Luke looked up from the breakfast table with a smlle as his uncle walked in "Ben! We weren't...
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9adam4 | 7 |
Thanks; I think I fixed it.
That does sound fascinating. I might give it a whirl someday when "Complete Detachment" is wrapped. I haven't gotten much into the Vader EU stuff, though, so it would need considerable research.To be honest, the SI I've always wanted to see is a Darth Vader SI preferably just as Anakin is mid jump in his fight with Obi-Wan, why? be just about the worst start for a SI, plus the challenge of working around a crippled chosen one, still very powerful but limited, but there are ways around that.
Astronavigation and repair droid R2D2 would not have called itself 'unhappy' with the plan.
Astronavigation and repair droid R2D2 would not have called itself 'nervous.'
How is it that "Complete Detachment" is more than 30 chapters in, and I'm just getting this stuff now on a mini-narrative thread?
Anyway, thanks.
What he needs to do is find a skilled enough Force Healer to keep him alive while he upgrades his cybernetics.To be honest, the SI I've always wanted to see is a Darth Vader SI preferably just as Anakin is mid jump in his fight with Obi-Wan, why? be just about the worst start for a SI, plus the challenge of working around a crippled chosen one, still very powerful but limited, but there are ways around that.
Nah, just clone himself using the cloning tech Kamino and/or emperor has access to. Preferably a braindead clone. Anyway, decant it, and have brain surgically moved over to the new body.What he needs to do is find a skilled enough Force Healer to keep him alive while he upgrades his cybernetics.
No. This is a separate narrative. Adam-wan wakes up on Tatooine in 7 BBY, with events back to canon (at least apparently).Is this the sequal to complete detachment? I haven't caught up in chapters yet and I'm worried that I've somehow spoiled it for myself.
Jumping backwards about two months, give or take. Filling in some things.
I assume it is the assumption of his maximum ability? He's claiming to be unable to lift 5 tons, because his previous maximum is considerably less than that. So, therefore he needs to improve his maximum. Because he is a living thing, he can grow in strength through exercise, and that's what they want him to do, I suppose? Or is it that his belief in his weakness is forcing him to be weak? Its unclear in the movies if Luke was always capable of lifting the Xwing, or if he needed to progressively improve to the point where he could succeed, like someone improving their maximum bench press over time.Jumping backwards about two months, give or take. Filling in some things.
Also hoping that someone will give a shot at what Luke is "supposed to say," here.
Needs a threadmark
The specific limits of the Force were always kind of nebulous, doubly so if you start including high end EU material. My own interpretation was that Luke was too focused on the physical, the idea of mass and viscosity being meaningful when nothing with a will was opposing the attempt and the Force deals more in concepts and the way they connect things. A starfighter's nature and purpose is connected to being weightless and unrestricted by the ground, so if anything it should be easier to lift than a rock, trivial even. If you're looking at those high-end feats in secondary material, the same could be said of whatsisname catching a crashing star destroyer in The Force Unleashed.Its unclear in the movies if Luke was always capable of lifting the Xwing, or if he needed to progressively improve to the point where he could succeed, like someone improving their maximum bench press over time.
That's reasonable, I just wasn't sure if that was where the Author was headed. In my opinion, it varies based on interpretation. There's no "right" answer for the Force. It could be conceptual, or it could be physical. The idea of midichlorians from the prequels would support a more physical approach. How strong you are is based on training and natural potential, again, like a weightlifters maximum. By comparison, much of the Original Trilogy purposefully keeps things like hard limits nebulous, for the explicit purpose of limit breaks on force powers. In Empire Strikes back, Luke can only lift the X-Wing when he needs it most to go save his friends. He stops second guessing himself and just does it because he believes he has to. He didn't visibly progress in maximum lift before that point, as far as we are shown. Whether you interpret that to mean he was steadily making progress offscreen during training or if he had a conceptual breakthrough is really down to personal interpretation, and different people endorse different views. I suspect that Lucas was trying to put physical limits on the force in the prequel trilogy, but so many people hate them that I can't assume that everyone will agree with what is ostensibly a canon interpretation of those movies.The specific limits of the Force were always kind of nebulous, doubly so if you start including high end EU material. My own interpretation was that Luke was too focused on the physical, the idea of mass and viscosity being meaningful when nothing with a will was opposing the attempt and the Force deals more in concepts and the way they connect things. A starfighter's nature and purpose is connected to being weightless and unrestricted by the ground, so if anything it should be easier to lift than a rock, trivial even. If you're looking at those high-end feats in secondary material, the same could be said of whatsisname catching a crashing star destroyer in The Force Unleashed.
e: after all, the reason he failed was that he couldn't believe it was possible. That explicitly, only slightly indirectly states that he could have succeeded if he did believe it.
Well to me the obvious line from just the wording to me is that you don't use thrust to lift things with the Force. The counter question then is what is the strain coming from? Why is Yoda tired after lifting the X-Wing if the only limit is what you believe you can lift? If you took some random fresh Force sensitive kid and said they can easily blow up the sun, can they? Do you just need to fool them into thinking they did it once before they can do it for real?Also hoping that someone will give a shot at what Luke is "supposed to say," here.
To the contrary, these are exactly the sort of questions that I would want my Padawan asking.Well to me the obvious line from just the wording to me is that you don't use thrust to lift things with the Force. The counter question then is what is the strain coming from? Why is Yoda tired after lifting the X-Wing if the only limit is what you believe you can lift? If you took some random fresh Force sensitive kid and said they can easily blow up the sun, can they? Do you just need to fool them into thinking they did it once before they can do it for real?
I would be an awful Padawan. The worst.
I believe he has been doing it for more than 40x as long, not 10."I've been communing with the Force for fifty years now. Master Yoda has been doing it for ten times that long. He understands the Cosmos in a way I never will."
Is this from the Legends spin off? You are using Cosmic Force how Living Force was used in the older series (aka original trilogy).He'll leave the Living Force soon, although he has trained his consciousness to persist in the Cosmic Force