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Ripheus23

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Everything posted by Ripheus23

  1. OK but Silverlight knows about the Five Scholars, doesn't it?
  2. I thought this was a joke post, but that the joke would be "Taln screamed," as the entire Secret History.
  3. But Khriss is writing the AA and presumably knows about the Five Scholars and so on... So is this just her implied assertion of Shashara's place in the lineage?
  4. This seems like something that's probably been debated before, but in case not... The Ars Arcanum says only the God-Kings of Hallandren are known to have reached the Heightening that allows steel to be Awakened. But Shashara had to have reached that Heightening to Awaken the steel Nightblood. Does that imply that she is somehow part of the God-King lineage? (It's been an age of my little life since I read Warbreaker so maybe I've forgotten where it explains this topic?)
  5. Per WoB (I will look for it if needed), what Preservation did was "kind of like Splintering." The mental image I have of Splintering is of a Spiritweb being a complex graph with a crystal-like look to it (like, IDK, a 4-dimensional object with 16 surfaces/facets, or whatever), with Splintering being the breaking of nodes and connectors off the graph. By contrast, Preservation divided Ruin's Cognitive and Spiritual sides to some extent, or put an interdict between them, or whatever. Likewise, Ruin's Physical presence was interdicted in the atium deposits. So Splintering in itself is mono-Realmatic (division of a Spiritweb) whereas Ruin's "prison" was poly-Realmatic (division of pan-Realmatic presence) with the Spiritweb remaining intact.
  6. Well the only technical requirement for multiple bonds is the semantic compatibility of the involved oaths. As long as the Ideals of one Order are consistent with the Ideals of another, then it would be possible for someone to hold to both sets of Ideals in good faith. And it could even be that the Ideals are ambivalent enough anyway, for such to be possible more or less no matter what.
  7. I got to thinking, maps usually have compasses. Arelon has the distinction of being shaped like the fundamental Aon, and the focal point of Aonic power is in a city shaped like a compass. Something to do with the "cartographic" relationship between Arelon/Aon Aon on the one hand, and Elantris/the gate cities on the other, is the source of the special power that Elantris has.
  8. I think a case can be made for romantic idealism (one irreplaceable, eternal love) that someone like Sanderson would be of a mind to appreciate, but I guess I will have to RAFO if he plays the philosophical cards that way in the end... EDIT: Although, if precedent is any indicator, the frequent success of arranged marriages between main characters testifies to the kind of marriages that Sanderson seems to "believe in" (IDK how else to put it...). IIRC, Sanderson's liberalized attitude towards GLBTQ issues, vs. the official stance of his own church, even so hedges him towards the most conservative extension of romantic ideality under the rubric of that church (i.e. it is possible that the entire LDS ecclesiastical community would liberalize its GLBTQ stance for the sake of genuine examples of eternal monogamy on the part of the minority spectrum in question; though the history of the LDS re: monogamy does paint an ironic picture of the (possible) developments, here).
  9. IDK, it seems more like being courted by multiple people. Just because multiple people can be attractive to you, that doesn't mean that, once you settle, you can marry multiple people. So to speak.
  10. So weeks/months ago, I speculated that if Adonalsium was a glob of Investiture, maybe the Shattering was an act that involved messing with gravity so as to pull the glob apart. Like, the Shattering resulted in the accelerated expansion of the universe, maybe (which process could hypothetically end in a "Big Rip" as space is smeared apart to infinity). Later, I noticed that the WoB about perpendicularities as Investiture gravity wells indicated the relationship is Realmatic more than/to the exclusion of Physical black-hole-ish, so no-go on the idea, I suppose. Now, though, re: the "Scar is spreading" theory in another thread, I wonder: maybe Adonalsium was causing the expansion of the universe to accelerate, to offset the heat-death potential of the Cosmere cosmos and that this plays into the question of the Adonalsium-related law of thermodynamics (since a Big Rip is kind of the opposite of a heat-death scenario... sort of... maybe not quite opposite as on a whole other level...?). This brings up the question of dark matter in the Cosmere, too, maybe. Sanderson has said something about string theory being relevant to the metaphysics of the saga, and there is a thread by someone that I really ought to read in detail, I suspect, about how to apply string theory to the Cosmere/Realmatics. But, without doing so at this late hour, I will just note that string theory IRL, IIRC, implies (probably or directly) the existence of particle supersymmetry. So, I wonder if dark matter and dark energy, in the Cosmere, would be the supersymmetrical field-substances for the Investiture correspondence to regular matter and energy respectively. That is, when regular matter turns into Investiture (as a substance), it is dark matter; and when it turns into regular energy, it is dark energy. An example of a hypothetical SUSY particle that might correspond to some thermodynamic shenanigans in the Cosmere re: Adonalsium and Investiture: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitino In another thread I also brought up the notion of "plektons" re: Investiture vs. matter vs. energy. Now technically the reduction could not be done straight since there are matter bosons and matter fermions, as well as energy bosons and energy fermions (I think), so simply couplying fermions to matter conceptually, and bosons to energy conceptually, would not do. The best we could say would be that primal matter is fermionic and primal energy is bosonic, I suppose (for irreducible particles, that is). Then primal Investiture would be plektonic, if the model held. However, I have next to no idea (besides exceedingly vague trigonometric intuitions) how plektons would fit into SUSY, to say nothing of SUSY+Investiture, so, yeah. Summed up/tl;dr/w/e: different hypotheses of the long-term fate of the universe---heat-death, Big Rip, Big Crunch, ekpyrotic, etc.---will play some role in describing/defining the nature of Adonalsium's thermodynamic function. EDIT: Ooooh, found this in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superstring_theory: Emphasis added... EDIT 2:
  11. Well assuming nuclear fusion works in the Cosmere along the lines that it does IRL, with the Investiture caveat, I imagine quantum shenanigans sometimes spontaneously convert matter and energy into Investiture under various stellar conditions. Maybe this all has to do with Adonalsium's thermodynamic shenanigans, and with It/Him dead, the Scar is spreading. (Maybe Adonalsium in Itself prevented the normal entropy problem, so to speak; now, though, stars are getting colder---closer to general thermodynamic equilibrium/heat death---and redder: the Scar as an imprint of the Shattering?)
  12. I figure there are some spren that can be bonded without swearing oaths. For example, the nine-shadows image/prophecy seemed to indicate that Odium's champion can bond to all the Unmade. Also, the Ryshadium don't appear to need to swear to the spren that grant them their sentience/sapience/w/e, since until they had that intelligence, they wouldn't be capable of oath-swearing in the first place (assuming that oath-swearing is an ability only had by intelligent/w/e beings). Ditto-ish for the greatshell bond to the "luckspren," I suppose. All that being said, to bond to spren such as to become a Radiant, would require bonding to spren whose bond is given via oaths, so...
  13. I suspect that swearing the oaths and being minded to attract a specific spren in the first place, makes multi-Radiants nearly impossible, as that'd be like monogamous polygamy (marriage-level emotional commitment towards multiple people, which doesn't really work).
  14. Hmm this is the best I can do:
  15. I never even thought of this option goshstormit! That almost makes even more sense, to me, though. It provides the narrative value of OB: that will turn out to be the book that solved the champion problem. Well, except we still weren't "shown" Honor's champion. (Actually, if Honor is dead, how do we even know that he can have a champion??? Or maybe OB solves the whole problem by collapsing both champions into Dalinar, somehow, and the reason why the contest could free Odium was because if Dalinar* surrendered to Odium, then as Bondsmith he would have been able to set Odium free?) Edited due to the post originally saying "if Odium surrendered to Odium"
  16. The main thing I remember missing was the explanation of the black sphere. *pulls black sphere out of tongue-and-cheek*
  17. Moash is the Judas Iscariot to Kaladin the Jesus, though. However, I do wonder... I'm gravitating ever more towards Taravangian as Odium's champion. I mean, I assumed that was a reveal anyway, and despite wiggle-room wording in the passage involved, well...
  18. I know, it's still a little weird, though. Like, Mithil could've become a dual village, Stonedown and Woodhelven; or a new Revelstone; or something... OTOH they had the war between Mhoram and Foul, and later the Sunbane, to contend with on the path to demographic growth so...
  19. Ripheus23

    Perspective

    I liked Khriss' perspective in the Ars Arcanum section. *adjusts duplicitous halo*
  20. Scientists currently debate if this happens in a Minshendi or a deSinger space. *pulls several tongues out of several cheeks*
  21. Although I technically agree, it's still upsetting that backwaters peasants living in a village that doesn't appear to increase in size over a 7000-year period (despite being the most important village in the world!), eventually learn and decide to use the word "frangible."
  22. Explain a subplot badly: Adolin's character arc: The most handsome man in the East develops a knack for raising swords from the dead (double entendre, en garde! ) and contends with a boy made of tears and wind for the heart of a woman with multiple personality disorder.
  23. Let's say the Intent of a Shard is a special Spiritweb function. For simplicity, it's the Spiritweb of the Shard. These are unchanging. Now, the Spiritweb filters into the Cognitive Realm, which gives us the Interpretation of the Intent. The Interpretation is caught in a cycle with the beliefs of physical beings. The names given to the Intents, are actually the Interpretations, written in Physical form. So, it's not so much that I would suggest Passion as a rewrite of Rayse's Shard's Spiritweb, but of the Cognitive-Physical representation of that Spiritweb.
  24. Proof: God cannot die, so if He seems to be dead, there must be some shenanigans involved. Theory: Everyone on the 17th Shard will soon have an Ookla-based username.
  25. [Abstract for an essay I will try to work on for submission to a peer-reviewed journal.]

    A Transcendental Argument for the Ability-to-do-otherwise

     

    As books like the Choose Your Own Adventure series highlight, the usual concept of free will is the ability to do otherwise at a given time, even given the same background conditions at that time [c.f. Austin]. Besides common intuition, though, what reason can be given for believing in such an ability, both as a conceptual precondition for willing, and for the actual existence of this will? The will, as a fundamental subjective function [ac], should be amenable as such to a transcendental argument on its behalf. Just such an argument will be delineated in this essay.

    1. Show previous comments  2 more
    2. Ripheus23

      Ripheus23

      Transcendental inferences can be critiqued or defended as circular or recursive: if an interlocutor does not accept the "explained" (transexplained!) premises themselves, then the explanatory axioms will fail to convince on the same level. Now so far, the notion of explanation has been referred to in a self-explanatory way. However, given the role of the relevant kind of argument in stopping epistemic regression, another characterization is possible: if an argument is a sequence of inferences, and if inferences hold between sentential forms, a transcendental inference can be defined as a piece of erotetic logic. That is, some questions (erotetic functions), concerning the forms of kinds of knowledge, entail or imply some assertions (assertoric functions). A transcendental inference is from a question to an answer. Since the fundamental premise in this argument would be a question, it does not admit of circularity as far as its inferential value goes. Asking the question at all commits the interlocutor to accepting the given answer.

      To illustrate: consider the problem of ethical rationality in general. This is often parsed as, "Why should I do the right thing?" Setting aside the ethical force attendant upon the word "should," I would suggest that the substantial answer to the question is that asking "why" of activity in the first place commits the interlocutor to acting on reasons "why." There is, in other words, no reason to ask, "Why do x?" unless one intends to do x just in case one knows why. The very question, "Why do x?" contains the motive of ethical activity in general.* [*Axiomatically and recursively, the variable "do x" can be taken for the activity of asking "why" in itself, so that the function becomes, "Why ask 'why'?" And it is exactly this question that entails the assertoric function, "Because there is no reason to ask why unless one intends to do what there is a reason "why," to do, in the first place." Asking the question commits the interlocutor to the ethical outlook transcendentally.]

    3. Ripheus23

      Ripheus23

      An illustration of the erotetic transinference, here, would be Kant's distinction between analytic and synthetic knowledge. To put the distinction in mathematical parlance, an analytic truth is one resulting from an epistemic function taking itself as an input; synthetic knowledge is knowledge from epistemic functions that take self-distinct inputs (the function being synthesized with external information-values). But an epistemic function is erotetic: answers to questions that can be known by assigning the semantic value of the constants to the variables are known by analysis as such, and answers to questions that can be known only by assignment of external semantic constants to the variables are known by synthesizing the information-value of the question with external such values.*

      *[This description immediately applies only to so-called "wh"-term questions (also known as "open questions") [add citation]. However, "yes/no"-questions can be converted into "wh"-term ones. Take, for instance, "Is Sarah in South Africa?" being recast as, "Where is Sarah?" "Yes," to the first question can be known by analysis or synthesis if and only if, "South Africa," could be known by analysis or synthesis of the information-value of "Sarah" in the "wh"-term case.]

    4. Ripheus23

      Ripheus23

      [The existence of free will is a matter of transcendental argument owing to the unity of the erotetic and prescriptive functions of the mind. Although questions are not absolutely reducible to epistemic prescriptions, the epistemic-imperative model of erotetic logic does testify to the fundamental relationship between the two classes of mental object [ac]. Empirically, all languages are recognized to express sentential syntax in erotetic, prescriptive, and assertoric forms [ac] [phrase in terms of illocutionary force?].

      Accordingly, the principle ought-implies-can is the keystone of our modal knowledge in concreto. That is, noncontradictory description is possible description simpliciter, but to know what in particular is possible requires more than bare conceivability or imaginability, and it is the deontic transit that gives us this. In other words, ought-implies-can is the principle of specific knowledge par excellence. But if this is so, physical determinism is unnecessary as a belief because the opposite belief is in fact necessary.

      ... What mathematics describe the action of the will? On the face of it, probabilities---and the difference between the chancy and the random [ac]---apply to this question. However, from the Kantian vantage, the existence of free will pertains to the antinomian problem of reason, which depends on the limits of infinite representative synthesis. Now, in Cantor's paradise, the antinomian sequences can all be collapsed into the problem of the absolutely infinite aleph-number ("omega"). Free will, mathematically, therefore must be expressed in the form of the aleph-numbers and their pure order.]

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