khajiitNPC wrote: »Personally I think it cuts deeper than that. Combined with the message Schick left us it confirms the lore is in our marrow and solidified ‘open source mythology’. Which I know the lore purists cringe at it. But I guess the bigger question is do they even grasp what the 36 Sermons are about?
Ajaxandriel wrote: »khajiitNPC wrote: »Personally I think it cuts deeper than that. Combined with the message Schick left us it confirms the lore is in our marrow and solidified ‘open source mythology’. Which I know the lore purists cringe at it. But I guess the bigger question is do they even grasp what the 36 Sermons are about?
Do you want to grasp what the 36 Sermons are about? I'm not sure. As a believer of C0da, you may be disappointed.
Let me quote Plato (The Republic)
"Now let me ask you another question: Which is the art of painting designed to be _ an imitation of things as they are, or as they appear - of appearance or of reality?
- Of appearance.
- Then the imitator, I said, is a long way off the truth, and can do all things because he lightly touches on a small part of them, and that part an image. For example: A painter will paint a cobbler, carpenter, or any other artist, though
he knows nothing of their arts; and, if he is a good artist, he may deceive children or simple persons, when he shows them his picture of a carpenter from a distance, and they will fancy that they are looking at a real carpenter."
Like a painter painting a carpenter without being a carpenter, Kirkbride depicted the story of a god, but he was only a good artist, giving the illusion that his character Vivec is truly a god who has something to teach to you about his reality, and you, you were the children who believed him.
This is what the whole 36 (or 37) sermons are about. An illusion into the illusion, to tell an in-universe religious belief.
Yes also: a bunch of raw nonsense, vaguely threaded around a metaphoric autobiography of Vivec roleplayed by Kirkbride - with one exercice of thought: what would I write as my own legend if I'd got the status of a god?
I'm not saying it's bad, I'm not saying it's not interesting, I'm just saying it is a tiny small part into the universe and certainly not the key to understand its possible truth.
If you think otherwise, you're just trapped into the deceit, trapped into the illusion of Vivec (the Sermons) which is into the illusion of the universe itself (TES). Here, there's a difference between a conscious player who will pretend to roleplay a dunmeri believer of Vivec, as a character, and a real-life fanboy who will believe Vivec teachings in his own immersion of Elder Scrolls, and then probably follow and fall into c0da's universe.
Next, canon and lore are another matter. Headcanon and fanon concepts already existed for all popular fictions long before c0da or TES even existed.
But still.
I imagine c0da can exist - just like the Sermons do exist - into the Elder Scrolls universe, for example, as a series of "in-universe science-fiction writings". I have no problem with this, since it's a fiction into the fiction - two "narrative" levels, so the Fourth Wall is not in danger, the consistency of the fictional world still stands.
So ... references to such in-universe fictions, myths and beliefs? Sure it can happen.
I like how Schick winked at this by mocking the KINMUNE story as an in-universe conspiracy theory told by a redguard NPC.
About the URL adress coded into the 37th sermon? It's a wink - not even a nod.
Unless you consider the World Wide Web IRL and the fourth wall to be canon* in-universe, it make absolutely no sense to consider it as part of the canon.
((*) One can consider this seriously though, since for an in-universe character point of view, our player real life is metaphysics.)
Amdar_Godkiller wrote: »The entire reason I've supported the Daggerfall Covenant is based on the fact that the thot box known as Queen Ayrenn is an AI impostor who must be destroyed at all costs, so naturally I love the fact that it's referenced and is acknowledged as canon.
khajiitNPC wrote: »I always begin with Aurbis which in the old language means arena then go from there. The scrolls are constantly changing. We go blind trying to pin down the point from egg to chrysalis to moth.
The moth priests know it too. Moths leave a powdery scale on everything. The same with dragons. There is no time and all possibilities exist along side those that actually exist. Momentary solidification of time.
Waking up is so hard when the dancers are on the tower. The serpent is a circle. ESO’s insignia is an ouroboric depiction of each alliance devouring and regurgitating it’s self.
A ceaseless battle. Yeah fictional worlds, maybe, but c0da is endgame stuff. I’m fine with those who clutch their holy canon because they need a narrator to give them substance. My character is the only one that exists. Solipsistic meandering in the thread of a forum.
Wasn’t Plato warning about mimesis tho?
khajiitNPC wrote: »Not bait. I think there is a very specific reason this appears in the lore.
I get people will say Easter egg or nod to Kirkbride because they believe Occam’s razor is the best scalpel.
Personally I think it cuts deeper than that. Combined with the message Schick left us it confirms the lore is in our marrow and solidified ‘open source mythology’. Which I know the lore purists cringe at it. But I guess the bigger question is do they even grasp what the 36 Sermons are about?
I have a friend who has a waifu in his head canon. I accepted it. I didn’t like it because her name was waifu. But I knew, c0da makes it canon.
I wonder why it’s so hard to accept. Especially in ESO where we have multiple Vestiges, the last quest of the psijic skill line, different instances, choices for our “character”. So many of the lore purists try so hard to work contrary to what’s going on. Dragonbreaks aren’t just convenient ways to retcon. CHIM is real!
But even the simplest thing as a different instant will be glossed over as game mechanic. It’s like...the truth is just beating them over the head with it, and they are like but...but...the franchise.
C0da doesn't make anything canon though. It goes against the very purpose of the word ''canon''.
Your argument that ''everyone plays differently, thus everyone's playstyle is canon'' is nice, but not how it works. How your character plays is your choice, your ''story'' is fanon, just as the story of my Vestige, or that of any other player in the game.
PrayingSeraph wrote: »khajiitNPC wrote: »I always begin with Aurbis which in the old language means arena then go from there. The scrolls are constantly changing. We go blind trying to pin down the point from egg to chrysalis to moth.
The moth priests know it too. Moths leave a powdery scale on everything. The same with dragons. There is no time and all possibilities exist along side those that actually exist. Momentary solidification of time.
Waking up is so hard when the dancers are on the tower. The serpent is a circle. ESO’s insignia is an ouroboric depiction of each alliance devouring and regurgitating it’s self.
A ceaseless battle. Yeah fictional worlds, maybe, but c0da is endgame stuff. I’m fine with those who clutch their holy canon because they need a narrator to give them substance. My character is the only one that exists. Solipsistic meandering in the thread of a forum.
Wasn’t Plato warning about mimesis tho?
...what?
khajiitNPC wrote: »I always begin with Aurbis which in the old language means arena then go from there. The scrolls are constantly changing. We go blind trying to pin down the point from egg to chrysalis to moth.
The moth priests know it too. Moths leave a powdery scale on everything. The same with dragons. There is no time and all possibilities exist along side those that actually exist. Momentary solidification of time.
Waking up is so hard when the dancers are on the tower. The serpent is a circle. ESO’s insignia is an ouroboric depiction of each alliance devouring and regurgitating it’s self.
A ceaseless battle. Yeah fictional worlds, maybe, but c0da is endgame stuff. I’m fine with those who clutch their holy canon because they need a narrator to give them substance. My character is the only one that exists. Solipsistic meandering in the thread of a forum.
Wasn’t Plato warning about mimesis tho?
khajiitNPC wrote: »@VaranisArano Lore proper definitely exists, I too believe that certain events are unchangable. My musing on the url, is why? And I know it’s definitely a nod or wink or Easteregg or whatever. But what a wink! The king of worms would smile at such a can being open.
My arguement isn’t so much that canon is irrelevant. Mine is hinged on the intention of Schick including such a divisive bit to the community, knowing full well the implications of directing users to that cite. I’m willing to accept it as nothing more than a nod.
But I still believe this is an endorsement and invitation for people to actively create their lore.
Would anyone happen to know when the Moth Priests and the Reading of the Scrolls first appeared in the Lore... or who wrote of them?
Would anyone happen to know when the Moth Priests and the Reading of the Scrolls first appeared in the Lore... or who wrote of them?
@wenchmore420b14_ESO
Came across this early writer of Elder Scrolls as well. I found the whole podcast interesting, little insights into this games development and where inspirations first came from for this and how this has continued - at about 14:36 into the podcast he also talks about how the name Elder Scrolls came to be.
https://audioboom.com/posts/7102926-everyone-is-a-hero-of-their-own-story-with-vijay-lakshman
I like too what was written about the Elder Scrolls themselves, though I am not sure who wrote this - that they are ever changing in their numbers and why this is to me is because of the input/actions/coda:) of the player base having the ability to add/change the scrolls themselves.
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Lore:Elder_Scrolls