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Ripheus23

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Ripheus23 last won the day on November 21 2018

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  • Birthday 07/15/1986

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    Aonspren
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  1. OK, so the reason the first Ripheus book is supposed to be called The Axioms of Paradise is because the entire series is supposed to encode an elaborate moral theory, or theory of moral information, into itself. One of the keys to the system is the concept of the final offenses, which are the three ultimate forms of sin. Together, they are the Form of Evil itself because one of them is implicated in all wrongdoing simpliciter and the others, despite being fundamentally inspired by the one, are equivalent in demerit.

    So, this maximal evil cannot be perfectly committed by anyone, because rationalistic moral psychology rules it out. It is possible to map "consciously" and "unconsciously" to any junction of the three offenses, so there are 26 ways to consciously or subconsciously commit them at the same time. 9 of these would involve consciously committing the fundamental sin consciously, which is metaphysically impossible otherwise speaking, in conjunction with either the others consciously or unconsciously. So, there are only 17 arrangements that can actually obtain.

    Now in the story, the Form of Evil is a given entity or object, a real presence. It is, after all, what Apollyon destroys and then transcreates at the apex of the finale. Before this endgame, though, the Form of Evil tries to break itself into pieces that cannot be simultaneously destroyed, implanting its essence in 26 people who it resurrects from the dead: the Broken Ones. These are not wicked people, to be sure. They are infected but not controlled.

    The rules of the game, here, are that unless one of the 9 has been killed, none of the 17 can die. Until one of 9 dies, the advent of the Final Power will be greatly delayed. If any of the 9 die, then any of the 17 can be killed, but until one of them is, the advent of the Final Power will be forestalled. So, some of the quasi-protagonists will unfortunately end up accidentally hastening the apocalypse by killing some of the Broken Ones; or these beings will be inspired to kill themselves, or whatever. Maybe one is killed by others and one commits suicide. IDK but anyway, this situation is a counterpoint to Intuition's plot (Intuition being the Shard-like name for one of the Septatheon) to halt the Final Power, which is one of the highest-level arc questions of the series and the only question with two arc-answers (the problem of Intuition and the problem of the Broken Ones; all the other kinds of crisis are faced only once).

    1. Ripheus23

      Ripheus23

      OK, so I forgot, it's not that being broken apart to avoid being totally destroyed, is the reason the Form of Evil breaks itself into the 26 pieces. It's purely to block the Final Power somehow, since the Form of Evil "knows" what Armirex's plan is (to give Apollyon His share in the Final Power, unto the transdestruction of the Form of Evil), wherefore the Form of Evil "believes" that preventing the advent of the Final Power, will allow it to survive the final apocalypse.

      Now, I suppose it would be interesting to throw in another "move" in the OP game, namely, after one of the 17 dies, there is yet another block on the Final Power, namely it cannot be transecrated unto the Destroyer as long as the other Broken Ones endure. So if all the Broken Ones die, it will become possible to give one's share in the Final Power, to someone else. I don't think I want to have Armirex murdering the Broken Ones, though, so I'll have to take care of them somehow else as far as their outcome goes. (I used to have a file on my lost laptop, in which I practiced writing Broken-One scenes, but, alas...)

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