...What? I said "you'd think if Nicodemus knew that the Church knew of a way to destroy a shadow, he'd try to get rid of the information"; you said "Nicodemus seems completely unaware of any possibility that a shadow could be gotten rid of, and furthermore Lash agrees with him"; then I said "You're right. And given that both Nicodemus and Lash should have far more information on how shadows work, this is evidence that either getting rid of one's magic does not rid oneself of the shadow or that no one has ever done so successfully." This is the equivalent of saying "Mab says that she has the ability to change Harry as her Knight. But Uriel says she doesn't. Because Uriel can be supposed to know more about the subject than Mab does, this is evidence that Mab is wrong."
It really works the other way.
"Mab says that she has the ability to change Harry as her Knight." == Nicodemus and Lash think you can't get rid of a Shadow
"But Uriel says she doesn't." == Michael says he knows a way for Harry to get rid of the Shadow.
Michael is allowed to have information that Nicodemus and Lash do not. He is literally someone to talks to a direct agent of an omniscient source of information, after all. Plus? Michael and his people have
incentive to figure out ways to get rid of a Shadow, while Nicodemus and Lash do not.
Put it this way -- if you wanted information on how to get clean of drugs, would you ask a medical professional who's never done drugs, or your dealer?
It's relevant because Michael's source(s) has an effect on the validity of this information. There's a distinct difference between him believing the information because it's a long-held church theory, believing it because he personally disapproves of magic, believing it because it's something Tessa mentioned in a fight, and believing it because the archangel Gabriel came down and told him. And if Harry knew Michael's sources, it has a good chance of affecting whether he believed the information.
None of that speaks to
whether Michael believes what he is saying is true. That's the measure of whether Michael's a liar, isn't it? Whether he believes what the thing he's saying is true?
Someone who's a Flat Earther might be hilariously wrong about the nature of the world, but if he or she believes what they're saying is true, that means they're not a liar -- stupid, misguided and misinformed, yes, but not a liar.
Michael is trustworthy, and he's smart. He's not some credulous soccer mom who's going to repeat as gospel something he saw on Facebook; I think we can assume that if Michael is saying something is true with confident, he is in turn confident that his source was truthful.
...You don't understand how lying works, do you?
Yes. And I understand that it's
not a thing Michael does. It's one of the central tenets of his character.
Michael also carries a concealed weapon on a regular basis. He may be uncomfortable when called on it, but he is willing to conceal information in service to a higher good.
Betcha a dollar that he doesn't lie about it when he's asked. Hell, when he's
literally about to be arrested at the start of Grave Peril, his reaction is to keep his Sword where it can be seen and tell the truth.
And here's a question: What is the "higher good" served by this supposed lie? As you have pointed out, at length, if Michael is wrong, if getting rid of Harry's magic
doesn't get rid of the Shadow, then it's nothing but bad news for everybody involved.
So, again,
why on Earth would Michael lie about it?The tangible, objective factor here is that Harry has the shadow--they're talking about what to do about that.
You're moving the goalposts. Yes, they're talking about the Shadow. The non-factor is that getting rid of Harry's magic won't work.
That is the thing that neither of them have reason to think about.
The possibility that Harry giving up his magic would not work is supported by evidence in the text. Michael claims it will. Nicodemus, as you pointed out, has clearly never heard of the possibility. Michael also says that no one has gotten rid of a shadow without taking up the coin. That is all the evidence for and against the position.
Show me where in the books anybody positively says, "it won't work." Show me where that position is addressed in that manner.
The only data point we have on, "Will giving up Harry's magic get rid of the Shadow?" is Michael's assertion that it would work.
We do
not have any data points on someone trying it and it not working.
We do
not have any data points of someone saying that it doesn't work, anecdotally or otherwise.
I disagree with this.
Why? What, in any of Michael's characterization throughout the whole series, makes you think he's a liar?
Michael is trustworthy. He's so trustworthy
the bad guys trust him to tell the truth and keep his word without hesitation.
This, so far as I can tell, is a circular argument: Michael didn't lie in this instance because he doesn't lie ever, and we know he doesn't lie ever because there is no instance in which he lies.
Well, yes? That's how "not being a liar" works, because if you're not a liar, there aren't instances where you lie.
We've Michael him in situations where he's been asked to lie and he explicitly refused to; we've seen him in situations where others have lied on his behalf and he's been uncomfortable about it. We've seen him presented with lies from various sources and his response has
always been some variation on, "Lying is wrong, I don't do it and you shouldn't either."
So, Michael doesn't lie. When he says something as if he believes it to be true, then
he believes it to be true. So far, the
only thing pointing to Michael being dishonest is your insistence that he must be lying.
YES I HAVE.[/u] Repeatedly.[/I] This keeps happening. Before you claim that I haven't said something, please re-read the thread, because you keep getting it wrong.
You've said why
you don't believe it's true.
You haven't presented any proof that Michael has evidence it's not true when he speaks in Proven Guilty. There's a
possible inference that he learned he was wrong by the time of Small Favor, but that is by no means evidence that he
was wrong and knew he was wrong in Proven Guilty.
You haven't presented anyone having told Michael it's not true at any point.
You haven't presented any compelling reason for Michael to say this thing to Harry if he believed it wasn't true -- in fact, you've presented a lot of reasons why Michael
wouldn't say it if it wasn't true.
So, again, what is the "good reason" for Michael to take an action that you yourself have argued is going to end badly for everyone involved?
The most I've seen amounts to reasons you think it
might not be true, based on a very specific reading of the two dialogs that seems predicated more on your own personal views of how people should talk than it does on how any of the characters have ever behaved.
I'm saying that there is no evidence that he is right apart from the claim he himself is making.
And there's no evidence that he's wrong. There is, again, a
possible inference that he
might be wrong, but no evidence.
And the question of the thread was not "is Michael objectively right and able to prove it beyond a shadow of a doubt."
The question is, "Did Michael lie?" Right there at the top of the page.
He "hems and haws" about trusting Harry. He doubts Harry. You can't claim that he's not capable of doubting and concealing information when we see him do so in the books.
Yeah, I didn't say he was not capable of doubting; I said he's ruled by faith, not doubt. I said that when he says something, it's because he believes it to be true.
He worries about and doubts Harry because -- as Harry acknowledges --
Harry gives him tangible, direct reasons to have doubts.
I see no tangible, direct reason for Michael to doubt the thing that
he himself is saying as true.
I am expecting Michael to speak accurately and behave like the character that I believe we have been shown (not the one that you believe we have been shown, clearly) based on clear concerns that he himself brought up, and possibilities that absolutely could reasonably be expected to factor into his thinking.
Show me another place in the series where Michael gives advice to someone, then immediately backtracks and says why his own advice that he just gave is bad.
Because that's what you're suggesting Michael should have done. It doesn't sound like anything Michael's done that I can recall.
You apparently think that Michael has some intellectus for truth and to be inhumanly perfect, while at the same time gratuitously leaving information out of his statements such that they are inaccurate.
No, that's not what I think at all. Hell, that's closer to what you seem to think -- that Michael knew for a fact that his own information was wrong, knew exactly what information he didn't have, and gave advice
he knew to be wrong.
As I have said,
repeatedly, I think that when Michael says something as if it's a fact, he believes that to be a fact.
You seem to be operating under the impression that not-lying is synonymous with being objectively correct and able to prove it. That's just not what the term means. I don't think Michael is wrong; but even if he is wrong, he's still not "lying" by saying what he thinks is true.