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#34 | |
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Wight
Join Date: Jun 2016
Posts: 144
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Quote:
If they grew them themselves, then they needed a lot of land on which to do so. While Mordor had the fertile lands of Nurn to feed them, this is not the case for the Hithaeglir. I bring this up because it was things exactly like this with which Tolkien struggled in his later days, looking specifically for the rules by which the world operated (for which this would be one). And Orcs do not need to be capturing and eating people to make them predators. That isn't what I meant by that relationship. Their relationship with all of civilization is that of a predator, who preys upon "Civilization" itself (ruining it, in some fashion). The manner in which it "Ruins" civilization is secondary. For instance: Cuckoo Birds have the same Predator:Prey relationship as do raptors like Hawks, Owls, and Eagles with their Prey. Except the Cuckoo Bird isn't preying upon the other birds to eat them. It is preying upon them to raise their young. The Cuckoo isn't exactly what you would call a "Parasite" either. But Parasites tend to have similar relationships in populations as do Predator:Prey populations. And the Orcs fit into a similar relationship with Elves, Hobbits, and Men. They Prey upon the civilization itself, whether taking time to replace things simply destroyed outright, or in replacing things stolen, or people killed, or kidnapped. Tolkien did not want Middle-earth to be simply a "Fairy Tale." At the end (from the 1950s onward), he was looking specifically for the "underlying postulates" that formed a "coherent theological and metaphysical system." (p. x of Morgoth's Ring). Those words imply that he needed things to have an explanation for How they worked, and not just that they existed within Middle-earth. They needed a reason to explain their existence, and a means by which they operated (a Metaphysical Explanation). MB |
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