One thing to keep in mind is that there really is no such thing as the light and dark sides
Yes, there really is such thing.
Actually there is no light side, what the EU calls the light side is the Force proper.
One thing to keep in mind is that there really is no such thing as the light and dark sides
Yes, there really is such thing.
Well then ignore the stuff that doesn't make sense and just talk about the stuff that you like and think should be kept.
A guy kills his father and marries his mother--then, consumed with guilt, builds a time machine and travels back in time--becomes his own father--travels forward in time--has a sex-change--travels back in time again--and becomes his own mother--so that in the end, he has sex with himself, gives birth to himself, kills himself, and marries himself?
A guy kills his father and marries his mother--then, consumed with guilt, builds a time machine and travels back in time--becomes his own father--travels forward in time--has a sex-change--travels back in time again--and becomes his own mother--so that in the end, he has sex with himself, gives birth to himself, kills himself, and marries himself?
A guy kills his father and marries his mother--then, consumed with guilt, builds a time machine and travels back in time--becomes his own father--travels forward in time--has a sex-change--travels back in time again--and becomes his own mother--so that in the end, he has sex with himself, gives birth to himself, kills himself, and marries himself?
Isn't that a Robert Heinlein story?
Thank kind of makes sense.So: Aeschylus + Heinlein = Red Dwarf.
Actually there is no light side, what the EU calls the light side is the Force proper.
That seems like the most appealing and interesting interpretation, Lucas' later back-peddling notwithstanding. I think as a good liberal, Lucas got cold feet about the implications of the good/evil balance - how inherently amoral it is - and tried to change things in the PT.One character resents this tremendously, saying that its constant attempts at "balance" kill billions and the galaxy would be far better off without it.
The balance stuff and the non-personalized divinity as it were is eastern, Taoist specifically.
Yeah, it's all pretty appalling when you scratch the surface, isn't it?And if I lived there, then when it came to the question of religion, I'd have to side with Han.![]()
That seems like the most appealing and interesting interpretation, Lucas' later back-peddling notwithstanding. I think as a good liberal, Lucas got cold feet about the implications of the good/evil balance - how inherently amoral it is - and tried to change things in the PT.One character resents this tremendously, saying that its constant attempts at "balance" kill billions and the galaxy would be far better off without it.
The balance stuff and the non-personalized divinity as it were is eastern, Taoist specifically.
That seems like the most appealing and interesting interpretation, Lucas' later back-peddling notwithstanding. I think as a good liberal, Lucas got cold feet about the implications of the good/evil balance - how inherently amoral it is - and tried to change things in the PT.One character resents this tremendously, saying that its constant attempts at "balance" kill billions and the galaxy would be far better off without it.
The balance stuff and the non-personalized divinity as it were is eastern, Taoist specifically.
Why blame Lucas for the Taost direction of the Force? There's plenty of evdience that it came from Kasdan and Lucas just followed suit
That seems like the most appealing and interesting interpretation, Lucas' later back-peddling notwithstanding. I think as a good liberal, Lucas got cold feet about the implications of the good/evil balance - how inherently amoral it is - and tried to change things in the PT.
Why blame Lucas for the Taost direction of the Force? There's plenty of evdience that it came from Kasdan and Lucas just followed suit
I'm not blaming anyone for that - I think that approach is the right one. And if Kasdan came up with it, then that explains why Lucas is frakking it all up now.
The rabbit hole goes even deeper: One of the audio sources Lipsett sampled for 21-87 was a conversation between artificial intelligence pioneer Warren S. McCulloch and Roman Kroitor, a cinematographer who went on to develop Imax. In the face of McCulloch's arguments that living beings are nothing but highly complex machines, Kroitor insists that there is something more: "Many people feel that in the contemplation of nature and in communication with other living things, they become aware of some kind of force, or something, behind this apparent mask which we see in front of us, and they call it God."
When asked if this was the source of "the Force," Lucas confirms that his use of the term in Star Wars was "an echo of that phrase in 21-87." The idea behind it, however, was universal: "Similar phrases have been used extensively by many different people for the last 13,000 years to describe the 'life force,'" he says.
According to George Lucas balance means minimal dark side. Imbalance is the situation in the prequels where "the dark side clouds everything" in the words of one certain jedi.
Temis the Vorta said:If the Force knows the difference between good and evil, it has a consciousness of some sort, or else it couldn't work the way it does. A consciousness very different from human intelligence, but you'd expect that. It's not like you'd find in concepts of equillibrium of the natural world, which works like a machine and no intelligence is required.
I just don't like his use of the Force. He's just imposing conventional Western notions of morality on the Star Wars universe, but if he was never the originator of the more interesting ideas about Eastern philosophy, then it's no wonder. It's not like I respect his writing overall, anyway.It's not "frakked up" you just don't quite get Lucas' use of the Force.
Interesting, I guess now is a good time for me to catch up with Clone Wars.How does minimal dark side constitute balance? In that situation Sith would presumably say "the light side clouds everything." Dave Filoni said they were going to address the prophecy about Anakin and what "balance of the force" means in the upcoming season of clone wars, so I guess we'll see exactly what he means there.
The bacteria has evolved to move away from heat because bacteria that don't do that die and don't have offspring. That's a machine-like process that requires no outside intelligence. But there's no way for "good" and "evil" to become part of a natural system unless there's an intelligence that can distinguish between good and evil.A bacteria can tell the difference between too hot and too cold and move accordingly. Doesn't mean it's conscious in the manner we are, just means it's alive. With the light side and the dark side, the difference is the intent with which people touch the force - all the consciousness the force requires to develop a sense of equilibrium is to be able to tell the two apart.
How could you even begin to accomplish such a thing? Isn't that like trying to "kill" electromagnetism or gravity?As for the character who resented the force, she didn't just resent it...she was out to kill it entirely.
The bacteria has evolved to move away from heat because bacteria that don't do that die and don't have offspring. That's a machine-like process that requires no outside intelligence. But there's no way for "good" and "evil" to become part of a natural system unless there's an intelligence that can distinguish between good and evil.
As you say, the key is "intent" - the bacteria has no intent to move away from the heat. That's just how it's evolved because its ancestors did that. Intent implies consciousness.
Well, given that it's generated by living things, one could simply kill everything and there'd be no more force. But that wasn't her plan - given that we know that certain places can be strong in the dark or light side, like the dark side cave on Dagobah, the game's writers posited that places like that are in fact a wound in the force, left by a strong dark or light side action. In the EU at least, it's possible to cut someone off from the force, and one Jedi in the game cut themselves off from the force upon sensing an event similar to the destruction of Alderaan, and the game said that left a wound in the force too - one where no force existed, a dead spot. Her plan was to expand that wound to encompass the entire galaxy.How could you even begin to accomplish such a thing? Isn't that like trying to "kill" electromagnetism or gravity?As for the character who resented the force, she didn't just resent it...she was out to kill it entirely.
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