MystMan wrote:I think that nothing that powerful could be simple... You know what I mean? My strongest theory is that they're just what the name implies: great <i>words</i>. Simply words with certain meaning, words that aren't used in everyday speech and writing, but are reserved to the Art.
The problem with single very powerful statements, is that what they gain in scope, they lose in flexibility. If I, for instance, had a word that meant: "guy that walks into a bar at three o clock in the afternoon, wearing a yellow-spotted iguana on his head and ordering a serving of fish and chips with chocolate sauce", I could express something very specific with a single word, but it would be of no use for anything else and I'd require a gargantuan vocabulary, whereas having separate words for things like iguanas and fish and means of quantisation, means you can puzzle together complex statements from more atomic ones. :7
It's like lego bricks - with the basic bricks you can build pretty much anything, but an imaginary single huge piece perfectly forming a model of the Taj Mahal, would be of little use for anything other than building a Taj Mahal model.
Chinese idioms, that are so plentiful, too are constructed from smaller parts; look, e.g, at the more polite form of "you". It consists of the symbol for the regular "you", combined with the one for "heart".
Heek, all around us and we ourselves are complex constructs built from more elementary parts; I tend to think of multicellular organisms as walking/swimming/waddling/whatever coral reefs. :=)
When we got "End of ages", I got rather stuck up on the title, which to me suggested that with the freeing of the bahro, there could be no more linking through books. I formed a little theory that the act of writing a descriptive- or linking book, would bind a bahro slave to that book - a slave that would from that point be forced to do the actual linking, shuttling book users to the book's destination, like somthing of a quantum elevator boy. The writing in the book would in this case be for the eyes and mind of that bahro.
Fortunately this theory has since been refuted. :)
I know there would be people picking apart Gahrohevtee's design and grammar, but do you seriously think people would seriously wonder why these words didn't actually <i>create</i> Ages (or should I say Books?) OOC?
Haha, of course not. :) Hence the little "winking eye" emoticon, whose purpose is to extra clearly flag irony. :7