The Dresden Files > DF Spoilers
Is Lasciel really a fallen angel?
Con:
My favourite fan theory is Lasciel was once Ishtar a Bablynoian Goddess of Love and War.... but admittedly Jim has said any fan theory he has to have to learned Ancient Babylonian for is unlikely.
As for Namshiel. From Marcones perspective he tried doing things God's way with the Shroud of Turin trying to wake up coma girl. So he went to the other team. Pretty classic jilted criminal trope logic.
As for Gender in Angels. It's something I've toyed with in my own idea for Angelic characters. Like Raphael could just as easily be Rachael, depending on how much phlegm you put in the p/c-h. Makes for a pretty good non-binary in my head. Plus some Angel names can apply to both genders. Gabriel for instance.
Yuillegan:
--- Quote from: b4utoo on December 29, 2021, 03:32:38 AM ---After careful consideration I think this question is going nowhere. I guess it's kind of like asking if water is really wet
--- End quote ---
Technically water isn't wet. Wet is the property of solid objects when a liquid like water adheres to it.
Secondly, don't insult other people and/or their threads. If you have nothing useful and polite to contribute, then don't post at all.
I have warned you before, if you can't follow that basic precept then further action will be taken.
Conspiracy Theorist:
--- Quote from: Yuillegan on December 29, 2021, 08:36:25 PM ---Technically water isn't wet. Wet is the property of solid objects when a liquid like water adheres to it.
--- End quote ---
Sorry to nitpick, but ice cubes in water is a solid object (water at the freezing point) where a liquid like water (above the freezing point) adheres to the solid.
So yes, you can have an interesting, polite, entertaining and reasoned debate on how wet is water.
morriswalters:
Water physics?
Yuillegan:
--- Quote from: Conspiracy Theorist on December 29, 2021, 11:11:53 PM ---Sorry to nitpick, but ice cubes in water is a solid object (water at the freezing point) where a liquid like water (above the freezing point) adheres to the solid.
So yes, you can have an interesting, polite, entertaining and reasoned debate on how wet is water.
--- End quote ---
No need to apologise, it's an interesting discussion to some (myself included).
I think you answer the problem though; ice is water in it's solid state. So we call it ice. Hence is isn't wet, yet it can become wet as well as making something wet.
The key thing with wetness is that a solid and a liquid is required, or that at least is my understanding.
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