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Originally Posted by
Radhruin_EU
That's a generalised argument which doesn't account for the difference between what the Three Rings were said to be for and your notion that the Red Ring could be used to set things on fire. The implied purposes don't suggest any destructive use at all, still less such the powerful one that Gandalf displays.
I call this a failure of imagination on your part. It shouldn't be surprising that the Elves might make something that didn't have any warlike use at all. As Sauron had nothing to do with the Three Rings, their purpose was 'pure', unsullied by any thinking of his. We're told what Celebrimbor's intent was (I've mentioned it often enough) and there's not even the least hint of any destructive power - not even one with a notionally peaceful use which Gandalf might be abusing. Shall I run through the list again?
- gaining knowledge: nope, nothing to do with setting things on fire
- making: creative, not destructive
- healing: nope, nothing there to do with setting stuff on fire
- preservation: the very opposite of destruction
Prove it could not be used in a destructive fashion. Conclusively. Not supposition based on your interpretations.
Making sounds creative, but making FIRE is not necessarily creative. The rest can all be used to facilitate destructive actions.
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Taken together with what Elrond says, it's indicative. We also know that during the siege of Minas Tirith, wherever Gandalf went people found fresh hope and courage, for a time - only to have it fade when he moved on. That chimes with what Cirdan said when he gave Gandalf that ring.
Indicative is not conclusive. The fresh hope could have been simply because a well known great leader was in their midst. You are correct, though, that it might also have been the ring. We don't know either way.
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Now, you seem to think I should give your opinion equal weight just because it's your opinion, despite the lack of evidence to back it up. Sorry, no: you've simply leapt to a conclusion. It's founded on your mistaken notion that Maiar weren't really all that powerful, which clashes with what we see of them in the books. We're told the Istari had 'many powers of mind and hand'; we're also told that they were under orders to keep their powers well hidden, and not to seek the rule the wills of others by open displays of power. You've gone and mistaken appearance for actuality: they don't appear all that powerful, so you think they're not when really, they're showing restraint. In Saruman's case, there's a suggestion as to why he's no longer powerful and as for Radagast, well, he's just a hippy.
I repeat: I NEVER SAID THE MAIAR ARE NOT POWERFUL. Just as you dispute that Narya could be used offensively, I dispute that all Maiar are powerful in the 'powerful in direct open battle' manner. I freely admit my opinion is only my opinion. You continue to speak as if you are Tolkien himself. Your opinions are likewise just opinions.
If Maiar can lose their power as easily as you claim Saruman lost his, how is it that the same didn't happen to the other Maiar? In particular, how is it that the Valar didn't simply strip Sauron and the One of power and leave them for the mortals to handle?
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The two are not related. Elrond's statement of what the Three Rings were for seems conclusive enough to me.
But not to me, hence as I said, we are at an impasse. You have already convinced yourself. It is me and any others who disagree with you that you have to convince now.
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First off, that's a reference to The Hobbit again and I've already told you what the problem is with that. 'Hobbit' Gandalf isn't quite the same character as 'LOTR' Gandalf; the older version is your typical storybook wizard, not conceived of as an 'angelic' being in humble guise like the LOTR version. In any case, it wasn't normal fire, it was horrid magical fire that stuck and burned fiercely, and would engulf someone if they got it on them and didn't put it out quickly. So what's the peaceful use for that, then? That sort of behaviour would be characteristic of a military weapon, in real life.
You can say that all you wish, but continually dismiss an alternate, viable explanation. What you seem to be suggesting is that Tolkien was a hack writer who had no continuity in his writing. The 'peaceful use of that' would be a forge or cooking flame that was self sustaining even in adverse conditions. The 'anything can be a weapon' works both ways. Weapons can usually be used as tools in various fashions too.
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You'll note that in LOTR, Gandalf doesn't set the Wargs on fire. He sets all the nearby treetops on fire to give the Fellowship light to fight by and to intimidate the Wargs.
Which supports my premise that tools or weapons can be used in indirect or more subtle ways and need not always be overtly or directly destructive.
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Because they didn't tell anybody in Middle-earth their real names. Ever.
The Balrog wasn't ove Middle-Earth. It was a fallen Maiar. It should have already known Gandalf by his proper name. You are making my case that the whole 'I am Gandalf' speach and staff waving wasn't for the Balrog but for the rest of the Fellowship, to maintain his 'secret ID' as 'a travelling wizard.' It's lucky for Gandalf that the Balrog was too busy fighting to blow Gandalf's cover.
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There are all those battles in the Sil, and no mention of battle-magic whatsoever. Whatever power Elves had, it wasn't the comic-book fantasy variety. The only beings who come close to that are Maiar. From the point of view of the book, that's fine: the only thing it seems to be clashing with is your expectation that magic in fantasy is about blowing stuff up.
There are no play by play details of any of the personal battles that I remember. If I get a chance later, though, I will try to find a quote or two on the power of the first born.
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It's generally accepted and utterly uncontroversial, because it's self-evidently true. All it takes is comparing the two and the differences are very apparent. The only people who have a problem with it are fools who think that everything Tolkien ever wrote was in the exact same context. The thing is, he did leave notes. Lots and lots of notes, drafts, redrafts, all sorts of bits and pieces of paper. The general course of evolution of his ideas can be followed across the decades, although it's full of digressions, false starts, abandoned ideas, and endless reconsideration. However, one can only say something is a retcon if there's a previous continuity that was changed retrospectively.
It isn't self evidently anything. The First Born are described as being more innately powerful than later generations, meaning those were more powerful elves in those battles. Also, there is nothing to suggest that Maiar are equally powerful. As such, it is reasonable to conclude Balrogs are not equally powerful. And as individually powerful as the Balrogs are, they were still facing greater numbers of Elves. Even if Tolkien himself didn't see explanations for the differences does not mean valid explanations do not exist.
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Essentially, if you want to take exception to what Chris Tolkien has to say then you need to read HoME first. Don't go casting doubt on something you've not even read.
I am not doubting Chris. I am doubting you. We disagree on interpretations of other matters so why would I trust your interpretation in this matter? Especially since you have not provided any actual quote.
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You need to read the relevant volumes of The History of Middle-earth - that'll explain all that, and more.
Translation: You have no actual quote to provide, merely to point me at literature. The Simmarillion contains the majority of the official published history of Middle Earth. I have been quoting it. Other than Cirdan and Elrond with respect to the nature of the Three (which neither of them had an actual hand in making, by the way), you have not provided any quotes backing up your statements.
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And the clutching at straws continues... it was very simple, it was because Cirdan had given it to Gandalf and to have it be known that he had one of the Three Rings of the Elves would have drawn undue attention to him.
Then why was it not widely known that Cirdan had it? The text is conclusive. It was hidden and no one was known to have it. Cirdan was believed to have had it but that is not the same thing.
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We don't have a 'how' for that, as Tolkien presented it as a given. I suggested earlier that he'd frittered away his power by trying to do too much too quickly. Sauron always spent a long time over things, slowly building up his power bit by bit; Saruman seemed to be trying to emulate him in an awful hurry, and I think that cost him. There's a symbolic element to it too, Saruman had effectively traded in his spiritual power for worldly power and he's shown to be have been a fool to do so. (I imagine Sauron thought this was all really, really funny).
Maiar lose power simply by doing things now? Saruman didn't just 'become less powerful.' He was killed by Wormtongue, a normal human. So either at least some Maiar are a LOT less powerful than you keep insisting, or Saruman was somehow stripped of power completely.
It seems more likely to me that his morale simply broke. After the failure to stop Sauron at Dol Guldor, he withdrew from the Council and set about trying to deal with Sauron entirely on his own. That failed utterly and he withdrew to the Shire, and was even challenged and ousted from there. He was rejected by his own people and during his stay at Orthanc, was pounded with doom and dispair by Sauron via the Palantir.
So it is plausable that he didn't lose power per se, but just lost his purpose and with it his will to survive.
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Saruman had been living in Isengard since 2759 TA, long before that. I think you missed the point: why there? The other two wizards remained humble (Radagast had a house, Gandalf no fixed abode) but Saruman moved into a huge fortress. Something was not quite right there, even then.
But he shut his doors to the others after that failure. There was a change. We do not know when he started using the Palantir either. Sauron may have already been affecting him. And for that matter, if he had been using the Palantir prior, it might explain how Sauron so easily evaded their pre-emptive strike against him.
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And 'Breeding Orcs and Men was still just breeding.'? No. First he had to degrade Men to the point at which they could be induced to mate with Orcs (Tolkien mentioned this in an essay). I mean come on, man, think about it! Nothing natural about it. And it doesn't matter what Saruman believed (or at least told himself), he'd lost the plot entirely. He was plotting to take the One Ring for himself, for one thing. Plus he'd been stealing other precious things and hiding them away in Orthanc.
These are men we are talking about. Men don't need magic to be involved in degrading sex. If absolutely nothing else, you are assuming human male, orc female rather than the other way around. In RL cases of bestiality exist. Thankfully they are rare but they exist. Plotting to take the One for himself was still arguably within his mandate. To use it beyond that, not, but he didn't advertise that until trapping Gandalf on the roof. That he might have been stripped of power is still problematic though in that it still doesn't explain why that wasn't done to the Balrogs or to Sauron.
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Go and do some research, please; you could do with reading both HoME and a good biography of Tolkien (I recommend Humphrey Carpenter's book). We're not discussing this on the same basis of knowledge, and no one simple quote will do - there's a whole explanation to it. I'm sorry, but just because you don't know about something doesn't mean it's not well known!
I see no point in reading any given biography when you cannot even give me so much as a single quote backing up your claims of retcons.
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Sorry, what? Where did I say he was like Superman? What's incontestable is that when he declared his power, his strength increased - we're actually shown that, when he rescues Faramir from the pyre. It's not like he hulks out or anything, though. And why the sword? Well, because it's preternaturally sharp and Balrogs were evidently tough. And you'd want to try to keep a little distance from the thing, too.
You really seem to have a narrow imagination. You cannot accept the use of one powerful being as an analogy with respect to another? Would you prefer I used Thor as an example? He was a Norse God in or out of the comics. You need to make up your mind. Either Elvin crafting compares favorably with divine might or it does not. Now you are arguing that the blade Glamdring is indeed a sufficiently powerful weapon to be of use as such to a Maiar.
This concept, by the way, that mortals make tools or weapons not just worthy of the Gods but for them exists in mythology. Odin's spear, for example, was Dwarven made.
He rescues Faramir from.... a fire...again with the fire. Quite a coincidence that the bearer of the ring of Fire seems to be effective in situations involving fire so often.
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The original version of TFoG is NOT the one that appears in the Sil. I already said that! I also already said that Tolkien never finished any of his intended rewrites of it. You're out of your depth, here:
go and do some research. Hell, just read the
Wikipedia article about it.
Academic. It is the version his son chose to publish. That it might have ended up differently if Tolkien lived longer doesn't change the fact it is as published. Which version of the Cantina scene in Star Wars do you consider canon? Did Han shoot first or not?
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And now it turns out you don't even know LOTR all that well. It's the one he uses when they're menaced by Wargs on the way to Moria, and he sets all the trees on the hilltop alight at once.
He didn't create the fire though. He tossed a burning branch in the air and magnified he fire. It is possible the invocation was literally instructing the fire what to do.
"High in the air he tossed the blazing brand. It flared with a sudden white radiance like lightening; and his voice rolled like thunder. "Naur an edraith ammon! Naur dan I ngaurhoth!' he cried."
It is plausible that Narya allowed that communication. We know that the ability to speak to otherwise inanimate objects such as trees existed in Middle Earth. The Elves knew this lore and Gandalf certainly did. I do concede that it is also possible he was invoking his power as a Maiar in this fashion, commanding the fire as Saruman commands men or orcs. However, the ability to communicate with the fire to facilitate such a use could still have come from Narya.
Regardless he still manipulated an existing fire source rather than create fire out of nothing.
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We're told what they're for, and nowhere in what's said is there the least implication of any destructive capability. As for that mention of the Olympic torch and comparing it to the Red Ring, you've missed the obvious point that to use that torch to cause harm would be an utter perversion of its purpose. It's a symbol of peace, for heaven's sake! What kind of person would use it as a weapon?
That it would be a perversion of the original intended purpose does in no way prevent such a thing from being possible. And the kind of person who would use the olympic torch as a weapon would be the kind of person pressed into a situation where they would need an improvised weapon. The Olympics have come under fire in the past. Literally. War itself is a perversion of peace. That doesn't prevent it from happening. And wars are not won by insisting thrashing tools or tractors or any given tool should remain tools of peace.
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Sauron uses spells, too. It therefore stands to reason spells actually did something, that they were a 'real' thing with a 'real' use and not just showmanship, something even Maiar found useful. And Sauron, of course, hadn't depended on any ring for his power; it's therefore bogus to imagine that Gandalf is, when he's the exact same sort of being as Sauron, apart from remaining 'angelic' rather than having 'fallen'. You've taken Gandalf's characteristically humble appearance and as the actuality, imagining he's reliant on that ring when there was a lot more to him than that, something that's only occasionally revealed but nonetheless gives no doubt that there's great power hidden within him. That can be clearly seen early on in the book, when Bilbo briefly angers him.
Innate power is not a 'spell' per se, and does not usually need an invocation. An invocation is used to call on some other power for aid. There is nothing in any of the writings that suggest that the Valar can assist or intervene at that kind of range. Eru presumably could, but a direct invocation there seems unlikely. Talking to what is there and asking it for aid does fit with the lore, but in terms of actual fire sources, you have the Balrog's flames, but it seems unlikely they would follow Gandalf's orders rather than those of their source.... So that leaves Narya, which again might have provided/facilitated such communication/invocation.
At least accept it as a possibility...
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They had to fight defensively. That was the point. When the Three Rings were made, the glory days of the Noldor had already passed. They were unable to defeat Sauron by themselves (he kicked their butts all over Eriador, leaving only Lindon free); they had to ally themselves with Men in order to see him off. The Rings were a means of keeping some small corners of Middle-earth essentially perfect, all but immune to the effects of the passage of time and forestalling the weariness of the world that would otherwise claim their inhabitants. That's why Lorien, in particular, was a palpably unearthly place. It's also why its inhabitants tended to stay put (the effects were localised). Gandalf had use for one of those Rings because it prevented him from becoming weary on his endless quest.
A bunker is still a weapon. Defense is a weapon. I doubt the soldiers of Gondor wore armor simply to impress the ladies. The fact that the Elves were unlikely to take the field offensively any time soon doesn't mean they gave up on violence or self defense as options. Furthermore they did take to the fields again. They were there at the final battle at the gates of Mordor.
Various nations in history have gone isolationist. It doesn't mean they disarmed or stopped developing weapons.
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I'm presenting the most likely scenario: a straightforward reaction by the Nazgul to Gandalf's unwelcome arrival on the scene. The simplest explanation is usually the best; it needs no unlikely elaborations in order to work.
If the Nazgul were already there and Gandalf arrived second, why did they let him get to the top of the hill in the first place? Gandalf arrived to check on a pre-arranged meeting/message drop and was beset by Nazgul. That is how I remember it. I can look it up if you insist.
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That doesn't fit the story. They couldn't have known that Gandalf would turn up there. Nor would they trust anyone else with the Ring, for obvious reasons. Besides, if that was the plan, what happened to these 'other agents'?
Why does it have to have been planned in advance? Why can't it be that they saw an opportunity and went with it? Both plans are opportunistic and require no pre-planning.
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That's just BS. I explained why the Istari appeared the way they did and why the Valar hadn't gone for something more direct to begin with. 'The Istari' is one more thing you should have read if you want to debate this properly, but haven't. It's far from academic - stop trying to make a virtue out of your own ignorance.
WHAT YOU OR I KNOW AS READERS IS ACADEMIC. WE ARE DISCUSSING WHAT SAURON KNEW. Sorry for the caps, but you seem very dense on some subjects. I asked you to provide a quote backing your point and again all you can come back with is an insult.... and you are the one accusing me of ignorance? Priceless.
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As for what the White Council did, the aim was to drive Sauron out of Mirkwood by force (having him lurking there was intolerable). As it was, he'd planned for them wising up eventually and so he promptly legged it, pretending to flee from them. The whole Dol Guldur thing had worked brilliantly as a distraction - Sauron had got them so worried about that that they hadn't been paying attention to what had been happening in Mordor, where the groundwork had been put in place for him to return and declare himself openly.
None of that changes the fact that the White Council did try to take him on directly. They were concerned that the One had surfaced again (or at least strong leads as to where it might be found) and wanted to try to deal with him before he could regain his power, not just in terms of the One but also in terms of raw military strength. Merely moving him wouldn't accomplish either.
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Unsubtle, overly literal and entirely unimaginative, as if something can't be powerful unless it has a use as a weapon. You're making the same mistake Gimli does in the book and you're too focused on this 'fire' thing to see that - you can't see the wood for the trees. That passage tells us that the Three Rings of the Elves didn't do what people might expect powerful magical items might do; you, however, are simply saying exactly what people would expect. There's a very obvious clash there.
ROFL, you are repeatedly insisting that any given thing can be used in one way and in one way ownly, and that even healing oneself in battle has no military value, yet accuse me of being 'overly literal and entirely unimaginative.' Priceless. Subtle power still has military application, whether you are able to comprehend that or not.
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Why that 'making' line of yours is boneheadedly literal can be demonstrated by looking at the other two Rings. So the Ring of Air lets you make air, then? Wow, that sounds useful. And the Ring of Water... that lets you make water? hahaha :D
You really are kidding, right? You cannot see how control of air (which would likely include weather) or water (how much of a body is water, again? Even Orcs bleed) would have military application? We have seen what Elrond could do with water without one of the three. There is no way you are that dense. By the way, you wanted an example of how innately powerful the early generations of Elves are, how about that? Elrond wasn't at the river when he pulled that stunt. He was rather distant, meaning he not just could turn a river into a destructive force, but could do so at significant range, was able to perceive the situation at that range clearly enough to get the timing right, and could add an artistic flair to top it all off, purely on the power he possesses as an Elf Lord. And if you were ever in a desert or a drought, you could be begging for the ability to create water.
But no, there was a retcon. There is no way that 'mere elves' could be powerful, right?
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[I]
Umm, no. It's that the description of those Rings never implies they do anything so literal.
The descriptions are all vague and metaphorical. We don't really have hard evidence as to what any of the rings can do. Even if Narya really does 'merely' affect confidence or inner flame, such a power could be used to make an enemy overconfident and reckless, or possibly to make them despair.