Jump to content

SomeRandomPeasant

Members
  • Posts

    59
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Female
  • Location
    Some coastal city

SomeRandomPeasant's Achievements

200

Reputation

  1. If you don't like my idea, fine. But if it is actually impossible to Jasnah to do anything but kill the footpads than that would be so lame. Jasnah is the most powerful soulcaster on Roshar and she can't even find a way subdue three men? If she her only two options were to leave them alone or execute them than that would take away her agency as a character.
  2. Would it expand so much that it would kill them? Every time we have seen transformation used on Roshar, there is no violent TNT explosion when rock or flesh is changed into smoke. When Shallan transformed a solid ship into water, and everyone on board just fell. They weren't blasted away or get shot into the air like a geyser. How much oil would get in someones skin in the 10 seconds that they would be submerged in oil. Skin is made to block liquids like oil.
  3. We have seen Jasnah easily transform huge amounts of stone into smoke when Shallan first comes to Kharbranth. And this was without causing a smokestone gemstone to shatter like it shattered when Jasnah took out the footpads. Soulcasting stone allys isn't beyond the capabilities of Jasnah. We have seen Shallan a much, much less experienced Transformer soulcast an entire boat into water. Yes soul casting parts of an object is harder but this is Jasnah, a highly skilled genius who has been Soulcasting for three years. She could have Transformed the entire ally into oil if she wanted to. As I have said many times the amount of stormlight doesn't matter because Jasnah can bring as much stormlight into the fight that she wants. She wasn't surprised to see the footpads. She knew that they would be there, so she could plan accordingly. Even if transforming inorganic matter uses up more stormlight than transforming organic matter (which I doubt), Jasnah could have simply brought more stormlight if she needed to. This point confuses me. Dunking the foopads into oil than transforming the oil into stone would be like dunking a strawberry in chocolate and then freezing the chocolate. The strawberry remains the same, even if the coating around it changes. The footpads displaced the oil when they fell in the oil. So if the oil is transformed back into stone, the stone material wouldn't suddenly get bigger and expand out. Are you saying that the stone would expand in the same way that water expands when in turns into ice?
  4. Frustration I thought we were past this. Feel free to argue that Jasnah was right to kill those the footpads, but we readers shouldn't pretend that Jasnah was incapable of non-fatally subduing them. To do so would be severely underestimated Jasnah's abilities. Like I said many times, soul casting someone into smoke costs more stormlight than casting inorganic material into into one of the ten essences. Jasnah could easily turn the stone from under the footpads into oil, than turn that oil into stone. This is a simple, easy plan that a genius like Jasnah is certainly capable of coming up with, especially since she had time to make up a plan before hand. Oil and stone are inorganic material and therefore cost less stormlight than turning the footpads into smoke/ burning a footpad. You keep saying that Jasnah doesn't have enough stormlight to do this, but turning organic material (like the flesh of the footpads) into smoke costs more stormlight than transforming inorganic materal. Jasnah also knew that there would be footpads in that ally, which means she could have brought as much stormlight as she needed to carry out whatever plan she wanted. If she needed more stormlight to non fatally subdue the footpads, she could have brought some more. However, Jasnah choose to kill rather than subdue, because Jasnah wanted to kill those footpads (rightly or wrongly). Jasnah didn't kill those footpads because she had no other choice, she killed them because she thought it was right to do so.
  5. @Frustration I think there seems to be a bit of a misunderstanding here. Nobody is saying that Lin is some anti-hero with a heart of gold. We all agree that, by the end of his life, Lin was very much a bad guy. The reason a lot of us slightly sympathize with Lin is the fact that he wasn't always bad. As @Bort has been saying, he made at least one noble decision early in Shallan's life. When Lin saw Shallan kill her mother and the other guy, he choose to take credit for the murder. While Lin intended to protect his daughter, his decision backfired. Everyone, his sons included, hated him for "murdering" his wife, despite the fact that Lin did nothing wrong. Can you at least sympathize with Lin at this point in his life? What came next was Lin's fault. He allowed his shame, rage, and the hatred of others to mold him into a monster. He abused his sons and killed his second wife. Nobody is letting him off the hook for that. We all know that he is responsible for his actions later in life. But that doesn't mean we can't mourn the loss of what Lin used to be. If Kaladin chose to kill King Elhokar, and then he joined Moash in light eye killing spree, I would say that Kaladin has become a villain. But I would still sympathize with Kaladin due to the sad events that led Kaladin to that point. I would still feel sadness over the various abuses of Kaladin's life. John Wayne Gacy was an evil murderer who was solely responsible for his own actions, but I can still feel bad about the abuse he suffered as a child. Just because someone is evil doesn't mean you can't sympathize with the pain they suffered.
  6. Not every shard has a number. Endowment's number isn't as set in stone like Honor's is. But many people theorize that that five holds repeated significance on Nalthis. The Five moons, the five scholars, it takes fives heightenings to earn a divine breath, and the ten heightenings are divisible by five. But like I said, this is probably a topic for a different thread. The main discussion should be on the power levels of the Knight's Radiant.
  7. Because Allomancy, created by preservation, is composed of 16 base metals. Also Leras says that 16 is the perfect number. Hemalurgy, created by Ruin, using a single Hemalurgic spike to transport powers. But this topic has deviated far from the main topic. I only mentioned the holy numbers in passing. The main focus should be about why the Radiants are stronger than the Fused
  8. Both Braize and the Shard Odium are probebly 9 centric. All the shards have a holy number associated with them. Ruin has 1 and Preservation has 16. Endowment's is probably 5. This has never been confirmed but many fans believe that Honor's holy number is 10 because the 10 orders, the 10 heralds, the 10 surges. Odium's holy number is likely 9 because of the 9 Unmade and the 9 surges (the surge of adhesion is considered blasphemous). Do you not think that Odium's holy number is 9? I suppose it could be something else.
  9. I believe Sanderson has said that the Knights Radiant are supposed to be the most powerful invested mortals in the Cosmere. A full Radiant is more powerful than a Mistborn, the Returned, a Fused, or anything else we have currently seen in the Cosmere. This is because the requirements to become a Radiant are far more stringent than anything else in the Cosmere. For example: A Radiant has to obey fairly restrictive oaths, and learn to embody them by the 5th Ideal. A Radiant has to attract and bond with intelligent beings called spren, which is a risky and intimate bond. A Radiant is restricted to Roshar, which is the only known source of stormlight in the Cosmere. Sure a Radiant could carry stormlight with them, but eventually, that stormlight will dissipate. That is also assuming a Radiant could leave. Kalak was completely trapped. It seems the more invested a Radiant is, the more they are tied to Roshar The power of the Knights Radiant are offset by the restrictions. Honor also invested far more of himself to Roshar than any other shard, meaning that the Radiant Oaths hold a bit more power than the power Endowment endowed to the Returned. I am not sure about this, but I think Odium's power involves copying the powers of other shards. The only reason they are slightly different is because Odium's holy number is 9 not 10. So I think it makes sense that Honor's power system (which has plenty of restrictions), is more powerful than Odium's power system in the long run.
  10. A villain and a sympathetic villain are still both evil. But I think we can still, at the very least, feel sympathetic to the villain based of the reason they do things. There is a difference between Voldemort, who does evil for purely selfish reasons, and Taravangian, who does evil because he believes he is saving the world. Both are evil villains, but I can sympathize with Taravangian more for his reasons for doing things. Sympathizing with a villain doesn't mean you condone everything they do, it just means that you recognize them as flawed humans (not some immutable evil entity). Characters like Lin and Moash underwent great pain that molded them for the worse. Did that pain force their hands to commit evil? Of course not. Both of them are accountable for their evil actions. But I can still empathize with the pain they felt that lead them to their current selves. Not everything is black and white.
  11. @Ookla the Frustrated I thought we could agree on one thing, Jasnah choose to kill those criminals. At this point I don't care if she was right or wrong to kill them, she might have been right to kill them. However, you keep saying that Jasnah was either incapable of non fatally subduing them, or she had to kill all of them because they could run away and get reinforcements. But Jasnah admits many times that this isn't the case. Jasnah simply wanted to eliminate them. Way of Kings Chapter 36: Jasnah said the foot pads might have harmed others. This is Jasnah's philosophy and that's fine. But we readers shouldn't pretend that Jasnah didn't have the ability to simply capture them. Jasnah never said, I wanted to subdue them, but they gave me no choice. She didn't kill the footpads because Jasnah was hopped up on adrenalin or because killing them was more humane than capturing them. Jasnah definitely wanted them eliminated. If the the foot pads, got on their hands and knees and begged for mercy, Jasnah still probably would have killed them.
  12. If you want to say that breaking your legs is a really bad, fine. Why do you care? A temporary injury is better then killing them. Why do you now suddenly care about there comfort? As I have said and you have said, transforming organic matter uses more stormlight than transforming inorganic matter. Jasnah has confirmed that turning organic matter into an essance uses alot more stormlight than turning inorganic stone into an essance. Using stormlight to change every cell in the footpads body into smoke would have taken alot more stormlight than changing the stone under them in to oil. She had the ability to execute pinpoint attacks on all four of the footpads. Why would she now be unable to target the ground from under them? The amount of stormlight needed is irrelevent anyway. Jasnah went into that alley prepared for a fight She could have brought exactly the amount of stormlight needed to subdue or kill, the footpads. If she needed more stormlight to turn the alley into oil, then she could have brought more stormlight. But she never saw subduing the footpads as in option. She choose to kill the footpads (rightly or wrongly), she didn't have to chose between letting them go and killing them on the spot. By the way, Jasnah admits that she intentionally killed the footpads. Shallan asks her why the footpads had to die and Jasnah said they might have harmed others. Jasnah never said, I wanted to let subdue them, but they gave me no choice. Your lungs are in your chest, not your stomach. But even if Jasnah accidentally submerged them up to their necks, the human body lives for four minutes without oxygen. These footpads would have lost consciousness after 30 seconds. Once they were unconscious, Jasnah could more accurately change their stone prison.
  13. You can claim that Jasnah was right to kill those footpads, but you absolutely cannot claim that Jasnah was actually incapable of subduing the the footpads without killing them. Seriously, what is wrong with Jasnah turning the stone under the foot pads into oil, then once they are submerged, turn the oil back into stone?. This would cost less stormlight than turning the organic flesh of the footpads into smoke. No risk of breaking bones (although I have no idea why you care so much about the foot pads being slightly injured).
  14. Don't worry this will be my last post. Jasnah doesn't need Cohesion to transform stone into sand and air. Cohesion doesn't allow you to transform all objects into stone. It allows you mold stone into a shape of your choosing. The Surge of Transformation means changing objects into a material of the surgebinder's choice. This can be done with any material, but it is most easily done with the ten essences like air, smoke, and oil. She could have easily turned the stone from under the footpads into sand and air, or even oil. Than when they are submerged, Jasnah can turn the material back into stone. Yes, but once the footpads are in she could easily transform the air back into stone. Those footpads died becasue Jasnah wanted them to die. As other people have said, Jasnah had a many ways to not kill a fleeing target. She is smart enough and experienced enough to do so. I respect your opinion as well.
  15. The two footpads who ran away were turned into smoke by Jasnah. Jasnah has said that turning organic material uses more stormlight than turning inorganic material. So killing them actually used more stormlight. She had more than enough stormlight to transform the inorganic material around her. You don't break your legs or die of brain trauma by falling into a pit half your height. But if you don't like my idea, fine. She could have easily transformed the stone from under them into sand. Than turn that sand into stone again, once they are submerged up to the waist. Jasnah is the most powerful living Radiant, after the Bondsmiths. She has had her powers for the longest, and was already an accomplished transformation surgebinder before Kaladin ever met Syl. If you are going to argue that she was actually incapable of non violently subduing the foot pads, than I think you are severely underestimating her abilities. Well now it makes sense! I guess than we will just have to agree to disagree. There is such a thing as justified use of deadly force, but I don't think it should be your first option. Especially if you are a top tier, self regenerating Radiant.
×
×
  • Create New...