Just like perfection, predicting a future that didn't happen is impossible.
Are you actually suggesting that the state of the world is FINE, then? If not, then this is an attempt at a "gotcha" and not an argument.
Yes, we know your opinion. Doubling down on it is not conducive to a discussion.
Do you believe that eliminating all strife and sorrow is possible in reality?
It's not that I misunderstood it. It's that you refuse to think critically about it.
(Off-note: did that accusation feel good? No? Then KNOCK IT OFF.)
Meteion was talking about Ultima Thule in general, not The Plenty specifically. And no, we cannot apply that statement to ALL of Ultima Thule or the Dead Lands, because the dragons didn't assume they had achieved perfection, nor did the star that died by plague, nor the star ruled by the deity that killed everybody. Even the wartorn star never seems to have claimed that their world was perfect. And on top of that, there are tons of worlds (like the Nekropolis) where even Meteion doesn't know what the hell happened. So clearly, Meteion's broad statement there has plenty of exceptions.
Likewise, in the Plenty itself, they say:
Meteion confirms this:"A curious traveler visited our star - a bird which proffered these questions: "What meaning does life hold? For what do you strive?"I could find no satisfactory answers, only bittersweet memories of an age long past.
There was a time when we were lesser, and in our nescience sought purpose - struggled to justify life's worth. That was, of course, before we achieved perfection. Now, condemned to our paradise, we understand the fatuity of existance.
Like the fledgelings we once were the poor bird could not accept the truth. It asked us again and again - hoping, perhaps, our answer might change.
There was a time when we yearned to explore the heavens, found purpose in the hope of unveiling life's mysteries. A dream shattered when we reached enlightenment, and found it empty. There was a time when we believed in our legacy, thought ourselves marking a worthy path our successors might follow. Efforts rendered futile when we discovered the keys to paradise and immortality. As individuals we struggled to know what was right, yet in today's perfect unity there is naught left to question. We are infinity constricted by the finite, but no more─Ra-la shall grant us the mercy of annihilation."
So again, we're left with two possibilities:[Meteion: Farther still existed a star without strife...
Meteion: ...where none remembered life's trials─or its joys.
Meteion: What its people had gained from ease, they lost to apathy.
Meteion: So they created the kindest, most gentle of beasts.
1) They did NOT eliminate all sorrow and strife, and were bummed out because they thought they did.
2) They actually eliminated all sorrow and strife, but found they could find no joy without it.
#2 contradicts itself. #1 makes them look like idiots that service no lesson.
The story states that it's #2.
Which is, again, Meaning 1 of "perfection".
In which case, the Plenty's entire problem never existed and they were just idiots.
To repeat:
Yes, we know your opinion. Doubling down on it is not conducive to a discussion.
Last edited by CrownySuccubus; 08-06-2022 at 04:57 AM.
Of course knowing the future to its specifics is impossible, but all living beings have to make judgment calls and inferences based on existing information. How convenient that its not acceptable to do so here.
Fuck no, but the issue I have with the world isn't that people are making decisions that effect others, its the decisions and the reasons for them. Even in the democratic societies people are making decisions for others, oftentimes ones they don't agree with. Unless you believe in anarchism Crowny, which is fine if you do, thats an inevitability.
You want a discussion or not Crowny. I'm answering your questions and responding to your points.
D All strife and sorrow? No.
You've treated me like an idiot and denigrated me throughout this discussion, so don't get sanctimonious with me.
We almost certainly can!
Sounds real familiar to me!Beyond that distant veil... Paradise lost. So glorious. So beautiful...
We were a proud and noble race. Strength embodied. We knew only love. Before they came...
Metal monstrosities of black and silver. No bonds of blood did they share, nor conviction did they have to guide them.
A crushing defeat. Never had we known such shame... Stilled now are the winds, though none could fill these wings burdened by ignominy. We fly no more, only sink into oblivion...
I beg thee leave me to dream. To forget that which we have lost...
Sure, but that perfection was still sought with a single minded zealotry that peace and unity was the way forward. A zealotry that gave rise to the machines that killed them and the war that ripped their planet apart. Each and every world we are shown follows that same pattern. The yearning for a perfect world, the manifestation of that in action, and the consequences that follow. If you wish to hold that Meteion find all these exceptions that were so definitely possible paths forward, and simply decided to torment Hermes for the fun of it, then by all means. I think that's crazy.
And I am repeatedly going to point out that the story gives several direct quotes where major characters state that it is impossible to do that. How do you hold the story states #2 with those quotes? You've yet to answer that, and instead insisted that the contradiction remains. The premise of the Plenty isn't undermined by pointing out that its denizens were wrong anymore than the premise of the dragons, or the Ea or the Omicron is wrong because of what happened in Ultima Thule. A society that gave up individuality itself in order to eliminate sorrow being ruined by the realization that life is unable to exist with out is not crazy, it makes perfect sense!
Believe as you please then. I think they tried their best.
Ok, then in the interest of discussion explain your reasoning. You've given a moral reason for why you shouldn't by saying:
But I don't agree with you there! So were at an impasse. If we would like to discuss that and not just agree to disagree, we then need to find a way around that. What reason do I have to not believe that? What problems exist in my reasoning here? Any of these would give me more to say than just restating my position!It's not a "hard call" at all. No one deserves to make unilateral decisions for an entire planet.
Ok, I genuinely don't understand how a statement where it is clearly stated that highly sensitive affairs that are revealed only to select few, which he states includes us, can be interpreted this way. The word include quite literally means "comprise or contain as part of a whole." What exactly do you think the whole being referred to is?
Good one Brinne, I'm sure you know for complete certainty that I've never advocated, agreed with or fought for change in production practices in worldwide supply chains. You mentioned me poisoning the well before but based on statements like this I don't think its a well anymore. Its a container of toxic sludge.
Eara, you were the one who invoked the state of the real world as something to inform this discussion and how we should understand the Ancients' situation, as seen with your first quote in my post, and furthermore, you were the one to tie your own personal choices in similar moral questions into how you view the overall morality of Endwalker. At that point, you have opened the door to interrogate on that basis, not me.
So, once again: only an evil of impossible magnitude can justify such an act as bringing harm to innocent life. "An evil of impossible magnitude" would cover both a threat to life present and future, and you being prevented from using your personal electronic devices, under this logic. Under premises that you, once again, had already introduced or accepted in this discussion.
And I gave reason why I don't think that's a fair criticism of my position, and in fact that whole statement relies on assumptions about a stranger on the internet. I explained my moral system, and I believe I have lived by it. If you genuinely think that me purchasing an electronic device is akin to the direct maiming and harming of an innocent, then we can discuss that. But don't pretend like this isn't some clear attempt at a gotcha.
Last edited by EaraGrace; 08-06-2022 at 08:00 PM.
...How "convenient" that one person shouldn't be allowed to make a judgment call to commit genocide on the entire human race and reset civilization based on a possibility which is inherently impossible to predict?
Yeah, that sounds like a good thing, to me.
As I said earlier, this argument fallaciously argues that because dictatorship and democracy are both forms of authority, they're both equal and completely denies the possibility that one is worse than the other.
No, you're doubling down on your opinions. Which is NOT conducive to a discussion.
Then that answers your question, doesn't it?
Give me one example. If it's a valid one, I'll apologize.
Regardless, the next time you pull that, this discussion is over immediately.
So MAYBE the dragons? So one out of the four mentioned?
But even the dragons don't really count, because it wasn't a search for perfection that ruined them. Like, at all. In fact, if the dragons had been any lesser than what they were, they still would have been wiped out by the Omnicron...only faster.
Again, the dragons don't count, the plague world doesn't count, nor does the one destroyed by their deity.
And the ones where Meteion doesn't know what happened literally cannot count, because she flat out does not have the answers.
That's a strawman. What I hold is that you are overreaching on a very general statement that Meteion made to offer it as "proof" of your argument, when it isn't.
Every quote you present that states how it's "impossible" to do it is countered by direct quotes which stated that the Plenty literally did it. Which I've quoted multiple times. The very fact that there are quotes that contradict each other is flat out, text proof of said contradiction. So how have I "yet to answer" anything?
Cool.
Your reasoning (based on the first two quotes in this post) basically amounts to "the answer to our problems is a benevolent dictatorship", where one person or cabal with good intentions acts unilaterally to enact whatever goal they think needs to be done for the sake of life. To avoid any semantics, we can call "one person makes decisions for the rest of an entire world" something other than a "dictatorship" if you like, but it really doesn't matter what it's called. It doesn't change the next part of my statement.
The problem with this argument is that such a benevolent dictatorship is, like perfection or predicting the future, impossible. The exact same fundamental problem that prevents perfection and prediction of the future is also inherent in the concept of a "benevolent" dictatorship. A person cannot be all-knowing or all-seeing or all-compassionate. Have you ever heard of a scientist that was the foremost expert on EVERY field of study? Have you ever heard of a politician who never made a bad decision? Have you ever heard of a business man who's never lost money? That's the fundamental problem with one person making decisions for everyone else. Nobody knows everything, is never wrong, or makes mistakes. The inherent problem of a dictatorship is that if the leader in question is incorrect, ignorant, or inefficient, then there is nothing anyone can do about it. Furthermore, once a dictatorship is in place, there is no guarantee that it will end. The perfect examples are Rome and Weimar Germany; both of them placed "benevolent" dictators in charge to save civilization from dire collapse, and then those dictators decided to just keep that power forever. And even if their reign ends, that doesn't negate the possibility of consequences -- by the time the last Roman emperor fell, Europe had become a theocratic hegemony, and by the time Germany was defeated, a few million people had been exterminated and humankind entered a nuclear cold war. Hell, even in the case of Venat, the changes she made to Etheirys (if not the universe, by not telling anybody about Meteion) are fundamentally permanent, and nobody has the ability to do anything about it.
If you agree with EW's story in that the pursuit of a perfect world leads to Dead Ends, then you, more than anybody here, should be absolutely opposed to the idea that any one person should EVER decide the fate of an entire planet -- because if the dictator decides that pursuing perfection is the correct thing to do, then that's where the world will be headed, because the definition of a dictatorship is that they're the only one with the power to act or decide. Furthermore, a dictatorship is a form of government that REQUIRES perfection. If the dictator is ever wrong about ANYTHING or ever ignores the interests of society, you are screwed. Even if you depose that dictatorship and install another "better" one, the problem remains. The best case scenario is that you get a great absolute leader for a temporary amount of time, until they make a decision that is incorrect, ignorant or inefficient. Then you're right back to where you started at BEST. At worst, there'll be so much damage that it'll be too late to do anything about it this time.
In essence, dictatorships are great, until they aren't. And once they aren't, you're screwed.
Last edited by CrownySuccubus; 08-06-2022 at 01:02 PM.
When did Eara advocate for a benevolent dictatorship? This whole spiel about the flaws of benevolent dictatorship seems a little silly when Venat was never a dictator anyway.
Venat made one decision for the world, upended the society she lived in, and then sequestered herself at the bottom of the aetheric sea while having very little influence on world affairs.
The people of the world then went and made thier own decisions for the most part.
"And even if their reign ends, that doesn't negate the possibility of consequences -- by the time the last Roman emperor fell, Europe had become a theocratic hegemony, and by the time Germany was defeated, a few million people had been exterminated and humankind entered a nuclear cold war. Hell, even in the case of Venat, the changes she made to Etheirys (if not the universe, by not telling anybody about Meteion) are fundamentally permanent, and nobody has the ability to do anything about it."
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