The Dresden Files > DF Reference Collection
Questions for Jim 2012 style 2
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--- Quote from: TheCuriousFan on October 11, 2012, 12:42:22 PM ---He at least has access to the known universe and was probably around to watch the language develop (also, glasses are probably ectoplasm constructs to humanise him in the eyes of those who make deals with him), HWWB was trapped outside the the universe in Outside, he would have had precisely zilch chance to learn English (which is a bitch to get right even when you're raised with it).
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I see two three four possibilities: a)the outsiders are having a lot more contact with schmucks like Justin and Papa Wraith than the WC want to admit to itself, b)they can pull it right from a persons mind c)they can just Know it, same as how Toot knows russian, or d)They are getting it relayed to them from their secret sleeper agent The Archive.
--- Quote ---I'm asking because it's one of the mechanics questions that occasionally bugs me (the other being why things instantly age to death when something stopping their aging is removed, shouldn't they just go back to aging as normal?).
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Well, several people, including Mab have referred to Time as a "he" so maybe harry was right and the old man with the hourglass was "was collecting his due" Maybe we'll meet him someday
--- Quote from: Sheaman3773 on October 11, 2012, 01:49:35 PM ---Quintus Cassius was more than old enough to have been instantly aged to death, but instead he merely started aging at an extremely accelerated rate. He described it as a balancing effect, the aging process making up for lost time, etc.
I tend to like the explanation that it was all of the entropy that was being held off hitting them all at once, though obviously that argument fails when brand-new immortals react the same way as the ancient ones.
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The best I can come up with is that he was supplementing the lost coin with his own magic, some sort of Necrmancy most likely. He was aging unnaturally, but not decomposing in seconds that we saw with the other denarians in SmF or with the half-reds in Changes
TheCuriousFan:
--- Quote from: Sheaman3773 on October 11, 2012, 01:49:35 PM ---Quintus Cassius was more than old enough to have been instantly aged to death, but instead he merely started aging at an extremely accelerated rate. He described it as a balancing effect, the aging process making up for lost time, etc.
I tend to like the explanation that it was all of the entropy that was being held off hitting them all at once, though obviously that argument fails when brand-new immortals react the same way as the ancient ones.
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That idea doesn't really work for me, let's see if I can explain why...
To use a movie example, let's say you're watching a two hour movie, you watch half an hour of it, then hit pause and go off and do other things for an hour or so, then come back and hit play again. Normally one would expect the movie to then continue as if never paused (going back to aging normally) rather than going into unavoidable fast forward to the hour and a half point unless you hit pause again (hyper sped aging to where you would be if you never stopped aging unless you find something else to stop the clock in time).
Did that get my problem with the rapid aging across clearly?
the neurovore of Zur-En-Aargh:
--- Quote from: TheCuriousFan on October 11, 2012, 02:08:14 PM ---To use a movie example, let's say you're watching a two hour movie, you watch half an hour of it, then hit pause and go off and do other things for an hour or so, then come back and hit play again. Normally one would expect the movie to then continue as if never paused (going back to aging normally) rather than going into unavoidable fast forward to the hour and a half point unless you hit pause again (hyper sped aging to where you would be if you never stopped aging unless you find something else to stop the clock in time).
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Normally one would, but sfaict from the text, the way this actually works in the Dresdenverse follows the "unavoidable fast forward" model.
TheCuriousFan:
--- Quote from: the neurovore of Zur-En-Aargh on October 11, 2012, 02:29:24 PM ---Normally one would, but sfaict from the text, the way this actually works in the Dresdenverse follows the "unavoidable fast forward" model.
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Yes, and I'm wondering why it does so.
Sheaman3773:
I understand what you are seeing, but perhaps I can give you some figurative language that might help.
Think of aging as your body's response to the increasingly heavy weight of time weighing on your body. When you get something that freezes you in time--a Denarian coin, becoming a Rampire--then all of the additional weight keeps piling up, but it's prevented from actually affecting the body by this power. When the power is gone, all of that weight falls on them, instantly aging them as much as if they had not had the power. Or, if you assume accelerated aging like in the DV rather than instant, what was keeping the weight off is no longer supported, so the weight starts falling through, more and more of it piling on the person, until they die.
Now, that's obviously not a comprehensive theory, given that organisms grow into their prime before they begin weakening, but it might be illustrative to think of it in that manner.
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