Here is another thing that the Tiering System does: It accepts the existence of characters with
Reality-Fiction Transcendence, which is to say, characters that see things as being literally fictional to them, and as such infinitely below themselves. To quote the page:
Reality-Fiction Transcendence is a state where a being is qualitatively superior to another world, as a result of seeing the world as fiction and thus being more 'real' than said world. Due to this, the character will be treated as completely superior to the cosmology it transcends, and all characters limited to it, and will thus be granted a higher tier.
For example, if a character were to view an entire space-time continuum as fiction, they would be superior to such an extent that finite, or even basic infinite, differences in power cannot overcome their superiority. Thus, they would be treated as more than infinitely greater, such as in this case Low 1-C. The gap between the higher world and the lower world would be strictly one of quality, not quantity.
In order to qualify they must view the world as a some actual form of 'fiction', i.e. to them what happens in the fiction is not real and of no physical consequence to their being and also otherwise is of no greater consequence to their being than an actual fictional character could reasonably be to a real life human. However, the medium in which they view the world as fiction generally does not matter, as it being fiction is enough for a Reality-Fiction Transcendence to be considered.
The current System, of course, also equates that to the addition of one more dimension, for the same principle as above: "It is a valid lowball for the concept, and so in lieu of more evidence, we go with the lowball."
Yeah, so, It's not really a valid lowball here, either: Reality-Fiction Transcendence essentially operates on the idea that the lower plane is not real to you, and thus utterly incapable of harming you on account of its unreality (Which also means that, as said on the page, the gap between the two is "strictly one of quality, not quantity").
Equating this to a dimensional jump is erroneous because, ultimately, an object of n dimensions and an object of n+1 dimensions are equally real. An object of finite dimensions and an object of infinite dimensions are equally real, too. An object of infinite dimensions and an object of
uncountably infinite dimensions are, in fact, also equally real.
They're ontologically not on different levels at all, and as such being ontologically above even a single one of those does, in fact, mean you are above them all. Consider the reverse case: A cube, a square, a line and a point are all equally real. Thus being on a lower ontological level than any single one of them likewise means you're
beneath them all.
Now, why exactly do I say that they're "equally real," or "ontologically in the same level"? Well, because there's a continuity between them; they're all composed of each other. A line is composed of points, a square is composed of lines, a cube is composed of squares.
Spacetime is composed of 3-D cross-sections, each of which is one instant of the universe. Even infinite-dimensional space is really just the sum of all spaces of dimension
n where n is any natural number.
And you can, of course, see this by adding together very large numbers of universes: If you had uncountably infinite 4-D universes, you'd be able to fill a 5-D volume (You'd have a Low 1-C multiverse). If you had an inaccessible cardinal's worth of universes, you'd be able to fill a space with an inaccessible cardinal's worth of dimensions (You'd have a High 1-A multiverse). And so on.
Bottom line is: All those spaces, no matter how impressively large in dimensionality they may be, still see smaller things as existent parts of themselves, regardless of how
minuscule those parts are. A 3-D universe would still be material in 4-D space, if only minutely so, and the same applies to all higher dimensionalities. Contrast that, then, with a Reality-Fiction Transcendence: Reality is not the sum of a bunch of fictional things, nor can it be expressed as such. To go from fiction to reality is a total discrete jump that doesn't have the element of continuity described above at all. It's not an extension of physical reality, as dimensional expansions are, but something altogether above it.
This
might be tempting to associate with a Finite vs Infinity relation, where infinity can't be gotten from summing up finite things, but it's not at all the same: An infinite thing
can be gotten if you have an infinite amount of finite things. So even an infinite thing is, nevertheless, a composite of things that individually are smaller than itself. Even infinite sets still have finite subsets. Reality has no fictional portion of itself, though.
And that's something you clearly see in a lot of cases of Reality-Fiction Transcendence: Most of the time, the "higher world" in question is a realm of existence that's 3-D from its own point of view. while the lower fictional plane has fully-fledged higher-dimensional objects like spacetimes and whatnot. Makes very little sense to say, then, that there's any continuity between the two worlds in the manner described above. In that case, the two layers have separate sets of dimensions, and thus can't really be related by dimensional gaps at all.
In fact, given the above detail (That something a R>F layer
below reality would in fact have to be below even 0-D things), a lower R>F layer would be better likened to
the empty set (∅), as in mathematics, it is indeed the only thing you can say is "less" than a 0-D point.
And as it turns out,
you can't multiply the empty set by something to get a non-empty set. If you try to do ∅ x κ where κ is any non-0 cardinal whatsoever (Finite, infinite, uncountably infinite. You name it), your result will always be ∅ itself.
As such, I maintain that Reality-Fiction Transcendence should likewise be above any and all dimensional differences. It, too, will be part of the new
1-A tiers being proposed here, which as mentioned before will be largely for superiorities that are strictly "qualitative," rather than quantitative.
Now, full disclosure: A misunderstanding arose earlier that seemed to suggest I want to rate Reality-Fiction Transcendence based on "How it is in real life." That is not true. In fact, I would say that such a thing doesn't really exist (Because R>F Transcendence does not exist IRL. The fictional works we make are not "lower worlds")
That said: A question that arose before is with regards to how much validity is there in equating different types of qualitative superiority. For example, there seems to be no obvious connection between Beyond-Dimensional Existence and R>F Transcendence, so isn't equating the two as much of an error as equating either of those two to dimensional differences?
The answer to that is: As of recently, Reality-Fiction Transcendences and Beyond-Dimensional Existences are, strictly speaking, not being equated at all.
As explained here, the latter finds its first stop in the proposed Tier
Low 1-A. Reality-Fiction Transcendences necessarily include BDE, but BDE alone is not a sufficient justification for equality to a R>F Transcendence.
(Most verses with BDE realms will
accidentally define them in ways that make it so they're equal to R>F realms, anyway, but conceptually, the above is still true)
This applies upwards, as well. For instance, I proposed a
High 1-A tier for superiorities that are fundamentally above qualitative transcendences, just like those are fundamentally above quantitative gaps. So the proposals do, in fact, include several mechanisms to prevent (Or at the very least minimize) the same false equivalences done by the current Tiering System.
Another objection given to the above is whether all cases of Reality-Fiction Transcendence actually meet the above requirements. Essentially arguing that what I am outlining above is, in fact, a very high-end interpretation of the concept and not at all what should be defaulted to. This has some merit but ultimately is flawed at the core, as well, namely because:
1. The Reality-Fiction Transcendence page already outlines it as something completely separate from quantitative gaps ("
The gap between the higher world and the lower world would be strictly one of quality, not quantity."), which dimensions are included in, and so quantitative interpretations of Reality-Fiction Transcendence are, in fact, simply not Reality-Fiction Transcendence, even if they look the same.
2. I am not arbitrarily baking "Is above all possible dimensional differences" into the definition of Reality-Fiction Transcendence, in the above arguments. I am outlining a set of properties and then
concluding that from these properties. Premise and conclusion are not to be conflated here.
But... with that said, I've come to realize that people indeed take Reality-Fiction Transcendence far, far more lightly than I do, presumably because the association with something as meager as a dimensional jump has led them to become unconcerned with what the concept of it entails.
Before writing this summary, I took the time to do some digging and found that some characters are currently accepted as holding a Reality-Fiction Transcendence over a reality due to some pieces of evidence that are rather underwhelming.
These profiles, for instance, treat purely visual depictions of characters
viewing reality as TV channels, or
a film,
as gameboards, as evidence of R>F.
As I've said before, I more or less completely reject the usage of such things as primary evidence for a Reality-Fiction Transcendence. Those would be relegated to being supplementary evidence, at best, but alone would never suffice. And as has already been said, I likewise have very little sympathy for gag feats and the like.
As for
what would qualify, a list of questions one should ask themself is:
- Does the higher world actually see the lower world as something immaterial, and insubstantial? Is there any continuity between it and the lower world, as there is with higher and lower-dimensional spaces, or even with finite and infinite things? Can there be?
- Is this actually being depicted as a matter of power, or, more precisely, something analogous to "size"?
- Can lesser existences unexplainedly interact or potentially interact with the higher existences, on their own, without any external (Or otherwise anomalous) assistance at play?
The first one finds itself more easily apparent in the more "mystical" or "metaphysical" instances of R>F Transcendence. For example, in cosmologies where the universe is defined as being illusory, and there is a "more real" reality existing above it.
Chronicles of Narnia is a good example of a such thing (Drawing from the concept of the Platonic Cave), and so is
this scene from Persona 2: Eternal Punishment.
Here you see that, by "illusion," what's needed is not something like the Matrix, which is really just a virtual space created by manipulations ultimately rooted in physical things (Brain electricity and etc, meaning the illusion is in fact just as "real" as the world behind it). What's needed is the world, itself, being devoid of substance (Existence) to a higher reality, even if it nevertheless has some mode of existence of its own.
For an illustrative example of this, take
this scene from Mike Carey's The Unwritten as a reference point, where the Leviathan is described as "too real" and "too solid" compared to the world below it. Another way to think of it is to picture the following: A character with Nonexistent Physiology, except their nonexistence is depicted as making them intrinsically
inferior to things that exist. That's how a character with a R>F Transcendence ought to see things below themselves.
For more ordinary forms of R>F, this would in turn be inferred by asking yourself yet another question: Is this higher world, quite literally, just a "real world"? Are those characters just people? Authors and readers and consumers of media? Are they
not just cosmic entities being non-literally portrayed as such? An example of a verse where the answer to this is "Yes" would be, again,
The Unwritten, and the very
image of the Reality-Fiction Transcendence article should give one a pretty good initial idea of what's expected from this type of R>F. Though, mind you: You can be simultaneously a literal author and a genuine cosmic entity. These two are not mutually exclusive deals at all.
This could be asked of beings who dream realities into existence, too. For example, one such character that would most certainly never qualify for a genuine Reality-Fiction Transcendence is the
One Being from Mortal Kombat, who is stated to
create reality with its dreams, and yet also
is reality: The realms composing the universe are splintered fragments of it. Suggesting that its dreaming stuff is no Reality-Fiction Transcendence at all, and in fact just a feat of
Subjective Reality.
The second one is straightforward, and is only really a factor in the second forms of R>F described above: Is the "real world" really being depicted as something transcendentally powerful, compared to the fictional reality? A good example of what I mean by this would be
this scene from Final Crisis: Superman Beyond, where Superman reaches out to try and grasp what is implied to be the reader of the comic, and describes it as "something immense beyond understanding." The
Luminous Being from Dungeons and Dragons would be yet another instance of this.
In contrast,
there can be characters who are depicted as literal authors and so on, but whose exact relationship with the fictional world is... vague, at best. In many such cases, you could very well interpret them as simply living externally to these worlds, and as having control over them, not involving total ontological transcendence at all. In which case, they'd be similar to the example of the One Being given above, simply swap dreams with books or whatever you like.
The third one is just as important as the above two, and in most cases will probably be what makes or breaks whether your R>F Transcendence is 1-A or not: Are beings from the fictional reality interacting with the "real world" despite having no business doing that? As an example: In
Bravely Default, the real world is an actual important plot-point, referred to as the "Celestial Realm" where the gods live. It appears to be very much a literal real world, so much so that, at the end of the game, the 3DS camera turns on and projects the player's face over the background as a showcase of the Celestial Realm. Furthermore,
the characters are referred to as lesser beings compared to the Celestials, who as said before, are also "gods" to them.
So, that seems to have a good case for a Reality-Fiction Transcendence, right? No, not really, because a plot-point in the game is also that the villain, Ouroboros, hatched a scheme to link together a bunch of alternate universes, in the hopes of consuming them and, in doing so, increase his power enough to breach into the Celestial Realm. That implies continuity between the higher world and the lower one in the sense described above, which is, of course, unacceptable. Another example would be
this, which, of course, dispenses all explanation.
Of course, given the above-mentioned factors, such things would have to be very definitely explained in a revised version of the Reality-Fiction Transcendence page. As has been said: Not everything that
looks like R>F is R>F in a genuine sense (Including many things we currently accept as sufficing for it), and so I would very much like to note that down.