(urth) Fairies and Wolfe
Lee Berman
severiansola at hotmail.com
Mon Apr 2 12:08:35 PDT 2012
>Jeff Wilson: Off the cuff, I'd say magic is characterized as an agency that
>is similar to divine power except that it can be made to do a mortal's
>bidding. Magic can be couched in material vessels like charms, fetishes,
>or talking fish, but has the capacity to do what the the invoker
>subjectively means to do rather than what the material vessels would
>otherwise do as judged by objective observers.
To play devil's (heh) advocate, I don't then see the distinction between magic
and divine power. It seems like Moses drawing water from a desert stone or
Jesus feeding the masses or walking on water would be forms of magic.
>Dude, it's the Trinity.
It might be a trinity but I'm not sure it's The Trinity. There were divine
trinities in religious belief before Jesus was born. Most pertinent being
the one involving Dionysus.
Discussions of the Trinity here have focused on the Long/Short Sun books. But
my own feeling is that the same pre-Christian trinity concept is invoked in
BotNS through Father Inire. As I see it, both his role and his names imply it.
His role as creator and caretaker of the Commonwealth could be tied to his role
as Pancreator (it is suggested that he might play a similar role for the Ascians).
The "Father" part is manifested in his implied role as Severian's (the Son, the
Theanthropos) ancestor. And the "Inire" name connection can be traced through Pan
to Dionysus.
I continue to acknowledge that my Father Inire theory is idiosyncratic and
individualized. But for me the various pieces keep fitting together too well to
discard it.
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