matrixman wrote:Or did he get them wrong too? You tell me, as I don't know much about horses either. In fact, just about all that I know of them I've learned from reading the Chronicles. So if SRD has been telling lies about horses, it's up to you to straighten me out.

Umm, see... with the Ranyhyn.. they are not "horses" - they are "the horse people." They are a people of their own, and also have many attributes of horses. I think I sorta suspended what I expected horses to do, and thought of them as "beings of the Land" and I never much bothered to compare them. They in many ways
embody the external beauty, power, glory, and gracefulness that _I_ see on the outside when I see a horse galloping... so maybe that is alot of it.
So I'm weaseling out of answering that one.
I'm guessing that much of how he wrote about horses had to do with personal experience... see the links amanibhavam posted.
Blackhawk wrote:seems to be a few horse trainers here, so im sure you have run into an untrainable horse? something you cannot dominate? what happens to that horse when its spirit cant be broken? do they punish horses for acting like Ranyhyn in our World?? hehe..
See, I don't believe that there is such a thing as an untrainable horse. Just a horse that no person has
yet learned how to control...
A wise trainer would discipline such a horse mildly, and with forethought and consistency in such a way that the horse associates discomfort with bad behavior, and reward (or release from pain/discomfort) with good behavior.
A foolish trainer would probably get his/her ego into the situation, and beat the horse unreasonably, and in a way in which the horse does NOT associate the punishment with the actual bad behavior ...sadly, THIS poor training and the resulting fear in the horse is what
usually results in the so called "untrainable" horses "with bad habits."
Lepus wrote:So what is it that allows us to dominate other creatures - human beings included? (Cats excluded, obviously.) Is it simply lack of fear? I know from training dogs that one must establish oneself as being "Alpha" and that being "Pack Leader" is born out of fear.
One major reason is just that we humans are way smarter. iQuestor mentioned the round pen. We humans figured out that if someone stands behind a horse's center of balance and motions a stick, they can command the horse to move forward. (I've never used a round pen myself, but I totally believe the people who talk about this method. If you're bored and interested in this... I'm pretty sure that googling the horse trainer "John Lyons" would bring up some fascinating info. It's kinda amazing.)
We humans are able to think outside of ourselves, and make long-term goals. We know that horses generally want to do what is the "easiest thing possible." So we contrive means (generally using small bits of reward-and-punishment) to make "what we want the horse to do" to become easier than resisting. We humans develop saddles, bridles, and harnesses which put pressure on to small areas of the horse's bodies, but make it impossible for them to resist.
We also know the long-term picture. The horse doesn't know we are planning to take him on a 25-mile trail ride. He just knows that every time that he tried to stand still and not move forward for the past 500 times, he was uncomfortably squeezed or kicked by the rider's legs, or turned in tight circles or serpentines. (this latter method was how I trained one pony to move forward! No amount of kicking could get him to move forward - but he could not resist my pull on the bridle to the left, so he'd have to turn his head; then he became uncomfortable holding his neck curved to the left, so he took one step to turn his body, and then another.)
And another reason that I am led to believe... though I actually feel weird stating it; others I know have integrated this idea more thoroughly into their beliefs.. There is the idea that God gave all the creatures to humans to care for, and also to "have dominion over."
SoulBiter wrote:...with horses, either you were in charge or they were. So you had to establish dominance and you had to maintain that dominance so that in the horses eyes, you are the leader. You also had to be able to recognize the signs of when your horse was doing little things to pick away at your dominance.
The thing that _I_ don't understand is... once I established dominance over my ponies, they didn't seem to challenge it! My mare went from biting if she had an opportunity, and kicking if we walked up behind her while she had feed - to NOTHING. Though what I totally expected was what Soulbiter described. I think perhaps
my confidence grew so much that _I_ was correcting the tiny challenges to my dominance (that I had come to expect) before they really became a problem.
(Wooo! I got to talk about horses!)
hue of bone wrote:Also, has there been any discussion about how SRD showed that both TC and Joan are both creators, for example, how TC created his first novel, then, SRD contrasts this with Joan's inward creation of Roger.
Also, this is an idea I'd never noticed! Cool! I never really thought of myself as having much of a say in how my baby was "created" during pregnancy! But that's my way of thinking, not the logic of SRD's story, and it DOES make sense that SRD _is_ trying to show this, at least in the story!
"People without hope not only don't write novels, but what is more to the point, they don't read them.
They don't take long looks at anything, because they lack the courage.
The way to despair is to refuse to have any kind of experience, and the novel, of course, is a way to have experience."
-Flannery O'Connor
"In spite of much that militates against quietness there are people who still read books. They are the people who keep me going."
-Elisabeth Elliot, Preface, "A Chance to Die: The Life and Legacy of Amy Carmichael"