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| J R R Tolkien The works of JRR Tolkien |
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| | #3 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: Romania
Posts: 145
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? Ok, here is what I had in mind: Quote:
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Ink-stained Wretch Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: California
Posts: 4,485
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? Well, it depends on what he meant by inevitable, doesn't it? Inevitable in an absolute cosmic sense -- or inevitable in serving the dramatic purposes of the author -- or inevitable in the sense that there had to be someone like Melkor rebelling or Tolkien would not feel that his mythology paralleled or reflected what (from his viewpoint as a devout Catholic) really did happen? |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Plastic Paddy Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: Netherlands
Posts: 2,715
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? I think I read somewhere that Melkor was jealous with Manwe, who was the Greatest of the Valar. Therefore Melkor tried to gain more power in the 'darker' ways. |
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| | #6 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: Romania
Posts: 145
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? Well, to my knowledge, Manwe became the greatest vala only after Melkor dispersed his power in his attempt to rule Arda; besides the previous quote, where he is reffered to as the "greatest artist", in the Ainulindale Eru says: Quote:
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Ohio
Posts: 194
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? By will. Given Tolkien's devotion to Catholicism, Melkor is almost perfect representation of Satan. Satan, at will, commanded a third of heaven against God, and well, you know what happened from there. |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| Thaphireth! Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Colorado
Posts: 1,693
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? In the letter referenced, inevitable to me means that someone will inevitably decide to rebel. I don't think that it was inevitable that the rebel was Melkor. Ulmo, Aule, Osse, and Sauron all showed their ability to buck the norm and rock the boat. Melkor chose to be the one to first rock the boat and then flat out rebel against Eru. If you want to talk predestination, providence, and God's perfect will versus His admissible will... look up R. C. Sproul and Reformed Theology. |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| 70% water... Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Derbyshire
Posts: 376
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? None of the above. ALL of the above. By 'Will' in combination with 'Nature' hence as given by 'Destiny'. If you choose to view Eru as the 'Ultimate' MIND, with all its facets that both Men and Elves posessed and of these facets came the Valar and their 'servants' (Maia)... Well, Melkor was the 'most-gifted' hence the greatest number of facets and the greatest strivings and yearnings and the easiest to seek his 'own' path, be it wrong or right... Theres one of my views of Melkor in his youth... |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Thaphireth! Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Colorado
Posts: 1,693
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? HG, I respectfully disagree. The number of facets of Eru is unfathomable, immeasurable, and incomprehesible to created creatures. Sure, I'd agree that Melkor understood more of Eru than the Ainur (except Manwe), the Quendi, the Atani, and all other creatures of Middle-earth. But the order of magnitude that Eru is above Melkor makes the differences between Melkor and Gollum negligible. Eru made Melkor for a good purpose and a good destiny. Melkor turned from his destiny and purpose to go his own way. Saying that Eru made Melkor to be evil is contrary to everything else we know about Eru. |
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| | #11 (permalink) |
| 70% water... Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Derbyshire
Posts: 376
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? I'll try to be brief. I will be brief because I would need to start quoting various parts of the Silmarillion to explain my meaning above, Boaz. First we would need to define evil. Then we'd need to know if there was ever any possibility that Eru Himself could ever appear to be evil... We know (something like) 'Melkor sprang from Eru's thought' as did each and every Valar and Maia, and they were not all the same. Akin to say one coming from the linguistic cortex (of that 'Ultimate' Mind) and another from the visual cortex or auditory part. These are like facets. Like areas of the physical brain. Spacially related. But not solely of that 'part'. They have to be fully functional in themselves. Or the reader loses all comprehension and the 'connexion' we can make with these 'angels' becomes smaller and they become more 'alien'... So I do hold that Melkor did, in a way, have the greatest of minds and all else. He just could not handle it. He saught beyond his means. He was too needy. He needed too much and thus went off track. You have to imagine the time scale involved here too. We're not talking six days. This being Melkor wandered and asked and wondered some more. He couldnt get what he wanted. Knowledge, power, control, answers. He wanted. Thats the beginnings of The Dark Road. To 'think' you have unsatiated needs. To not know your own 'mind' because its too big, too vast, too complex. He started on a dark road and thus spiralled down and down. How else can you explain this creation of Tolkien's? (Short answers above are not adequate, Im sorry to say. Its just not that simple. Melkor came OF Eru's Mind, thus it deserves more thought to 'work'...) |
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| | #12 (permalink) | |
| 70% water... Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Derbyshire
Posts: 376
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? Quote:
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| | #13 (permalink) | ||||
| Registered User Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: Romania
Posts: 145
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? Quote:
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| | #14 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Ohio
Posts: 194
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? Quote:
I know the source is not from the Silmarillion, but when I read that, it refers to Lucifer, and I think of Melkor too. As for why God allowed wickedness to fill the heart of Lucifer is just as hard to understand why God hardened Pharoah's heart in Exodus. His ways are higher than our ways of understanding. Eru can be a representation of God to some degree if we remember Tolkien's affinity towards Christianity. | |
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| | #15 (permalink) | |
| 70% water... Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Derbyshire
Posts: 376
| Re: Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate? I still have to say that for Melkor, in becoming Morgoth (as Feanor named him) it is by his own Will (purpose and intent) as well as his own Nature (the Being Eru created) that lead Morgoth down the path we know (from the collective works called the histories of Middle Earth) that he 'did' travel. Does that make sense? Have I got across the point that I think it is a combination of the three points and not any single point by itself? So, really, the original question "Melkor: evil by will, nature or fate?" has to be reconsidered and to quote from above: Quote:
For example in the extreme: someone hyper-sensitive could say that it is evil to use bleech down your sink! Screams of 'woah, sheesh, youre killing billions of microbes, dood, and they havent doen anything TO you' -ok, pre-emptive strike, but whats wrong with the example? A kind of killing. Yes, all right, thats this world. In Arda I guess Morgoth made those microbes. There was also the anguish Yavanna felt over her beloved trees when she found out that other beings would 'need' wood for building and so forth. Killing trees murder? All the Valar wished to defend their creations, defend and stand up for their own toils. So where exactly do you draw the line? What seems evil to one being isnt evil to another? Osse was rather merciless: I recall that Voronwe (sp?) was a sole survivor. Was what Osse did evil? This is how careful you have to be with definition. Its perspective. When and where and how and why did Melkor suddenly become a 'Lord Of Darkness'? That question is a reshaping of the original question. Then theres Satan, Lucifer, some firey cherub, or whoever... Well, Im in the Sci-fi/fantasy/author section here and I cant speak for whoever he or it is. So to go quoting from the Bible is more a question of 'how closely do you associate Ea with our Universe?'. Im not here to do that. I refrain since that gets into peoples real-life hearts, and avoids this typed discussion about Melkor. | |
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