Is it possible to have a pastrolist society that is also industrial? If so how?


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@Shades of Eternity was thoughtful enough to post what a pastoral society was, but what then is an industrial society?


For industrialization, you really need a society where food production is so efficient that a significant portion of the population doesn't have to engage in it directly. In the United States right now, only about 2% of the population is directly involved in producing the food we eat. Though I've been hearing that statistic for 30 years now, so maybe it's changed. I don't think it's possible for a society to be both pastoralist and industrial at the same time. But we're talking about settings for an RPG, so we can make things work with magic and technology I guess.

What if it only took 2% of the population to maintain the industrial society? i.e. It only takes a tiny portion of the population to maintain the infrastructure necessary for an industrial society? Why would a significant portion of the remaining people lead a pastoral lifestyle?
 

This is something that I thought about in the middle of the night and curious to see what we come up with.
Is it possible to have a pastrolist society that is also industrial? If so how?

Do you mean "pastoral" in the technical sense of herders, or do you mean pastoral, like Bilbo Baggins and the Shire was pastoral?

I think several of the answers here amount to "No, you need to get to post-industrial tech before you can have humans generally living a pastoral life with industrial levels of manufactured goods."
 

Imagine a world where the majority of the manufacturing, producing, and distributing is automated, and areas of production are proscribed and limited (perhaps underground, as aco175 said). The surface could be pastoral, and the people living there could benefit from advanced goods without necessarily having to produce them themselves. "Pastoral on the streets/industrial in the sheets..."
See Stargate SG-1 episode, “The Nox”.
 

How about the Ithorians from the Star Wars EU? They keep their planet protected by living in floating herd ships, keeping all tech/industry off the surface and leaving the planet as pristine as possible.

You could also say Project Genesis from Star Trek 2 and 3 was a failed attempt.
 

In the Pacific Northwest, in the late 19th and early 20th C, not a few farmers had lathes and tools for turning both metal and wood; most had at least access to a blacksmithy in the nearby town, if not having their own forge, hammers, and anvil on their farm. The reliance upon horses and hard sutfaces lead to having to shoe them, and many kept the tools to do so, even if they usually hired the town farrier. Many also made their own hinges, latches, and nails, as those can be done with just the brazier, hammer, tongs, anvil, and metalstock.

The rise of additive metal fabs (usually laser sintered) and computer automated milling may see a return to farmers making their own parts... but the nature of farming is such that many farmers are having to sell out to corporate farms...

It's very plausible to me that colonies of modern or post-modern groups may have such local automated manufacturing tools and remain industrially capable but at artisanal production rates. A farm town can support (if shipping is a major factor) a part time tire fabricator/retreater, a frame fabricator, possibly even a small smelter.
 

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