Yes, but that was non-canon, and understood as such.
This is different. It's ( apparently ) official.![]()
Yes, but that was non-canon, and understood as such.
This is different. It's ( apparently ) official.![]()
Canon/non-canon - not much of a difference; it's still all fiction, Set Harth.
This series is still intended to fit into the continuity of the films. You're taking your own need to see it as a separate continuity and dragging the writers into it. But there's no proof that their intentions are to rewrite or contradict ROTS.
They said it in TPM, but just saying something is quite different from convincing the audience that it is real. TCW is actually doing the work of trying to convince us of the reality of Anakin's special-ness, in a way that has more gut-level believability than that pathetic midichlorians nonsense. That's what I mean by "establish" - a writer doing the work of making a plot element real for the audience. A lot of the PT's problems can be traced to lazy writing, not actually doing the work of a storyteller, which is a lot more than just saying "X is true."We already knew that. It's usually drowned out by all the TPM-related noise.The Mortis arc established that Anakin is special among Force users
The Mortis Arc already called that into question, so obviously TCW has more to say about the metaphysics. Which is good, because destroying one side to bring anything into "balance" is inherently absurd.Vorta Claus said:which had surprisingly little to say about the metaphysics
Destroy Sith, balance Force. That about covers it.
Who's "Revan"? He was never in the PT. The notion of any mortal being able to control both sides of the Force is not in the movies or the TV series, yet if that's what Anakin believes he might be able to do, the repercussions for the whole story are immense.in that he could (in theory) be beyond both the dark and light sides, and able to control both.
I don't think the words "beyond" or "outside" were even used. The idea of using both sides of the Force is really nothing new. Revan does it, and according to the portrayal of certain sources it's not such an unheard-of idea.
It doesn't matter what the writers "intend"
Vorta Claus said:(and I wouldn't trust any press releases or interviews from LucasFilm, which of course have to keep up the fiction that Lucas didn't totally botch the PT)
Vorta Claus said:They have created a story that right now is impossible to fit into the continuity of the PT
Vorta Claus said:TCW is actually doing the work of trying to convince us of the reality of Anakin's special-ness
Vorta Claus said:in a way that has more gut-level believability than that pathetic midichlorians nonsense.
Vorta Claus said:The Mortis Arc already called that into question
Vorta Claus said:Which is good, because destroying one side to bring anything into "balance" is inherently absurd.
Vorta Claus said:The notion of any mortal being able to control both sides of the Force is not in the movies or the TV series
Vorta Claus said:you're a lot easier to please than I am.
It doesn't matter what the writers "intend"
The Mortis Arc already called that into question, so obviously TCW has more to say about the metaphysics. Which is good, because destroying one side to bring anything into "balance" is inherently absurd.
I'd always assumed that the existence of the Sith, or at least their being active, brought about an unbalancing of the Force, and by killing the Emperor and returning to the Light side Anakin rebalanced the Force. Perhaps it doesn't mean balance between Light and Dark, but more of just a peace over the whole thing which is disrupted when people use it for evil. Basically it's more of a philosophical balance, rather than a mathematical balance.Set Harth said:]
Only if you insist on making the mistake of replacing a side of the Force with a group of people. The prequels never said anything about destroying the dark side, just the Sith.
I'd always assumed that the existence of the Sith, or at least their being active, brought about an unbalancing of the Force, and by killing the Emperor and returning to the Light side Anakin rebalanced the Force.
JD said:Perhaps it doesn't mean balance between Light and Dark, but more of just a peace over the whole thing which is disrupted when people use it for evil. Basically it's more of a philosophical balance, rather than a mathematical balance.
It's pretty simple then: Explain what the balance actually is, and why massive numbers of Jedi and only two Sith (if even that) keeps it "balanced."I'd always assumed that the existence of the Sith, or at least their being active, brought about an unbalancing of the Force, and by killing the Emperor and returning to the Light side Anakin rebalanced the Force.
So far, so good.
JD said:Perhaps it doesn't mean balance between Light and Dark, but more of just a peace over the whole thing which is disrupted when people use it for evil. Basically it's more of a philosophical balance, rather than a mathematical balance.
It does mean balance between light and dark. Among the sources which explicitly spell this out are Cloak of Deception, TCW's Altar of Mortis, and The Old Republic: Revan. The problem is when balance between light and dark is replaced by balance between Jedi and Sith. A parity in numbers between Jedi and Sith is not the balance discussed in the films. It is an invalid substitution. The films discussed a balance of the Force, not a balance in the membership of two organizations. A balance of one type is not automatically the same as a balance of anything else. When you take words out of a phrase and replace them with different words, you tend to change the meaning of the phrase. As depicted in the PT, the restoration of balance to the Force is something that the Jedi hope for as a possible positive outcome in the future. To assume that the Jedi look forward to an outcome of "one Sith for every Jedi" is patently absurd.
The balance would probably only be found in the eradication of both orders, which is effectively what happened at the end of ROTJ (despite its name), as Luke is no true Jedi. Luke and Leia would likely be considered grey Jedi by some standards, what with both breaking the no-personal-attachments part of the code. So I'm thinking it's really about internal balance.
Explain what the balance actually is, and why massive numbers of Jedi and only two Sith (if even that) keeps it "balanced."
O'Dib said:The balance would probably only be found in the eradication of both orders, which is effectively what happened at the end of ROTJ (despite its name), as Luke is no true Jedi.
O'Dib said:So I'm thinking it's really about internal balance.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.