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I'm kinda surprised this doesn't exist yet. Might as well make this before I run off for a bit.
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In the movie, they're a hybrid of men and goblin-men. According to Tolkien Gateway, it's a reference to an early description from Tolkien, where orcs "worm their way out of the ground like maggots".Is there any explanation in the first lotr movie how uruks are made? Like somekind of ooze. What was that?
Interesting.We have a Low 1-C cosmology.
A 2-A kinda multiverse is a mentioned in Tolkien's Letters, but it's less a multiverse, and more Tolkien considering every story to be its own world (kinda) that exists on the same level). Authors are sub-creators that exist above that to the point of R>F and the Ainur are also called sub-creators. Eru is above them all as the Omnipotent creator (with Tolkien putting himself below Eru, who he equates to God. Mind you, Tolkien is not considered a genuine character in the verse, he only matters for cosmology).
If you ignore that, Eru is R>F for holding the entire Low 2-C framework of Eä as mere thought, with the Ainur in their origin scaling to him for being seen as genuine and mighty beings by him (and for shaking his entire realm, which would be Low 1-C. There's a even a moment where his level of existence is called the "Primary Reality" vs the LOTR as a "Secondary Reality").
There is, but I'll need to check both its usability (it's in Morgoth's Ring, and only the most recent parts of that can be used. Notes written by Tolkien just a bit before his death), and the context, as it may have referred to literal planets.Interesting.
Isn't there one statement of there being multiple 'worlds' or something?
So the "secondary reality" can potentially be 2-C.
I see.There is, but I'll need to check both its usability (it's in Morgoth's Ring, and only the most recent parts of that can be used. Notes written by Tolkien just a bit before his death), and the context, as it may have referred to literal planets.
Yep, but he was also back to his original might then (within Eä) so he'd be back to tier 3 if the Dagor Dagorath wasn't abandoned.Didn't melkor destroy a sun in some unused material?
Was that a normal sized sun he destroyed?Yep, but he was also back to his original might then (within Eä) so he'd be back to tier 3 if the Dagor Dagorath wasn't abandoned.
Well he would destroy the sun and moon and their respective guardians.Was that a normal sized sun he destroyed?
Also, i think valar and maiar are missing alot of abilities.
Isn't there like multiple timeless halls?The Void exists outside the Timeless Halls, but it isn't presented as something higher than it. Melkor explores it just fine on his own. References to voids can also mean space at times, so there's that to consider.
There's only one solid Low 1-C realm from what I've explored. The "primary reality" of Eru, aka the Timeless Halls. If you include the weirder parts of the cosmology you get from adding Tolkien's views on God and sub-creation, I suppose there may be two (depending on whether "God" is considered to live in the same place that authors/sub-creators are).
Yes. I was using the Halls of Mandos as a grammatic example.The Halls of Mandos are nothing more than Mandos' personal realm where spirits wait after death. The Timeless Halls are the truly ascendant realm of Illuvatar and are far above the Halls of Mandos.
Tolkien writes about God and Eru in a way that really correlates the two. His letters pretty much makes it clear that he views Eru as God in the story, rather than just a wholly fictional representation. It's one of the those Christian interpretations of writing where every act of creation, or rather sub-creation (like writing) acts as a tribute to God's overall creation. Each story is a fictional universe in and of itself.Personally I thought Tolkien saying that about there being "multiple stories being tribute to Eru" was just a poetic way of saying we can all interpret God differently but I can see why one would interpret it the multiverse way.
Experiment mentioned they would do it but I'm not sure if they still are.Whatever happened to the Ossë calc?
Just curious. On this site, who is accepted as scaling to First and Second-Age Sauron?
Not sure. I only cover the book canon. I imagine we just don't have the size of Mordor in the movie, or someone hasn't calc'd it yet.Gotcha. As far as the movie version of Sauron goes, do we know why holding all of Mordor together is only rated as a supporting feat for 7-B?
Personally speaking, I only advocated for the Valar as solidly universal, with Eönwë + Ilmarë as being at most universal.That's why I'm iffy on Ainur on Arda still being universal, First age heroes can give em a good scrap.
Personally speaking, I only advocated for the Valar as solidly universal, with Eönwë + Ilmarë as being at most universal.
The Valar have no statements of being weakened in the First and early Second Ages (and even statements of being weakened make it iffy on whether it's due to Eru's laws or actual weakening) while the Greater Maiar are repeatedly said to be comparable to the Valar.
But the thing is, it's hard to discern who the Greater Maiar are beyond those two (who luckily happen to have no anti-feats or scaling issues), so I'm iffy on having other Maiar up there, besides maybe Ossë and Sauron (but he causes issues as we know).
I'll bring the topic up again in revisions once we have the Ossë and Uinen calc done.
That's fair. Although Morgoth kept getting weaker over the entire Silmarillion, so it's not an issue that Eönwë can go from around Morgoth's tier to way above him.I kinda like the idea of using the Greater Maia tier such as Eönwë making them only Universal, but still not too clean. Weakened Morgoth is still implied to be the same tier as the strongest Maia and even when he fought Fingolfin was still the strongest Vala. I actually prefer the published Silmarillion in this regard since Morgoth just gets clapped by Eönwë while if we use the idea he and Eönwë had a close fight the tiering becomed very messy I think.
Yeah, that's the thing I was thinking of. There was also something about the past becoming more concrete somehow making them less able to change the future, as Eru does... stuff.There is that Tolkien statement that says once the World is taken shape they become iirc less involved, I suppose that's the best justification. They hold way more back once Reality becomes established to be akin to RL.
The Sun and Moon are quite interesting. Their exact size in never 100% mentioned per say, and the whole flat earth cosmology makes it so them "sinking" below the ocean could be taken as them going under the flat earth and then rising on the other side, rather than going through the ocean. Also explains why the sun doesn't evaporate the ocean when it does so.In the Published Silmarillion the Sun and Moon are tiny and the Sun can actually sink in the ocean, as for the Round earth cosmology I've read the Arien/Morgoth story and in it she is the Guardiam of the Sun and iirc Morgoth wanted her to "give up" her guardianship of the Sun to him. She said no and after he assaulted her, the Suna corruption made the earths orbit no longer perfect and all that. So that something to look into
They are on vessels, but the specific type of vessel isn't specified too well. They're very likely not boats though, as the moon is said to he held on an "island" of unknown size.It's possible the flat earth is massive, the Outer seas that encircle the landmasses are huge, but not much evidence to go by from that. The Sun and Moon are also on ships made by the Elvesz so I think that may debunk any potential size increases.