Wayfriend wrote:I don't think the Worm is despised because it's an alternate creation myth. I think the Worm is despised because it looks as if two alternate and conflicting creation myths are both real and true at the same time.
Exactly! It bothered the hell out of me at the time, and still makes me uncomfortable. And in
Runes the story seems to be, '
What old man in an ochre robe?' It's as if the Creator, who was vividly established as a real character in
The Power That Preserves, is now being soft-pedalled right out of existence.
I don't like that. Reality isn't like that; things that exist don't vanish so thoroughly that they never existed at all. There are no dinosaurs walking the earth today, but nobody can take away their existence in the past: the bones are everywhere.
A story that plays that fast and loose with its own history is lacking in the most important attribute of realism:
self-consistency. If a fantasy story is self-consistent and resonates with the reader's emotions, that's as real as it needs to be; if not, no amount of 'realistic' detail will save it.
I certainly hope SRD has some method in mind of resolving the paradox. And none of this 'steering between poles of contradiction' stuff, either. The Creator is real, and the Worm is real, for we have seen them both in action. So there must be some relationship between them. Somebody is not telling that story.
Without the Quest, our lives will be wasted.