Not true.Reverend said:Also worth noting that they were part of Lucas's notes as early as '77
https://www.starwars.com/news/so-what-the-heck-are-midi-chlorians
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Not true.Reverend said:Also worth noting that they were part of Lucas's notes as early as '77
I didn't like that book either way. Not a fan of the notion that Plagieus was still creeping around during the events of TPM. Palpatine does not strike me as the sort to have waited a moment longer than necessary to off the boss, let alone his entire adult life.I recommend that you don’t read the Darth Plagieus novel if you’re not a fan of midichlorians.![]()
Because it comes off too much like Plato's Stepchildren. Just pump someone full of midi-juice and make a better Jedi. It leads to a realm of needless technobabble explanations and excuses to explain keeping the mysticism of the Jedi while trying vainly for empirical explanations for the Force. Pick a fucking lane, Lucas.I don't get why people get so hung up on midichlorians as a concept.
That's 100% not how microcellular symbiosis works, and if you think otherwise, then clearly you've not been paying attention to all the failed malformed clones floating in jars.Because it comes off too much like Plato's Stepchildren. Just pump someone full of midi-juice and make a better Jedi.
Nonsense, it's a fiction. The only reason they can't pull a Bones is so they can explain away why someone can't just super-soldier serum their way out of dependence on the mystical yahoo bullshit convention that is the Jedi and Sith. Midiclorians were stupid from the get go.That's 100% not how microcellular symbiosis works,
Nonsense mumbo-jumbo.Also being a Jedi isn't about how easily one can connect with the force. It's about being centred, calm, passive, and selfless.
Because it comes off too much like Plato's Stepchildren. Just pump someone full of midi-juice and make a better Jedi.
It leads to a realm of needless technobabble explanations and excuses to explain keeping the mysticism of the Jedi while trying vainly for empirical explanations for the Force. Pick a fucking lane, Lucas.
If the uninformed won't pipe down, they could try reading:Now can the uniformed in the audience please pipe down?
Why are you so rude? Maybe actually read the links that are given to you. Midichlorians were retroactively added during the making of the book. It wasn't there in the original.Now can the uniformed in the audience please pipe down? Thank you kindly.
Oh hey what's this? Why it's an excerpt from that background/lore interview Lucas did for the licencing people back in '77 that was reprinted in Rinzler's 'Making of Star Wars' book! And what's that? This is also where the idea of Threepio being over a century old and Vader being a Sith Lord came from! Who da thunk it?!
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Like it. Don't like it. That's up to you; and honestly makes no difference either way.Was it in the OT? No. It does seem like he had an idea of it back then according to this but it's not in the OT. He introduces it in 1999 in TPM but barely explains it.
No one from 1977 to 1999 spoke about midichlorians, cell structures, ability to detect it, etc...The Force didn't have a biological aspect in the movies until 1999.
I played those old Kyle Katarn video games and in the Mara Jade spin off there were little reptile creatures called Ysalamiri that disrupted the Force. No explanation about it. Maybe it's part of their biology. Maybe it's just part of their existence.
Vague is ok especially for something like the Force. Kenobi's explanation in Star Wars about the Force is is enough for me: "It's an energy field created by all living things. It surrounds us and penetrates us; it binds the galaxy together." Space magic. Fine by me.
GL had really great ideas....and some not so much(see Indy IV). This biological aspect of the Force is one of those.
The idea he had back then appears to have been limited to an alien race which was naturally stronger in the Force than humans.Nombrecomun said:It does seem like he had an idea of it back then according to this
1983:Nombrecomun said:The Force didn't have a biological aspect in the movies until 1999.
Maybe. Does that mean Palpatine is a Skywalker(wink)? Obi Wan? Yoda?1983:
"The Force is strong in my family. My father has it. I have it... and my sister has it."
"The Emperor knew, as I did, if Anakin were to have any offspring they would be a threat to him."
Biological.
Does that mean Palpatine is a Skywalker(wink)? Obi Wan? Yoda?
Oh hey what's this? Why it's an excerpt from that background/lore interview Lucas did for the licencing people back in '77 that was reprinted in Rinzler's 'Making of Star Wars' book! And what's that?
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Now can the uniformed in the audience please pipe down? Thank you kindly.
”It is said that certain creatures are born with a higher awareness of the Force than humans. Their brains are different. The Force is a perception of the reality that exists around us.”
No. That's an assumption. Not 'absolutely means'.Yes, it absolutely does mean biological.
Ridiculous. Skywalkers being Force-sensitive does not mean all Force-sensitives are Skywalkers.
Personally, it doesn't seem biology came into it that much before work started on the Prequels
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