Originally posted by rancke:
Rain (may I call you Rain?), please trim your quotes down to the bits you respond to.
Of course you may shorten it to Rain. After two years on Diablo II West and East servers, everyone over there had shortened it as well (especially since my accounts went RainOfSteel, RainOfFire, RainOfAshes, RainOfFear, RainOfDust, etc.), so it’s quite familiar.
As to content, I sort of thought I was responding to the entirety of it. But in any event, I can cut down.
In return, I’d also ask that you stop altering the content of the material I post. It’s extremely irritating. I thought the few subtle hints I dropped would make the point, but apparently, they did not.
I’d also ask that you cease removing quotation attributions, or if you clip and rearrange, that you add quotation attribution.
Originally posted by rancke:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by RainOfSteel:
We are discussing comparative terms here. The Imperium is a Nation. England is a nation. The Duchy of Cornwall is a big piece of England, and a duchy of the OTU is a tiny piece of the Imperium. This is where the break in comparison occurs.
That's because the comparison is invalid. It is no more warranted than comparing the meaning of 'duke' today to it's original meaning and complaining that dukes today don't lead armies.
</font>[/QUOTE]I rather think otherwise. My comparison is spot-on. A nation is a nation. Two nations of dissimilar size may be compared to each other if one takes into account the passage of time objectively. If one takes the entire milieu of AD 1300 (or AD 1100, or AD 1700, or whatever) vs. IC 0 or IC 1100 or whatever, one must make the
comparative adjustment for time. Terra of AD 1300 was an entire milieu with nations, wars, great/vast distances between the nations, long communications times, strikingly similar to a certain nation we all know about in IC 1100 (perhaps strikingly similar to all of Charted Space). The milieu of 3000 years later has gotten bigger . . . but that’s it. It is otherwise largely the same.
Attempting to state that expansion due to 3000 years of advancing time and knowledge make the nobles of the future somehow better or higher on the “precedence” list is wrong. The 3000 year difference
must be “accounted” for. Either the modern nobles must be “rolled back”, or the ancient nobles must be “rolled forward” (for the comparison to be seen correctly). That’s why it’s “comparative”.
It’s true that in IC 1100, any Member World noble or national leader
of that era possessing the same power levels as a noble or national leader of AD 1300 Terra would be
insignificant, you have stated this and I agree . . . but since this isn’t the case, and I’m not talking about that situation, then I feel that comparison itself is what takes on invalid characteristics. How can one fail to properly account for the 3000 year gap? The two eras cannot be
directly compared because of the gap, but only compared after the adjustment for the gap in time is allowed for.
Example: Cy Young is widely regarded as one (not the only one, certainly) of baseball’s greatest pitchers. The Cy Young Award is each year’s highest award for any pitcher. In his day, it was dangerous to face him (true, like any pitcher, he had his bad years). In the modern game today, Cy Young would get wasted by modern batters used to higher speed pitches and fresh late game relief pitchers. In Cy’s day, there were no formal relief pitchers; he completed so many games (906 games played,
completed 749, winning 511) that no pitcher today has any hope of achieving a similar stat. Can we downcheck modern pitchers because they can’t complete anywhere near 749 games in an entire career because Cy Young could? On top of this, the official ball used has been changed twice, making the whole throwing and batting scene completely different. Cy Young’s accomplishments in baseball
cannot be correctly viewed in the
modern context without taking these factors into account (the changes in individual skill development, the ball, etc.), i.e. we must “account” for the passage of time.
So, attempting to compare Cy Young’s accomplishments to modern pitchers (Sandy Koufax, Bob Gibson, etc.) by teleporting him into the present day to face modern batters to see if Cy could do as well as modern pitchers today would be wrong.
Attempting to do the same with AD 1300 nobles and IC 1100 nobles would be equally wrong.
Originally posted by rancke:
The nature of his nobility flows from the Emperor of the Imperium. It has as little to do with the nature of Old Earth nobles as the nobility of a European duke has anything to do with the power and majesty of the Roman Republic.
Then what were the sections in GT:Nobles describing the history of Solomani and Vilani nobility?
In any event, that structure, “power flowing” out of the prime ruler, is the same set-up as England (and many others) had from the beginning, something about the “Divine Right of Kings”, or something like that.
I think I see where we differ. I believe there is a major link to the past in the nature and essence of modern Imperial nobility, you do not. Haarumpf!?! What do we do about that?
Hmm. I have this thought running around in my head. I don’t own M0, so I don’t know for sure, but I was a part of many and varied discussions on the TML last year about nobility and the Imperium in general, and blasted if I can’t remember reading
something about Cleon locating documents from early Sylea that backed a claim that he was a legitimate descendant (in some manner or other) of the Emperors of the Second Imperium, and therefore the logical choice as Emperor of the Third. Am I smoking crack?
Originally posted by rancke:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by RainOfSteel:
It has everything to do with it. My original criticism was that in GT:Nobles a ?turning point? was missed, an opportunity to lay down more consistent and reasonable canon over the top of some of the patchwork of what was done before. It is a legitimate criticism.
Certainly it is legitimate criticism. I just disagree with your reasoning. Which is, I hope, equally legitimate.
</font>[/QUOTE]Absolutely. As long as you stop altering my single and double quotes into question marks (see example above vs. original content shown immediately below), I’ll be happy.
Originally posted by RainOfSteel:
It has everything to do with it. My original criticism was that in GT:Nobles a “turning point” was missed, an opportunity to lay down more consistent and reasonable canon over the top of some of the patchwork of what was done before. It is a legitimate criticism.