Sure you can say that, to Earwa and its ignorant inhabitants, that there is no distinction of physical reality and 'metaphysics' (soul, sorcery, gods, etc.)
No, I'm saying the distinction flat-out makes no sense when talking about Earwa. (There is a
related distinction that
does make sense: that between the World as the God wills it and that alternative version of reality created by sorcery and hence bearing the Mark.)
I obviously didn't explain my point very well, because the problem isn't merely that we're looking at things differently to how Earwans would, but that we're looking at things differently from how Earwa
is. The lack of distinction between the physical and the metaphysical is not due to
ignorance on the Earwans' part.
People here appear to be drawing the dividing line between what would be real in our world and what would be impossible in our world, ignoring the fact that both are equally 'real' in Earwa. That makes no sense to me. It feels just the same as when people try to explain things like the owlbear from
D&D in terms of evolution by natural selection, or try to work out the chemical composition of wildfire from
aSoIaF. If an alchemist from our own Europe's mediaeval period tells us something is 'magic', we
know he's wrong; when Hallyne the Pyromancer says the same thing, we've no logical reason to doubt him and
assuming he is wrong because of how stuff works in our world is a logical error.
We have the ability to see the whole picture as it exists within Earwa.
That statement seems completely at odds with how Bakker writes. I don't think we
ever see "the whole picture". I think filling in the 'gaps' with how things would be in
our world is a mistake.
our privileged perspective and using it to figure out what is really happening in Earwa.
I can't agree that we have a "privileged perspective". I think, if anything, we readers know far,
far less about how Earwa works than its inhabitants do.
Afterall, there would be almost nothing left to talk about if everyone here had that view.
Obviously I disagree with this, otherwise I'd not be here.
I can grok this, Duskweaver - but clearly the World is mundane in some senses (read: comparable to our flerwed anachronist projections).
As I pointed out above, the more
meaningful distinction appears to be between the World as the God wills it (or originally created it) and that which bruises the Onta. If you want to use the word 'mundane', I would suggest using it for the former. But anarcane ground is no less 'metaphysical' than anywhere else in Earwa. Does that make sense?
Everyone might have a connection the Outside but not everyone is affected in life by that connection, right?
To say someone is "unaffected in life" by their own soul seems nonsensical to me.
and we know from the TUC Ch. 1 Excerpt that the division is tricky - clearly some aspects of cognition don't in fact carry over to your experience of soul later, marking an uneasy distinction between mind and soul again).
Hmm... I'm going to have to reread.
Seems like there are implications here for the damnation or otherwise of amnesiac Nonmen?
Speaking of which, I've had the strange thought bouncing around in my head lately that the amnesia of the Erratics might have originally been
intentional, devised as a method of "hiding their Voices".
Anyway, I think it'd be helpful if people defined their terms (my inner Confucian is rearing its head again

). What
exactly do you guys mean when you say 'mundane', 'psychological', 'soul', 'mind', 'metaphysical', etc. in the context of discussing how Earwa works.