I doubt anyone could say anything about what's ongoing or relevant in the scientific world.