Ryzel wrote:I hope this does not seem too critical, I have really tried to be objective.
Not too critical for my tastes. Not by a long shot! I <I>love</I> taking things to these lengths and detail! Nor is your objectivity in question. There's nothing remotely insulting to me in any of this.
I think it might make things easier, more wieldy, if I divide this into a few parts. This is getting pretty big, so any parts that anybody's interested in continuing will be easier this way.
Part I
Where I simply state the fact that the Oath of Peace and Kevin's Lore are incompatible.
To his horror, Mhoram had come to perceive that the Oath itself was the essential blindness, the incapacity which had prevented the new Lords from penetrating to the heart of Kevin's Lore. When the first new Lords, and all the Land with them, had taken the Oath, had articulated their highest ideal and deepest commitment by forswearing all violent, destructive passions, all human instincts for murder and ravage and contempt, when they had bound themselves with the Oath, they had unwittingly numbed themselves to the basic vitality of the Old Lords' power.
Mhoram had to make a choice. One or the other. And he did what he did because, truly, he <I>didn't</I> have a choice. It wasn't something he debated with himself. He simply would not abandon the Oath. He would not abandon himself.
Part II
Where I try to help everyone see that Mhoram's decision was strong and good in <B>all</B> ways.
To start, it was a practical decision. Kevin's Lore clearly wasn't working for the Oath-bound New Lords. If Mhoram hadn't figured out that he had to be more like Kevin (although desperately holding onto himself in ways that Kevin never did), we wouldn't have had Lord Mhoram's Victory. And even with that, they would not have won without the white gold.
Heck, Kevin's Lore didn't even work for Kevin! Not when it came right down to it. He was <I>much</I> more proficient with his Lore than the New Lords, and he even knew of the ultimate possibility of his Lore, the Power of Command. And he <I>still</I> didn't know how to beat Foul.
So, Kevin's Lore didn't do the job with Kevin's rules, and it barely worked with the Oath. Based solely on practical concerns, the argument to keep using it isn't strong enough.
But, of course, that's not the reason Mhoram decided to find new lore. Nor was he being foolish, weak, stubborn, or naive. His decision came out of an absolute conviction for a way of life that he believed was the best way. It was certainly the best way for him; the only one he would live.
I don't completely agree with absolute pacifism. (Neither does Mhoram, but I'm using it to make the point.) But it's not because I think the aspects I disagree with are wrong. They're just not for me. (Maybe I'm not strong enough for it.) I <B>strongly</B> admire those who can live by those principles. In contrast, I don't agree with the way of life that says to kill all your enemies before they kill you, but I sure find flaw with it!
Mhoram and the people of the Land had no choice. Their convictions were strong, and beautiful, and could not be compromised. Kevin's Lore demanded that they compromise. Drinny, it just can't happen that way. For you and I, yes. Because we don't have those convictions. But not for them. They came from a different history. And because of that history, they evolved spiritually in a different direction than my culture did.
Ryzel wrote:This tells us that earthpower is not inherently "good" power. We see several examples of earthpower being used for "non-good" purposes in the chronicles. (Blasting Ur-Viles etc.) In my opinion this would mean that ANY lore concerning its use would be either potentially dangerous or relatively impotent.
I agree with the beginning. But I see no reason for the conclusion of your last sentence. Some of the principles that Kevin's Lore was built on were violent. That's why those who clung to principles of non-violence were unable to use it. Eventually, that lore will lead to destruction. But if a lore was built on the principles of non-violence? Why would that have to be relatively impotent? Why should Mhoram have worried that he couldn't find a non-destructive, yet powerful lore?
Ryzel wrote:All these points lead to this: I believe Mhoram was wrong to abandon Kevins lore because it seems obvious that the potential for destruction is not in the lore but in the power itself. To therefore abandon the lore is foolish.
Again, I disagree. The power can be used for good or evil. It's the choice of the user. Kevin's Lore used it for destruction. That's the choice you make when you use that lore. That's why it was incomprehensible to those who took the Oath of Peace. If you used it, you would eventually destroy. It was inevitable. And if you <B>will not</B> destroy, you are unable to use the Lore. Mhoram would not destroy.
Ryzel wrote:As a last point I would like to add that to trust in good motives as a guarantee for good results is foolish and I would like to think that Mhoram had learned at least this much from the results of the actions of Elena and the fate of the Bloodguard.
It's true that good motives do no guarantee good outcomes. No guarantee by a long shot! But do you think a good outcome is more likely if you begin with <I>bad</I> motives? How often do you suppose good motives lead to good outcomes compared to bad motives leading to good outcomes?
And if you aren't given a guarantee either way, which path do you attempt - the one that violates all you are, or the one that confirms it?
And the outcome doesn't even matter. Here's a better question to consider: Even if you <I>know</I> that you will lose, that you will die, do you die <I>with</I> your principles - yourself - intact, or do you become what you hate so that you can live? Mhoram could not say, "Let's take back the Oath, and start relearning Kevin's Lore, but this time we'll be willing to give in to our violent, destructive passions, our instincts for murder and ravage and contempt." If he had done that, he would no longer be Mhoram. For him, the loss that would come with that starting point is worse than the loss of his life. (And apparently, the other Lords agreed. A majority, at least. And if others in the Land disagreed, and chose to go back to an approach to life that permitted violence, we didn't hear about it.) "In reality as in dreams, what matters is the answer we find in our hearts to the test of Despite."
The unfortunate result of Mhoram's decision was not caused by any flaw in his decision, but by the way they went about it. I think duchess is on the right track. Maybe they didn't "give sufficient warning onward to future generations." Or maybe that's not possible. Things were going SO well, that maybe it would have been impossible to make them take "that old doomsayer, Mhoram" seriously. If later generations could come to believe that <I>aliantha</I> was poison!, then it's no surprise that they became less and less vigilant about a legendary boogey-man who hasn't been seen in millennia. "<I>If</I> he ever existed, he surely must be dead!"
Ryzel wrote:Additionally it becomes clear that by abandoning the lore the old lords also abandon any chance that they might have for actually discovering the long term effects the destruction of the staff of law would have.
<I>That's</I> certainly true. But that idea can paralyze you. You would never be able to do <I>anything</I> if you worried that it might make you unable to detect something that you can't even imagine at the moment. It's one thing to use that rationale to not use some immense, active thing like the Power of Command, but another to use it to not try another path in order to be true to yourself.
Part III
How can the Earthpower be used, if not with Kevin's Lore?
Drinny's idea of allowing "a degree of strong emotion" is fine. They can have as much emotion as they want. They just need to avoid violent emotions. I don't think that the only strong emotions are violent ones; I don't believe that the strongest emotions are the violent ones (although they may be the easiest); I don't believe that the only strong emotions that can accomplish extraordinary things are violent ones. Emotions like love, passion, fascination, and awe have inspired people to put HUGE amounts of time and effort into all kinds of things that are not remotely violent, with sublime results. Writing books, writing computer programs, developing surgical procedures, learning languages, advancing mathematics, composing music.......
Ryzel wrote:Good argument for the philosophy of pacifism, which I do not follow myself, but I think that it is the wrong argument you are using here. My view of the Oath of Peace is not as a philosophy (pacifism) but as a forcible restraint on creativity/potential. One which the people of the land was willing to accept, certainly, but nonetheless a limit on what they could do. Mhoram made the choice to uphold the Oath of Peace rather than abandon it and risk desecration.
I don't know if I understand you. Are you saying that the pursuit of peace (or the refusal to use violence) and creativity/potential are mutually exclusive? It seems like you're saying that. It's true, I suppose, that the Oath of Peace, if practiced fully, would completely prevent any creativity/potential of lore that deals with violence. So no, you cannot fully explore every aspect of humanity that way. Personally, I wouldn't mourn the loss.
But I don't see why it would restrain the creativity/potential of lore in the thousands of areas that do <I>not</I> deal with violence. Would not giving in to my "violent, destructive passions" and my "human instincts for murder and ravage and contempt" make me less able to work with healing, communication, exploring, traveling, teaching, that rock-reading the one Unfettered did, etc, etc? If their lore was based on avoiding violent conflict, they might develop shields that would make a Word of Warning look like a child's toy. And would a Bene Gesserit be able to tell if someone was being posessed by a Raver, even if they never met the person before? A new lore built on peace could go in directions that include people being able to see and understand in ways that the Bene Gesserit do. The non-violent possibilities are endless.
Part IV
Other stuff.
Ryzel wrote:I disagree with you here, the law was not destroyed by the destruction of the Staff. Weakened, yes, but not destroyed.
I suppose "destroyed" is taking it too far:
The tool and its purpose were one.
And she Staff had been destroyed.
That loss had weakened the very fiber of the Law. A crucial support was withdrawn, and the Law faltered.
For the Staff of Law had been destroyed. The Clave flourished in part because the old severity of the Law, the stringency which matched the price paid to the beauty of the thing purshcased, had been weakened;
And this was possible because the Staff had been destroyed. The Law which had limited him and resisted him since the creation of the earth had been weakened;
Ryzel wrote:Later I seem to remember Mhoram commenting that the ritual of desecration is one of the simplest uses of earthpower, it requires only despair or something like that.
I don't remember exactly which passage you're referring to. But I love what Amok said about it:
"Lord, Desecration requires no knowledge. It comes freely to any willing hand."
Ryzel wrote:The key point in my opinion is not the staff itself however but the fact that EARTHPOWER HAS THE POTENTIAL TO BREAK THE LAW. This is demonstrated in TIW, where the seventh ward is used to break the Law of Death.
Just for fun, I'll throw out this theory. I don't see any evidence that SRD viewed it this way, but why should that stop me?

Maybe Death is merely shown to be a part of the Earthpower, or an even larger system that includes both. To speculate, some property of quarks may be found that can stop water from becoming ice. No matter what you do with temperature, pressure, and the purity of the water, it will not freeze. This does not mean any law of chemistry has been broken. The laws of chemistry are a subset of the laws of physics, and are subject to that greater body. Maybe Death is a part of the Earthpower, and subject to aspects of it. Especially the ultimate expression of it - the EarthBlood. Maybe the Law of Death wasn't "broken", maybe we just saw an aspect of the entire system that was <I>darned</I> unlikely to come up.
Where's an emoticon for *WHEW*?
