Author Topic: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon  (Read 13450 times)

Offline groinkick

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Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« on: January 31, 2019, 06:07:15 AM »
In Changes seven words were used to manipulate Dresden from one of the Fallen.  In Ghost Story, Uriel balanced the scales with seven words.  In Fool Moon seven words prevented Harry from murdering Denton while in Hexenwolf form.

I felt Denton's pulse beneath my tongue.  Felt his whimpers vibrate into my mouth.  So easy.  One simple motion, and I would never have doubts, fears, questions.  Never again. And, something inside of me said in a calm tone, you'll never be Harry Dresden again.

So a voice inside of Harry told him that he'd never be Harry Dresden again, using seven words.  Coincidence?  Maybe, but still curious to me.
Stole this from Reginald because it was so well put, and is true for me as well.

"I love this place. It was a beacon in the dark and I couldn't have made it through some of the most maddening years of my life without some great people here."  Thank you Griff and others who took up the torch.

Offline Mira

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #1 on: January 31, 2019, 02:15:00 PM »
In Changes seven words were used to manipulate Dresden from one of the Fallen.  In Ghost Story, Uriel balanced the scales with seven words.  In Fool Moon seven words prevented Harry from murdering Denton while in Hexenwolf form.

I felt Denton's pulse beneath my tongue.  Felt his whimpers vibrate into my mouth.  So easy.  One simple motion, and I would never have doubts, fears, questions.  Never again. And, something inside of me said in a calm tone, you'll never be Harry Dresden again.

So a voice inside of Harry told him that he'd never be Harry Dresden again, using seven words.  Coincidence?  Maybe, but still curious to me.

The voice of his conscience speaking...   Or even the alternate Harry that turns up in his fever dreams.  Though that Harry may seem darker in a lot of respects, he speaks the truth..  It is the voice of free will,  the choice was Harry's to make, the simple maybe even satisfying killing but for a price, he could never look at himself in the same way ever again..

Offline Fcrate

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #2 on: January 31, 2019, 04:15:15 PM »
The voice of his conscience speaking...   Or even the alternate Harry that turns up in his fever dreams.  Though that Harry may seem darker in a lot of respects, he speaks the truth..  It is the voice of free will,  the choice was Harry's to make, the simple maybe even satisfying killing but for a price, he could never look at himself in the same way ever again..
I agree. I also think it was too soon in the series for foreshadowing of that kind.
هل أخذت الغاب مثلي منزلاً دون القصور
فتتبعت السواقي وتسلقت الصخور
هل تحممت بعطره وتنشفت بنور
وشربت الفجر خمراً من كؤوس من أثير

Offline groinkick

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #3 on: January 31, 2019, 08:01:15 PM »
The voice of his conscience speaking...   Or even the alternate Harry that turns up in his fever dreams.  Though that Harry may seem darker in a lot of respects, he speaks the truth..  It is the voice of free will,  the choice was Harry's to make, the simple maybe even satisfying killing but for a price, he could never look at himself in the same way ever again..

When he was tempted by dark magic in Storm Front, and was on the verge of destroying Sells home but stopped short when his pentacle acted strangely, and he felt a hand holding his, was this also free will and his subconscious?

I'm in the camp that there are big players involved from the beginning, and won't be realized until later.  Jim has hinted that we will learn of the big players working behind the scenes.  I think he said in the wrestling book.

I agree. I also think it was too soon in the series for foreshadowing of that kind.

In the very next book we get: KoTC, Nemesis infection of Leah, Cowl, the beginning of the Red Court war, and as Cowl said "many things happened that night".  We also know now that there are Fallen who are allied with the Outsiders... So if Nemesis has been involved since Book 1, it stands to reason there could be Angelic involvement since early books.

Jim has said that he has dropped things in books with the idea that people will pick up on things upon rereading them with knowledge from future books.  Yeah I can be totally wrong, obviously.  But still think that there are things that go all the way back to Storm Front that we won't understand until future books.

Also there was a strange shadow in Storm Front.  Could it have been Sells as Shadowman?  Possibly....  But I wouldn't be surprised if it's Nicodemus who showed up not too far down the line.
« Last Edit: January 31, 2019, 08:18:39 PM by groinkick »
Stole this from Reginald because it was so well put, and is true for me as well.

"I love this place. It was a beacon in the dark and I couldn't have made it through some of the most maddening years of my life without some great people here."  Thank you Griff and others who took up the torch.

Offline Bad Alias

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #4 on: January 31, 2019, 08:25:11 PM »
I think the voice from Storm Front was his mother.

But still think that there are things that go all the way back to Storm Front that we won't understand until future books.

I always have to wonder how much was planned since it was written and how much is written and then linked back to because it works. And unless everything is spelled out plainly, I don't think we will ever really stop debating who did what.

Offline Mira

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #5 on: January 31, 2019, 09:14:57 PM »
Quote

When he was tempted by dark magic in Storm Front, and was on the verge of destroying Sells home but stopped short when his pentacle acted strangely, and he felt a hand holding his, was this also free will and his subconscious?

   I always felt that he felt the unseen spirit of his mother at that point, she after all left the pentacle for him.  The pentacle is also the symbol of his magic, all that is good about it, things Eb taught him.  So you can take it that the spirit of his mom stopped him, and touching it he remember all the things that Eb taught him about magic, his own belief in what magic stands for.  He then made a choice of his own free will, not to use black magic to destroy the house and to kill.
had taught him

Offline groinkick

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #6 on: February 02, 2019, 08:00:53 AM »
   I always felt that he felt the unseen spirit of his mother at that point, she after all left the pentacle for him.  The pentacle is also the symbol of his magic, all that is good about it, things Eb taught him.  So you can take it that the spirit of his mom stopped him, and touching it he remember all the things that Eb taught him about magic, his own belief in what magic stands for.  He then made a choice of his own free will, not to use black magic to destroy the house and to kill.
had taught him

yeah, my theory is the seven words may have done that, given him his free will back.  The result was that he removed the belt and was disgusted by what he almost became.
Stole this from Reginald because it was so well put, and is true for me as well.

"I love this place. It was a beacon in the dark and I couldn't have made it through some of the most maddening years of my life without some great people here."  Thank you Griff and others who took up the torch.

Offline Cozarkian

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #7 on: April 08, 2019, 11:09:31 PM »
In Changes seven words were used to manipulate Dresden from one of the Fallen.  In Ghost Story, Uriel balanced the scales with seven words.  In Fool Moon seven words prevented Harry from murdering Denton while in Hexenwolf form.

I felt Denton's pulse beneath my tongue.  Felt his whimpers vibrate into my mouth.  So easy.  One simple motion, and I would never have doubts, fears, questions.  Never again. And, something inside of me said in a calm tone, you'll never be Harry Dresden again.

So a voice inside of Harry told him that he'd never be Harry Dresden again, using seven words.  Coincidence?  Maybe, but still curious to me.

You could absolutely be right that the same entity whispered those words, but I don't think it was Uriel. In Ghost Story, Uriel inspired the 7 words, but he couldn't have actually been the entity speaking them, because the first word was "Lies." Mab wasn't lying, she was just wrong. She can't lie and Uriel knows that. Thus, for Uriel to say Mab was lying would make him a liar. I don't think he can lie either. That means some other entity must have spoken the actual words as the proxy of Uriel.

Offline nadia.skylark

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #8 on: April 09, 2019, 01:09:41 AM »
Quote
You could absolutely be right that the same entity whispered those words, but I don't think it was Uriel. In Ghost Story, Uriel inspired the 7 words, but he couldn't have actually been the entity speaking them, because the first word was "Lies." Mab wasn't lying, she was just wrong. She can't lie and Uriel knows that. Thus, for Uriel to say Mab was lying would make him a liar. I don't think he can lie either. That means some other entity must have spoken the actual words as the proxy of Uriel.

Not necessarily. Here is the definition of "lie" I found:
Quote
lie
noun
1.an intentionally false statement.
"the whole thing is a pack of lies"

2.used with reference to a situation involving deception or founded on a mistaken impression.
"all their married life she had been living a lie"

If the seven words were using the second definition of "lie" then Uriel is in the clear to say them. We have a WoJ that Mab could say that she could change Harry because she believed it to be the case, given her past experience with Winter Knights. Thus, Uriel was just saying that her claim was founded on a mistaken impression, which indeed it was.

Offline Avernite

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #9 on: April 09, 2019, 05:58:43 AM »
You could absolutely be right that the same entity whispered those words, but I don't think it was Uriel. In Ghost Story, Uriel inspired the 7 words, but he couldn't have actually been the entity speaking them, because the first word was "Lies." Mab wasn't lying, she was just wrong. She can't lie and Uriel knows that. Thus, for Uriel to say Mab was lying would make him a liar. I don't think he can lie either. That means some other entity must have spoken the actual words as the proxy of Uriel.
Why wouldn't Uriel be able to lie? He's the spook, I think he CAN lie, just not in a way that compromises Free Will.

More importantly, he says lies. He doesn't say 'Mab lies' he says 'Mab's words are lies'. A semantic difference, but if Mab is wrong and doesn't know it, you could argue her words are still lies withou Mab lying.

Offline DonBugen

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #10 on: April 09, 2019, 06:12:02 AM »
I'm not quite sure that an archangel would be bearing false witness, actually.

As for this suggestion...  interesting.  Not so much for it being seven, but just for the fact that it's a voice inside Harry.

My personal take?  We already know that Harry's got his alter-ID sitting in the back of his mind, waiting for violence and lust and power.  I have a feeling that in this case, the main narrator is mostly Id-Harry, and it's the Ego who's stating this, trying to pull back on the reigns.  And the only reason why it appears as another voice is because Harry's just a kinda messed-up person who already personifies his splintered personality.

Offline Yuillegan

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #11 on: April 09, 2019, 08:07:16 AM »
Plausible, very plausible. I think it is highly likely there have been beings affecting events behind the scenes since the very beginning. In fact they pretty much had to have been, in cases like Uriel, because that it all they do all day long. They are always working. Just because Harry with his incredibly, hilariously limited perception is unaware is no bench mark for them NOT affecting events behind the scenes.

In terms of in the text, they are good possibilities but hard to prove. Just as easily, as some have pointed out, his conscience or sub-conscious etc. Jim doesn't tend to entirely let every act of choice be influenced, in fact he tends to highlight it massively when it does occur.

We should also not forget, that when Uriel in Ghost Story reveals the seven words whispered to him by the Fallen, that scene is different and that thought does not actually occur in the text during Changes. Even though we learn his memory was altered by Molly, that scene does not actually exist in the text of Changes.

And I do agree, just because Uriel called Mab a liar doesn't mean Mab though she was lying. She simply assumed what she said was truth. I don't think the fae have to tell objective truths, only believe that they do. Otherwise the fae would be WAY more powerful than they are. I think the only beings that might fall into that category are beings with Intellectus (funnily enough, like Archangels and the Mothers).

I don't believe Uriel can lie. Both as a limit of the universe/his being and his code of conduct. The Fallen are liars. That is one of their main point of difference. Whether Uriel can lie to immortals is another thing, but I suspect it would only be lies of omission etc rather than outright lies. It is a sin after all.
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Offline morriswalters

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #12 on: April 09, 2019, 11:27:37 AM »
The voice of his conscience speaking...   Or even the alternate Harry that turns up in his fever dreams.  Though that Harry may seem darker in a lot of respects, he speaks the truth..  It is the voice of free will,  the choice was Harry's to make, the simple maybe even satisfying killing but for a price, he could never look at himself in the same way ever again..
Yeah, I read it as an internal dialog.  It gives the reader the feeling of two voices, one urging Harry to kill, another, Harry's true self, reminding him of what he is and what he stands to lose.  This presages the Winter Mantle.  Mab's lie is a lie of omission.  It's in the thing that she doesn't say.

Offline Cozarkian

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #13 on: April 09, 2019, 02:37:32 PM »
Not necessarily. Here is the definition of "lie" I found:
If the seven words were using the second definition of "lie" then Uriel is in the clear to say them. We have a WoJ that Mab could say that she could change Harry because she believed it to be the case, given her past experience with Winter Knights. Thus, Uriel was just saying that her claim was founded on a mistaken impression, which indeed it was.

The difference between a lie and a mere mistaken impression or falsehood is in the knowledge or intent. In the example you used, the married woman would be "living a lie" if, for example, she was pretending to love her husband when she knew that her feelings weren't real. Or maybe her spouse was a criminal and she was pretending her spouse was an upstanding citizen. Either way, it is about willful blindness. I don't think the Fae can do that - their subconscious would force them to confront the truth by preventing them from lying. Mab would have been physically unable to speak those words if she was merely hoping to live a lie by lying to herself.

Why wouldn't Uriel be able to lie? He's the spook, I think he CAN lie, just not in a way that compromises Free Will.

I think DonBugen handled this question quite well, but even assuming Uriel can bear false witness on some occasions, lying to somebody when you are telling them something it is extremely important for them to believe is not very smart. E.g., 2 + 2 = 3, trust me, Mab can't change who you are.

More importantly, he says lies. He doesn't say 'Mab lies' he says 'Mab's words are lies'. A semantic difference, but if Mab is wrong and doesn't know it, you could argue her words are still lies withou Mab lying.

Mab lied, Mab's words were lies, and Mab told a lie are all synonymous. The fact that you felt the need to specify that "you could argue" is a clear indicator that "semantics" is a poor justification for using the word Lies. Either JB made a poor word choice by using "Lies" over the equally available and more accurate choice of "Wrong," or JB chose the word lies because Uriel and was not the actual speaker and the word choice was tailored to the character speaking. JB isn't perfect, it's possible he just made a writing mistake, but in this case I don't think he did.

We should also not forget, that when Uriel in Ghost Story reveals the seven words whispered to him by the Fallen, that scene is different and that thought does not actually occur in the text during Changes. Even though we learn his memory was altered by Molly, that scene does not actually exist in the text of Changes.

Agreed, but why is that important other than that JB skipped the scene in Changes for story-telling purposes?

And I do agree, just because Uriel called Mab a liar doesn't mean Mab though she was lying. She simply assumed what she said was truth. I don't think the fae have to tell objective truths, only believe that they do. Otherwise the fae would be WAY more powerful than they are. I think the only beings that might fall into that category are beings with Intellectus (funnily enough, like Archangels and the Mothers).

If Mab didn't think she was lying, then Mab wasn't lying, she was simply wrong. Telling a lie requires knowledge of the falsity of the statement.

Mab's lie is a lie of omission.

That just doesn't fit. I don't think Mab was being clever and trying to mislead Harry into believing something that wasn't true, I think Mab believed what she said was true and she was simply wrong, because she doesn't truly understand free will.

Offline morriswalters

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Re: Angelic intervention in Fool Moon
« Reply #14 on: April 09, 2019, 03:59:01 PM »
That just doesn't fit. I don't think Mab was being clever and trying to mislead Harry into believing something that wasn't true, I think Mab believed what she said was true and she was simply wrong, because she doesn't truly understand free will.
Mother Summer tells Harry that it is possible to master the mantle, that in fact, it had been done.  And given that, Mab had to know.
Quote
Mother Summer said. "Do you have a chance to remain yourself despite the tendency of the Mantle to mold your thoughts and desires?  All Knights, Winter and Summer, have that chance.  Most fail."
That quote is from Cold Days.  It has two meanings.  It tells Harry that he can remain himself and that Mab herself may yet retain some part of her humanity.