So what exactly were the ghosts that had took over May's body? Will that explained as "technology"
I doubt it since they mentioned the Darkhold, which from what I understand is basically Marvel's version of the Necronomicon.
So what exactly were the ghosts that had took over May's body? Will that explained as "technology"
Indeed. Not only has that plot twist been used a million times and not only is it something that happens frequently in the real world, but in terms of the story it was just a sub-plot that lasted maybe ten or fifteen minutes of screen time and didn't really amount to much. If there isn't more to it, why would they bother to do it at all?Killing her seems too easy?
I suspect there will be some fallout for May, but I think it was also used as an excuse to make Simmons suspicious of Fitz and their doctor friend. (What secrets are he/they keeping from Shield and from her?) She's going to want to know about that energy source.If there isn't more to it, why would they bother to do it at all?
IIRC the Necronomicon exists in the Marvel lore too, but the general idea is that the Darkhold is the master text while the Necronomicon and other such similar works are but an incomplete copies.^^ Yup, that's exactly what it is.
It'll just prove that magic is real. Albeit classified as a new branch of science with its own laws, rules, and methods that completely spit in the face of physics and chemistry. And with which a certain level of artistry, intent, and willpower is useful, too.As for this "proving" there's no science involved: what is a dark tomb of arcane secrets and eldrich spells other than a text book for *really* complicated and exotic science?
It'll just prove that magic is real. Albeit classified as a new branch of science with its own laws, rules, and methods that completely spit in the face of physics and chemistry. And with which a certain level of artistry, intent, and willpower is useful, too.
The problem with that is that, then, it'll let any super-scientist come up with an endless array of gadgets that completely negate magicians. It's better to keep them completely separate, else it does undermine the whole point of magic existing in the first place.
Not sure where you keep coming up with that. Magic most definitely has its own rules, its own laws, and its own methods. Those rules, laws, and methods just defy all scientific principles and sensibilities. For example, instead of erecting an electro-magnetic technobabble ectoplasmic prohibitor field, a sorcerer just has to draw a few runes on the wall and evoke the name of the hoary demon Whogivesaflipicer. Someone like Fitz would just be flabbergasted by that, rambling on about how nonsensical and impossible it is, yet it would work even better than his technobabble cage would. And even then, the cage is only working in a "curing the symptoms rather than the disease" sort of way rather than actually attacking the problem directly like the sorcerer's magic is.The problem with the "magic is just magic" approach is that there are no rules
^^ Yup, that's exactly what it is.
Indeed. Not only has that plot twist been used a million times and not only is it something that happens frequently in the real world, but in terms of the story it was just a sub-plot that lasted maybe ten or fifteen minutes of screen time and didn't really amount to much. If there isn't more to it, why would they bother to do it at all?
That's not true at all, there are a lot of fantasy stories dealing with the rules and laws of magic, and the consequences of trying to break them. The entire arcs of Full Metal Alchemist and Once Upon A Time In Wonderland are just two stories that come to mind as soon as the topic is brought up and I'm sure there are plenty of others out there. I'm pretty sure The Dresden Files and Kate Daniels series also both lay some pretty clear rules about how exactly their magic systems work.The problem with the "magic is just magic" approach is that there are no rules, thus there are not stakes and no consequences that can't be undone and that leads to lazy storytelling. Anything can be magicked away, anything can be created and anything can be destroyed. Even fantasy needs some grounding--a point of reference--in order to have meaning.
Not in the Dresden Files.The Dresden Files and Kate Daniels series also both lay some pretty clear rules about how exactly their magic systems work.
That's not true at all, there are a lot of fantasy stories dealing with the rules and laws of magic, and the consequences of trying to break them. The entire arcs of Full Metal Alchemist and Once Upon A Time In Wonderland are just two stories that come to mind as soon as the topic is brought up and I'm sure there are plenty of others out there..
I have no idea where you're coming up with any of this.Yeah except we're not talking about pure fantasy or fairy tales, we're talking about the place of "magic" in an otherwise grounded setting. You can't have the one interact with the other without rendering one utterly irrelevant.
I had to consider it for a moment also, but I think he was talking about consciousness, and specifically what's on our immediate conscious attention, as opposed to the various sensory, homeostasis, and memory neurons running in the background. As in, May's overwhelming fear was only located in a small part of her brain, but it was driving her illness, and threatening her very life.Yeah, but then he seemed to walk it back with "but only a few neurons make all the noise." I'm not sure what he means by that, unless it's that, on average, only about 16% of neurons are active at any given moment, though we use pretty much all of them over the course of a day. Still, his phrasing was so confusing that it undermined the attempt to debunk the myth.
It was a supernatural teen drama in its early (and best) years.Smallville adamantly avoided the Superman costume and spent years trying to pass itself off as a supernatural teen drama
Yeah, Aida has to come out of the closet eventually, but there's got to be some after effects for May.I suspect there will be some fallout for May, but I think it was also used as an excuse to make Simmons suspicious of Fitz and their doctor friend. (What secrets are he/they keeping from Shield and from her?) She's going to want to know about that energy source.
I do think they ultimately acknowledged the Necronomicon, but the Darkhold dates back to the early 70s when the Comics Code was first revised to allow Vampires and Werewolves (but not Zombies). The Darkhold was the source of the Russoff family curse as well as a couple of other things that I can't remember.IIRC the Necronomicon exists in the Marvel lore too, but the general idea is that the Darkhold is the master text while the Necronomicon and other such similar works are but an incomplete copies.
All the secrets of the universe are encoded in the Mandelbrot Set. We just have to figure out how to read it.Personally, no eldrich horror or fire ball hurling sorcerer can frighten or entrance me anywhere near as much as this.![]()
To tell you the truth, I thought that bit was pushing it a little too much.Well, you did get the nice twist that the blackout occurred just as they were going to shock her back to life, which dovetailed cleverly with the larger plot about the EMPs, and which I confess I didn't see coming.
Yeah, that was definitely an unexpected "Oh shit" moment.Well, you did get the nice twist that the blackout occurred just as they were going to shock her back to life, which dovetailed cleverly with the larger plot about the EMPs, and which I confess I didn't see coming.
"Oh, shit! Talk about bad timing!"
Yeah except we're not talking about pure fantasy or fairy tales, we're talking about the place of "magic" in an otherwise grounded setting. You can't have the one interact with the other without rendering one utterly irrelevant.
It's okay, mutant powers and quasi-magical abilities are totally fine as long as you don't say they come from magic. <thumbs up>You mean like when freaking aliens showed in the otherwise grounded setting whose most impressive things were guy in power armor and dude who becomes a green rage monster?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.