Ajaxandriel wrote: »I read that in a shelf, it's new chapter
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Lore:Cries_from_Empty_Mouths
Interestingly enough, it's seems they made the Lefthanded Elves a kind of "flat-earth atheists" of Aurbis
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/FlatEarthAtheist
How are they atheist? The only fact we get from that text is that they don't believe in an afterlife. Beliefs where one or several god figures that created the planet exist, but there's neither an afterlife nor reincarnation for the mortals, do exist.
WhiteCoatSyndrome wrote: »Ajaxandriel wrote: »I read that in a shelf, it's new chapter
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Lore:Cries_from_Empty_Mouths
Interestingly enough, it's seems they made the Lefthanded Elves a kind of "flat-earth atheists" of Aurbis
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/FlatEarthAtheist
I considered the possibility that the various afterlives didn’t use to exist, and consistent belief in them brought them into being, but the Yokudan afterlife specifically has been spelled out as a way to endure the kalpha cycle, and I’m pretty sure that predates the Sinestral mer. So there would definitely be afterlives in existence when the author of that book is questioning their existence.
The mer in general don’t seem to be big on afterlives: the Altmer and Dunmer have their ancestors’ spirits hanging out in their tombs, and the Bosmer’s Ouze is right in Valenwood. Presumably some of them go off to the Aedic afterlives but they don’t seem to have a racial default the way the Nords (Sovngarde), Khajiit (Sands Behind the Stars), Redguards (Far Shores), and Argonians (Hist) do.
A text doesn't have to be a factual account, it could also be written to declare superiority of one group or another or even to morally destabilize an enemy, just to name a few examples.
And then, the translator even mentions having problems translating the text and having used the Yokudan language as a base.
Ajaxandriel wrote: »I mean the trope (look at the link above) not literally having no gods - this we have no clue about. The matter of gods or not isn't in the text.
Ajaxandriel wrote: »There obviously is an afterlife in Aurbis (or is there?) as we witness many spirits and so on.
Yet they don't believe in it.
I agree, it's not the name i'd have given! XDThen the trope has a stupid name because a-theism literally means "without god(s)"
To quote from the new lorebook:
"While many stages of death exist, in the final after there is nothing."
These spririts (or states of existance) could be considered a stage between life and the "final nothing" of the Sinistral's religion.