Any technology is likely to be utterly confusing to those without its socio-technical prerequisities, and adoptable to those who have them.Darren wrote: ↑Sat Feb 01, 2020 2:52 pmI can see the parallels, and it does require some level of technology and development over time. However, when exposed to writing systems, even peoples without those previous developments can make writing systems. If a person who had never seen a computer before suddenly found out that some people were using them, they certainly wouldn't be able to replicate even the most basic form of one. I still think that some things can be more natural than others without either being 100% natural or unnatural. Writing is by no means 100% natural but it's more natural than computers.
Say you're a Scythian who happens to get caught in an Assyrian raid around 1000 BCE. You're enslaved, you see this "writing" technology, and later you escape. Do you invent writing for Scythian? Probably not. It's an alien concept and it doesn't meet the needs of your culture. On the other hand, if you're a Hittite, you readily adopt the new technology. (It may be worth a reminder that the first writing systems were extremely difficult to use, and required many years to learn.)
Similarly, the Scythian tribesman wouldn't invent a computer if he could see one. But what about a Soviet technician in 1946? In fact it didn't take long for the Soviets to have their own computer.
All this is pretty tangential to whether writing is "natural", of course, since no one has provided a consensus definition! (If anyone has my Conlanger's Lexipedia, recall the 7-page discussion on meanings of "nature".)