Just read through this thread. Great comments and speculation.
The Millennium trilogy is on my list of books to read in 2010. Given that I've not read them and how the plot might impact the Ascendant storyline, my interpretation of events in Warpath was that three cultures--Bajorans, Eav'oq, and Ascendant--were aware of these "greater beings" and projected their own conceptions on them based on their cultural history and how they interpreted what they deemed to be encounters with the "greater beings."
At the time I read Warpath, I thought this set up was--an allegory? symbolic of? not sure of the right term--of our own experience of, in my opinion, creating a god or gods in "our" own image, imbuing it/her/him/them with our own psychological strengths and deficits, etc. I assumed the plot taking shape was going partly examine how multiple groups of people or cultures can see the same thing/entity very differently.
Donnie
The Millennium trilogy is on my list of books to read in 2010. Given that I've not read them and how the plot might impact the Ascendant storyline, my interpretation of events in Warpath was that three cultures--Bajorans, Eav'oq, and Ascendant--were aware of these "greater beings" and projected their own conceptions on them based on their cultural history and how they interpreted what they deemed to be encounters with the "greater beings."
At the time I read Warpath, I thought this set up was--an allegory? symbolic of? not sure of the right term--of our own experience of, in my opinion, creating a god or gods in "our" own image, imbuing it/her/him/them with our own psychological strengths and deficits, etc. I assumed the plot taking shape was going partly examine how multiple groups of people or cultures can see the same thing/entity very differently.
Donnie