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The Dresden Files => DF Spoilers => Topic started by: dspringer1 on September 16, 2019, 05:20:30 PM

Title: Mab's Limits
Post by: dspringer1 on September 16, 2019, 05:20:30 PM
As a general tendency, the forum generally assumes Mab is effectively all-knowing, all powerful, at least from Dresden's perspective.   

This thread is more focused on Mab's very real weaknesses.  I would argue that Mab is a key player, but nowhere close to all knowing/powerful. 

Strengths
*  Immortal
*  Fairly low powered god.  The combination of Lady, Queen and Mother is collectively equal to a strong god like Hades in power.  The Mother has the lion's share of that power, so Mab by herself has to be fairly weak in the god power scale.  I would argue that the very weakness of her god power is a strength as she suffers much less restrictions on the use of her power as compared to the more powerful gods.  The universe as described clearly has rules that severely limit the more powerful beings.  The Mother must be far more constrained than the Queen and the Lady should be less constrained than the Queen. 
*  She is Winter --- great power over cold, ice, winter, etc.   Fey are very nature focused, so expect she has great ability to influence anything winter related in nature. 
*  She is clearly very smart and capable
*  She can hear things spoken at night, especially if her name is spoken.  Great source of intelligence
*  She is a planner - always having multiple plans for every contingency
*  She commands the winter fey.  Mother may be stronger, but the queen rules day to day operations
*  She no doubt has a "bank" of favors accumulated to leverage as needed
*  She has a very capable 2nd in command in Lea -- as well as a capable (if young) Lady in Molly

Weaknesses
*  Mab shares all the weaknesses of Fey - cannot tell a lie, vulnerable to iron, bound by winter law, must honor agreements, cannot give gifts without payment. 
*  Mab is automatically countered to some extent by Summer. That is the role of Summer
*  Mab's nature is Winter Fey --> which means her reactions are somewhat predictable if you understand winter fey in general
*  Mab cannot harm a mortal directly, but must wait for them to make themselves vulnerable (via a deal) or use the Winter Knight. 
*  Mab is weaker in the summer months, which means enemies can time their threats to when she is least able to deal with them
*  Mab must devote a large chunk of her time and energy to defending the outer gates.  If she wishes to be elsewhere, she must assign a substitute (typically Lea). 
*  The Fey are not easily controlled - as evidenced by Mab's use of unyielding edicts (like nobody can go to the mortal world until dawn as seen in Cold Days) as more subtle/flexible rules are likely to be bypassed by clever fey seeking advantage.   I would also argue that the Molly as Lady short story also highlighted the restrictions Mab operates under via her conversation with Molly.  She asked Molly for alternatives and Molly could not provide them.  That implies pretty strongly that Mab is operating with some pretty significant constraints. 
*   There are MANY other powers comparable to Mab out there in the universe.   Her attention must be split to counter many of them and/or make sure their agenda does not hurt Mab's agenda.  For example, the entity behind the "worshipers" in the molly short story has nothing to do with the Outsiders, but was still a threat to Winter's interests.   Even though the Outsiders are clearly making a move, Mab cannot afford to ignore the other threats just in case they are acting while Mab is distracted. 
*  Mab has been surprised several times, so clearly her ability to find useful/critical information is limited.

What am I missing?
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Bad Alias on September 16, 2019, 06:16:40 PM
Strengths
*  She can hear things spoken at night, especially if her name is spoken.  Great source of intelligence

Weaknesses
*  Mab cannot harm a mortal directly, but must wait for them to make themselves vulnerable (via a deal) or use the Winter Knight. 
*  ... For example, the entity behind the "worshipers" in the molly short story has nothing to do with the Outsiders
As to the strength, where'd that come from? For the weaknesses, it was stated that the queens couldn't kill mortals uninvolved with the courts, but Aurora the chlorofiend was weak against Murphy, so I'm not exactly sure how that works. I'm uncertain as to how the Outsiders, the Old Ones, and the Oblivion War all relate to one another. There seems to be a lot of overlap.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: dspringer1 on September 17, 2019, 02:47:02 PM
The hear things spoken at night might be from a comment in the book - or the myths around the head of the winter I have heard in other contexts.  Sorry - cannot point to the reference, but believe it is there.

The clorofiend could distract Murphy, but I doubt it gave her anything more than light bruises.  It was so unusual given the context that it became a discussion point in that book between Murphy and Dresden -- and one of the reasons he "caught on" that the Summer Lady was his foe. 
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: g33k on September 17, 2019, 04:07:13 PM
The hear things spoken at night might be from a comment in the book - or the myths around the head of the winter I have heard in other contexts.  Sorry - cannot point to the reference, but believe it is there...
I think it's a power often attributed to the folkloric "Queen of Air and Darkness."  It certainly is explicitly one of the powers of Andais (the QoAaD in the Merry Gentry novels).  IIRC, there are several instances where Harry needs to avoid naming Mab aloud, for worry of attracting her attention.  I don't think that DF-Mab automatically hears everything at night, though.  Possibly anything she wants to / tries to hear?

... The clorofiend could distract Murphy, but I doubt it gave her anything more than light bruises.  It was so unusual given the context that it became a discussion point in that book between Murphy and Dresden -- and one of the reasons he "caught on" that the Summer Lady was his foe. 
Harry realized it must be one of the Queens, but there had been some frost/cold used against him (possibly Elaine's magic?  Or Lloyd Slate?) so he was presuming at that point a Winter foe.  He didn't realize it was Aurora 'til much later (I think in the Mothers' house).
 
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Yuillegan on September 18, 2019, 11:39:46 AM
Strengths
*  Fairly low powered god.  The combination of Lady, Queen and Mother is collectively equal to a strong god like Hades in power.  The Mother has the lion's share of that power, so Mab by herself has to be fairly weak in the god power scale.  I would argue that the very weakness of her god power is a strength as she suffers much less restrictions on the use of her power as compared to the more powerful gods.  The universe as described clearly has rules that severely limit the more powerful beings.  The Mother must be far more constrained than the Queen and the Lady should be less constrained than the Queen. 
She can hear things spoken at night, especially if her name is spoken.  Great source of intelligence
*  She commands the winter fey.  Mother may be stronger, but the queen rules day to day operations

Weaknesses
*  Mab cannot harm a mortal directly, but must wait for them to make themselves vulnerable (via a deal) or use the Winter Knight. 
*   There are MANY other powers comparable to Mab out there in the universe.   Her attention must be split to counter many of them and/or make sure their agenda does not hurt Mab's agenda.  For example, the entity behind the "worshipers" in the molly short story has nothing to do with the Outsiders, but was still a threat to Winter's interests.   Even though the Outsiders are clearly making a move, Mab cannot afford to ignore the other threats just in case they are acting while Mab is distracted. 


Lots of theories in there - I am curious about where you get your ideas from though. So let's unpack.

Mab is a low powered god - where do you have reference to this? She is clearly stronger than retired gods like Odin and the Lords of the Outer Night. In terms of your scale and the god you have compared her to (Hades), are you saying he is as strong as the Mothers (and by extension, an Archangel)? Because I have yet to hear of any evidence to support that. Archangels, and beings of their level (the Mothers, the Walkers etc) are beyond mere gods like Hades. But I am open to a discussion of an alternate point of view.

I don't believe that her power works like Anduriel's, in that she can hear all things of the night. Her title as Queen of Air and Darkness, is more to do with the human elements (reason and savagery) than the physical phenomena. Which isn't to say she has no influence (she rescued Harry from the cold dark waters of Lake Michigan) but I think this ability has never even been hinted at in the series. Her ability to hear her name is more to do with being supernatural, even Toot-toot has that.

Mother Winter serves more like the Chair of the Board, the ultimate ruler. She doesn't do day-to-day operations as she has duties and concerns that are much higher and more complex. She is more akin to a force of nature, than merely a steward of a role. As Jim says, you just obey gravity - duh.

Mab may not directly be able to harm a mortal - but she doesn't need to. She has all those other Winter Fae for that. Plus a Knight.

And the worshippers were worshipping a "sleeper" something that the Outsiders wanted released...
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: morriswalters on September 18, 2019, 01:03:37 PM
By inference Mab is capable of observing the mortal plane.  Not just listening to voices but seeing.  It has been shown to us both in Small Favor and Changes.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: dspringer1 on September 18, 2019, 05:02:30 PM
Several hints in the book that the three queens are really the three aspects of a goddess - the most recent example is the statues seen in Hades throne.  If true, the goddess is a peer of Hades in power.   

If the three collectively are equal to Hades and the Mother is FAR more powerful than the Queen, then Mab must be equivalent to a fairly weak goddess.  On a mortal scale, the difference is irrelevant, but Mab's enemies include other god and god-like beings, so it is relevant when assessing Mab's ability to discover and counter the plans of other dark forces. 
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Avernite on September 18, 2019, 05:47:26 PM
Several hints in the book that the three queens are really the three aspects of a goddess - the most recent example is the statues seen in Hades throne.  If true, the goddess is a peer of Hades in power.   

If the three collectively are equal to Hades and the Mother is FAR more powerful than the Queen, then Mab must be equivalent to a fairly weak goddess.  On a mortal scale, the difference is irrelevant, but Mab's enemies include other god and god-like beings, so it is relevant when assessing Mab's ability to discover and counter the plans of other dark forces.

Hecate once was a peer of Hades, aye.

But Hades faded, while "Hecate's" Fae conquered human perception of the forces of nature. The Twice-Triple Queen is not only Hecate, but far more.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Kindler on September 18, 2019, 07:27:00 PM
If Mab/Molly/Mother Winter are Hecate, then what are Titania/Sarissa/Mother Summer? Are they also Hecate?
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Bad Alias on September 18, 2019, 09:06:37 PM
If Mab/Molly/Mother Winter are Hecate, then what are Titania/Sarissa/Mother Summer? Are they also Hecate?
Yes, if I recall correctly. See the chapter in Skin Game where they enter Hades' vault and see the statues.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Regenbogen on September 18, 2019, 09:08:45 PM
If Mab/Molly/Mother Winter are Hecate, then what are Titania/Sarissa/Mother Summer? Are they also Hecate?
That doesn't make sense to me. Perhaps the essence of Hecate is spread over the world in different Trios. Summer and Winter Hecate being only one example. Shakespeare's three witches (bubble, bubble,...) and many more manifestations.

Hekate as goddess of magic, necromancy, crossroads, thresholds, in between, and guardian of the gates between worlds (translated from wikipedia).

... gates between worlds -> the Outer Gates...
Goddess of the inbetween. Human universe -> Fairie <- the Outside
Goddess of necromancy... What? OK. Didn't know that, but it makes sense because of the thresholds an in between.

How does that apply to Mab?
I think it doesn't. At least not to Mab alone, but to all three Queens of Winter combined. Mab is just the aspect of the adult one of the three, who is currently in charge though the Mother has still the last word if she wants to.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Bad Alias on September 18, 2019, 10:14:34 PM
There is an idea from Neopaganism that Hecate (or really any triple goddess) is the maiden, mother, crone. "However, to Neopagans, as a triple Goddess, Hecate represents Maiden, Mother and Crone." http://www.hecatescauldron.org/The%20Goddess%20Hecate.htm (http://www.hecatescauldron.org/The%20Goddess%20Hecate.htm). "Though the existence of a triple goddess associated with the Moon and with magic existed in classical pagan religion, the specific character of the modern neopagan Maiden, Mother, and Crone archetype is not found in any ancient sources, in which both Diana and Hecate were almost invariably described as maiden goddesses, with an appearance like that of a young woman." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triple_Goddess_(Neopaganism) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triple_Goddess_(Neopaganism)), internal citations omitted.

I don't recall how much of the following is confirmed and how much was commonly accepted theory here on the forums. In the DF, Hecate was a maiden, mother, crone god. When whatever happened with the Greek gods and fairies happened, Hecate further split in two. Her maiden aspect split into the two ladies, mother into the two queens, and the crone into the mothers. There is also something about them (the Fairy Queens) being the three fates, Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos. In Greek mythology, Hecate doesn't have much to do with the three fates. It's all very confused.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Bacail on September 19, 2019, 12:41:37 AM
I don't recall how much of the following is confirmed and how much was commonly accepted theory here on the forums. In the DF, Hecate was a maiden, mother, crone god. When whatever happened with the Greek gods and fairies happened, Hecate further split in two. Her maiden aspect split into the two ladies, mother into the two queens, and the crone into the mothers. There is also something about them (the Fairy Queens) being the three fates, Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos. In Greek mythology, Hecate doesn't have much to do with the three fates. It's all very confused.

Keep in mind that we have also seen evidence of more Norse mythos in Summer and Winter.  Recall in Cold Days when the mantles were passed that Summer's took the form of an Eagle and Winter of a Serpent.  Among other mentions of these two, its strongly brings to mind the Eagle and Serpent of the World Tree in Norse mythology.  Skuld (meaning Debt or Future)is one of the names of Mother Winter, who was just one of MANY Norns, though one of the three Big Norns (along with Urðr (Fate) and Verðandi(Happening or Present))  Also, Skuld was also considered a Valkyrie in two Norse poems.  So it's actually A LOT more convoluted than just Hecate.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Bad Alias on September 19, 2019, 01:30:47 AM
Skuld (meaning Debt or Future)is [possibly] one of the names of Mother Winter.
Mother Summer was somewhat vague in how correct Harry was and specifically which way he was correct.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Yuillegan on September 19, 2019, 06:55:43 AM
The whole Faerie Queens = Hecate thing is just a theory. An interesting one, but by no means the only one. And it has never been confirmed.

What everyone always seems to forget is the sheer Power of things like Uriel. He is so strong he doesn't do contested violence, he has terminated galaxies and even whole universes (WOJ). Mother Summer and Winter are at the same level, and so apparently are the Walkers (HWWBh and HWWBf). But they are all limited because of their extreme might, and so can only use that incredible power in very specific ways at very specific times. This is all WOJ. And lastly, Uriel is considered a Senior Vice President of Creation. Assuming TWG is the President and Chairmen, I really highly doubt Hades and Hecate are at the same level. There are SO MANY gods. Thousands, possibly more depending on the limits Jim has set. There are only two Mothers, three Walkers and five Archangels. That tells you something right there.

And one more thing, there is a WOJ about how the Fae are agents of those whose influence was waning in the world, and so poured a whole lot of power into them in order to maintain that influence by proxy. This hints pretty strongly that many of the old gods put their power into the Fae in order to make them much more than what they were. This goes a long way to explaining their many links to the various religions and mythologies. There was a very interesting WAG that it was Hecate who all the power was poured into, but she was split in two (Summer and Winter) and the Queens are just different aspects of the original being, and the main bit that is left is Mother Winter (on account of the fact she has never changed). But that too is just a theory.

What is clear enough, is that Hades is not at the same level as the Mothers, and therefore cannot be as great in power as all SIX Queens combined. That would be insane. He would then be stronger than two Archangels combined plus extra. It isn't impossible I suppose, but considering everything we know about Power in the series and the various beings, it just doesn't add up.

Also Hades hasn't faded, he isn't like Vadderung. He simply is less involved - by Choice partially but also because of the balance of powers. See the WOJ about sleeping deities.

Morriswalters - Mab, and I suspect many other beings have some form of Farsight or Scrying etc. This is not the same thing as being able to hear and observe every thing that happens in the dark. Not in the same way Anduriel can. Don't you think that would have been revealed by now? No. It is more likely that when she chooses, she can try and observe various events as they happen (and perhaps see into the past and various possible futures, to some degree). Vadderung, Leah, Uriel and others have all shown the ability too, and I suspect they are far from the only ones. Hell, even Harry can view events happening from beyond himself either by scrying (using Little Chicago) or even through premonition.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Bacail on September 19, 2019, 07:40:59 AM
Mother Summer was somewhat vague in how correct Harry was and specifically which way he was correct.

"He knew certain names.  He was not wholly stupid in choosing them, or wholly wrong in using them." -Mother Winter, Cold Days. Page 383 of the Paperback. 

Since he only called her by two actual Names (Atropos, Skuld) and Mother Summer said, "It was not an imbecilic guess, she said.  And, yes, she has been known by such names before. But you've only guess the name of one of her masks-not our most powerful name."  Atropos and Skuld are in fact two names for Mother Winter, but also two different names for the same aspect of Mother Winter.  And that aspect is only ONE of Mother Winter's, of which she has more and some of them might be shared with Mother Summer. 
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Bad Alias on September 19, 2019, 03:14:13 PM
@Bacail: Was it "the name" or "the names?"

@Yuillegan: The biggest piece of evidence is the the statues of the fairy queens in Hades' vault that Ascher identifies as Hecate. The way the statues are described are very similar to statues of Hecate with the exception that there aren't any ancient Greek statutes showing her as maiden, mother, crone. A chapter or two after we see the statues, Hades talks about Hecate's wedding gift to him, which is part of the origin story for seasons in Greek mythology.

That they are the Fates, and which ones, is pretty much confirmed by WoJ.
Quote
Posted byu/thefran
6 years ago
Who are the other two Moiras?
Apparently, Mother Winter is Atropos, 'cept for a cleaver instead of scissors.

Mother Summer is more likely Clotho with her duty to grant life. This leaves Lachesis
jimbutcherauthor
127 points
·
6 years ago
Right model, but you've got it misaligned by 90 degrees. :)
If they're the Fates, I don't see why they'd be Hecate too.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Bacail on September 19, 2019, 03:50:03 PM
@Bacail: Was it "the name" or "the names?"
That they are the Fates, and which ones, is pretty much confirmed by WoJ.If they're the Fates, I don't see why they'd be Hecate too.
Names, plural.  Those are direct quotes from the books that i posted.  So that would mean that mother winter is both Atropos AND Skuld, among any other mantles she holds.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Bad Alias on September 19, 2019, 04:08:40 PM
"she has been known by such names." Such - of the type previously mentioned. (Google definition). This means Mother Winter has been called by similar, but not necessarily the same, names before.

"But you've only guessed the name of one of her masks." Emphasis added. Singular. This strongly implies that one of the two names guessed is incorrect and one is correct.

This has been informative because it could be that the Greek name is wrong and the Norse name is correct. Therefore, the Queens could be Hecate and the Norns. The WoJ is vague enough that the "right model" has the wrong inputs and it should of been Skuld instead of Atropos. I still lean to them being the Greek Fates. If the second quote had been plural instead of singular, I'd say we've confirmed that Mother Winter is Atropos and Skuld, or at least part of them, but with it being singular, I don't see how she can be both.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Avernite on September 20, 2019, 04:08:38 PM
My personal read of it is that Atropos and Skuld are both names for one mask of Mother Winter, referring as they do to the same concept (mask).

That being the case, I suspect the Fae started as two triune goddesses. The Fates/Norns/... and Hecate/Gullveig/... (or Freyja for the Norse version, or maybe Freyja is Gullveig, or...) being mashed together into the twice-triple Queens. Then they probably used the Stone Table to murder a bunch of other old goddesses (and gods, for all we know) and take their power.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Bad Alias on September 20, 2019, 06:39:36 PM
Atropos and Skuld are names, Harry only guessed a name. It'd be conclusive if she had said "But you've only guessed the names of one of her masks." As it says the name, I don't see how you're reading it as "names." As I see it, the only way she is both is if Jim made a grammatical mistake/typo.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Snark Knight on September 21, 2019, 12:27:50 PM
For example, the entity behind the "worshipers" in the molly short story has nothing to do with the Outsiders, but was still a threat to Winter's interests.   Even though the Outsiders are clearly making a move, Mab cannot afford to ignore the other threats just in case they are acting while Mab is distracted.


Not exactly. The sleeping Old Ones are the lovecraftian dark gods. The Outsiders are their exiled servants and soldiers. Their goal for breaching reality is to get in and reunite with their masters to wake them up.

So knocking down Old One cults is actually just as fundamental to Winter's war as holding the Gates.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Regenbogen on September 21, 2019, 01:04:33 PM

Not exactly. The sleeping Old Ones are the lovecraftian dark gods. The Outsiders are their exiled servants and soldiers. Their goal for breaching reality is to get in and reunite with their masters to wake them up.

So knocking down Old One cults is actually just as fundamental to Winter's war as holding the Gates.

Agreed. Because...

'That is not dead which can eternal lie, and with strange aeons even death may die.' (H.P. Lovecraft)
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Yuillegan on September 21, 2019, 01:20:22 PM
Avernite - I think you are essentially correct. I believe a coalition of gods from many pantheons got together and used the Stone Table to transfer a LOT of power into the Sidhe. But not so sure it was murder, rather I think it was sacrifice. I think it was done not to detriment the gods, but to help them. WOJ is that the Sidhe were given power by agents who thought their influence in the mortal world was waning.

Bad Alias - I think the Gaia theory is more likely here. I think that because of all the different gods and goddesses pouring in their power, that is how they became what they are. But I think they were always important in the various pantheons (Moirae in Greek, Norns in Norse, Devi/Kali/Parvati etc) and then gained additional significance and power.

Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: dspringer1 on September 23, 2019, 03:44:28 PM
What everyone always seems to forget is the sheer Power of things like Uriel. He is so strong he doesn't do contested violence, he has terminated galaxies and even whole universes (WOJ). Mother Summer and Winter are at the same level, and so apparently are the Walkers (HWWBh and HWWBf).

Nothing in the book that I have seen says that Urial and Mother Winter are at the same level.   What makes you believe they are equivalent?   




But they are all limited because of their extreme might, and so can only use that incredible power in very specific ways at very specific times.

I would argue that "estimating how limited a godlike being is" would be the only way to measure the power of a godlike being.  A more limited being is a more powerful being.  Uriel is incredibly limited, while Mother Winter is so mysterious that it is hard to tell.  Hades is very limited, although it is unclear how much of that is choice vs hard limits.  Ambiguity on power level seems a feature of the dresden universe.   



There are SO MANY gods. Thousands, possibly more depending on the limits Jim has set. There are only two Mothers, three Walkers and five Archangels. That tells you something right there.

Not sure this makes sense to me.  There are thousands of gods, but there is only one Odin and only one Hades.  So not really sure why your counts communicate anything about power. 

Also do not forget that there is a multiverse.  There might be thousands of gods, but only a relative handful are active or engaged in any way with the Dresden world's universe.   And it is not clear at all (until Mirror Mirror) whether Mab/Mother Winter exists in more than one multiverse.  These other universes might have different guardians at the outer gates.   It might even be possible that in some worlds the outer gates have fallen where in others they stand.   So I can totally see thousands of gods of roughly equal power across the multiverse, with most of those simply not active or so limited in their access to the Dresden universe that they have effectively no power in that universe. 





What is clear enough, is that Hades is not at the same level as the Mothers, and therefore cannot be as great in power as all SIX Queens combined. That would be insane. He would then be stronger than two Archangels combined plus extra. It isn't impossible I suppose, but considering everything we know about Power in the series and the various beings, it just doesn't add up.

It is not clear to me how you are determining Hades is at the same level as the mothers.  The speculation that Hades is comparable to Hecate is based purely on mythology.  But neither mythology or anything that occurred in the books would give any insight as to the relative power of Hades vs the Mothers.   Can you please identify why you feel the two are equivalent? 


Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Bad Alias on September 23, 2019, 04:16:12 PM
I think there is a WoJ stating that the Mothers are in the same league as archangels or maybe angels. The problem with saying that means they're the same is like saying that the worst and best baseball teams are in the same league, so they are equal.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Yuillegan on September 25, 2019, 10:16:34 AM
Dspringer, I will answer your questions one at a time as best I can.

Nothing in the book that I have seen says that Urial and Mother Winter are at the same level.   What makes you believe they are equivalent?   
Right, so Uriel there actually have been multiple references both in-text and WOJ that say they are operating at the same level. I am not going to do all your homework here but there are several examples. Initially in the early books, in Summer Knight, Mab and Titania are considered to have power to rival the archangels and lesser gods (SK, Ch 23, p172). Harry then goes on to say that the Mothers are an order of magnitude above them. This is partially retconned as Mab and Titania in the later books no longer seem to be at the same level as Archangels, merely being at the level of the gods (not specified whether lesser or greater, or what the difference is between those categories, but very much explained that they outrank most gods). Jim also backs this up several times in interviews - he discusses that gods (or retired gods) like Erlking and Kringle, whilst being peers of Mab, are her equals. She is the boss of the worst of the worst for a reason. In their home turf they might be more dangerous to her, but that's the home field advantage. In Dead Beat when Cowl attempts to become a dark god using the Darkhallow (specified in the book as minor-league but this too may have been retconned in favour of him being greater), a question was put to Jim of who we had met thus far who could take Mab (assuming she was outside Faerie all alone, with no army or back up). Ferrovax, Titania (coin toss), the Mothers (who wouldn't), Drakul, all the White Council with her name, all the Reds, all the White Court, a union of the old Elders of the Black Court, and Cowl if he had completed the Darkhallow. When questioned if Cowl would really be that strong from eating just a bunch of spirits, Jim replied that was how beings like the Erlking became so boss in the first place (which is why he is part of the spell), and that the power-sucking Stone Table isn't for nothing ;)

Whilst Mab is powerful, there are WOJs describing fights between Angels as blowing up planets, which is why they don't generally get involved like that in the first place. Uriel doesn't even really do contested violence, as he just thinks about annihilating galaxies and it just happens. There are multiple WOJs on this. In text, Harry even says he knew (like knowing with intellectus) that Uriel could take out all the planets everywhere just by thinking about them. There is even a really rare WOJ replying to a fan on FB in a private group where he said Uriel has ended universes. Mab and Titania are not in that league.

And finally in Cold Days, Harry even compares summoning Mother Winter just shy of calling up Lucifer himself. If that isn't a close enough comparison...

I would argue that "estimating how limited a godlike being is" would be the only way to measure the power of a godlike being.  A more limited being is a more powerful being.  Uriel is incredibly limited, while Mother Winter is so mysterious that it is hard to tell.  Hades is very limited, although it is unclear how much of that is choice vs hard limits.  Ambiguity on power level seems a feature of the dresden universe.   

You could argue that Choice is what makes you truly powerful. But I am comparing Power (energy) and Will (the ability to direct that energy). In Summer Knight there is a good example of this. The Mothers ask Harry what happens when something is stolen (including power) and he guesses it can be hoarded (as Dragons do) and it can rendered valueless or sold (both of which are change). When Lily is turned into a stone statue she is full of the power of the Summer Knight. She has a mantle. But as she is unable to express it, unable to use her will, the Power is rendered somewhat useless. Which is not to say that she has no power. She just can't use it at that point. But on the other hand, if you only have Will and no Power what can you do? Very little indeed. Which would seem a lot to something with little to no Will of its own, but to something with both Power and enough Will to use it - like another mortal for example - you are obviously at a massive disadvantage. It is all about the balance, the ratio. It is clear as you get higher in one you get less in the other. But it doesn't change the fact you have it in the first place. So Mother Winter, Uriel, HWWBh all have strong limits. Yet in the right circumstances can change reality and affect everything on a incredible scale. So while it might be a little here or there in terms of their full bench press amount, it doesn't really matter. Power has purpose. So they can do what they need to do when it is the right circumstances for them to act.

Not sure this makes sense to me.  There are thousands of gods, but there is only one Odin and only one Hades.  So not really sure why your counts communicate anything about power. 

Well actually we don't know that there is only the one Odin or the one Hades. That hasn't been established at all. But we do know that there is only the one Uriel, the one Lucifer etc. These guys are multiverse spanning beings - they operate at on a completely different scale. The fact that there is only a handful of these beings in all the multiverse, one of each individual in fact, shows that they are far more important to the overall cosmology than a Hades or Odin.

Also do not forget that there is a multiverse.  There might be thousands of gods, but only a relative handful are active or engaged in any way with the Dresden world's universe.   And it is not clear at all (until Mirror Mirror) whether Mab/Mother Winter exists in more than one multiverse.  These other universes might have different guardians at the outer gates.   It might even be possible that in some worlds the outer gates have fallen where in others they stand.   So I can totally see thousands of gods of roughly equal power across the multiverse, with most of those simply not active or so limited in their access to the Dresden universe that they have effectively no power in that universe. 
So pretty much answered this in my above point, but you basically make my point for me. We don't know that the gods are multiverse spanning individuals. Nothing in WOJ or in the books suggests this. We do know that Vadderung was theoretically aware of possible split universes, but wasn't 100% sure. He talks to Harry about this (specifically paradoxes) in Cold Days. And yes, while you may be correct that Mab may not exist across the multiverse, it would be strange if multiple Mother Winter's existed considering she is at the same level as other multiverse straddling beings. There indeed may be different guardians of the gates in different worlds. But they would all have a power source, who might wear a different mask in each universe. But underneath those masks is the same being. Mother Winter (or whatever is under that...)

It is not clear to me how you are determining Hades is at the same level as the mothers.  The speculation that Hades is comparable to Hecate is based purely on mythology.  But neither mythology or anything that occurred in the books would give any insight as to the relative power of Hades vs the Mothers.   Can you please identify why you feel the two are equivalent? 

I have never determined that Hades is at the same level as the Mothers. In fact I entirely disagree with that. Hades and Hecate were peers in mythology, but by no means was she the level of Hades. He had far more importance, and was considered so in ancient times. I was disagreeing with the comparison that Hecate is the being that makes up SIX Queens of Faeries, two of which are Archangel level. If Hecate makes up all six, and Hades is her peer or stronger, then he would have to be stronger than two Archangels plus extra and maybe a lot more so. Which would probably put him close to the Almighty. Jim's books give a lot of power to faith and belief, and Hades isn't very actively worshiped compared to the BILLIONS that worship the Almighty (in his various names - Jehovah, Yaweh, Allah etc). It just isn't rational. Now there may be no direct comparison in the books or in WOJ - probably because there really doesn't need to be. It is pretty straight forward with the pieces Jim has given to us.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: dspringer1 on September 25, 2019, 03:20:19 PM
Yuillegan

Interesting discussion.  My rebuttal 😊

I think we both agree that Mab is not equal to an archangel.    I remember a comment in the book implied that Mab and Uriel are in the same business, but that does not mean they are in the same level. 

I believe that the Mother is not equal to an Archangel.  None of your arguments in favor of this fact seemed persuasive. 


The Argument that the Lady, the Queen and the Mother are one individual is based on really two things in my mind.   
1)   The constant repetitions of the three statue theme in multiple settings (arctus tor, hades vault) with each time the author clearly indicting it is significant
2)   What happens when a Lady (or Queen) dies.  When a Lady dies, her power flows to the Queen.  When a Queen dies the lady becomes the Queen.  Presumably the same is found for the mother.  Like flows to like is the phrase used.   That tells me the power is the same.   It is not three Mantles, but one mantle with three parts.   

My point about “counts” is that the fact that there is one of some being or three of some being or a thousand of some other group says nothing about the power of any individual being discussed.  Power determines power, not how many others match your power.    The exact count of gods or archangels tells you nothing about their power. 

I do agree with you that any being that exists in multiple universes is almost certainly more powerful than a being that exists in just one. 

I disagree with you about the gods being multiverse.   I would argue that the stories confirm that the gods are multiverse, as do the WOJ.   Almost the entire conversation about the role of Ivy talks to this.   The whole point of what Ivy is doing is to “disconnect” a god from this world.  By blocking the memory of the god, that god loses contact with this universe.    I remember at least one other Harry digression where he talked to gods being active in some universes and not others.     Based on how described, no one god is probably active in all universes and probably many gods are active in only one.  But it is clear that at least some godlike entities are active in more than one universe. 

Given the close relationship between the Mother and the Queen, I find it hard to believe that one is mulit-versal and the other is not.   Not sure what the correct answer is, but I am positive that the answer is the same for both. 

There does seem some relationship between belief and power, but it is not a count.  A being with a billion worshipers is not many times more powerful than one with a few thousand worshipers.  I think worship is important, but it is not the primary determination of power.  A clear example is Hades who has great power, but probably no worshipers remaining on the planet (although he is a favorite in fiction).   I suspect worshipers/fans are necessary to provide an anchor in this world and more worshipers/fans make it easier to influence the world.    That certainly impacts the effective power of a being.   But there is little evidence that worshipers have a huge impact on raw power. 
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: g33k on September 25, 2019, 08:42:43 PM
... If Hecate makes up all six, and Hades is her peer or stronger, then he would have to be stronger than two Archangels plus extra and maybe a lot more so. Which would probably put him close to the Almighty...

Probably not.

I suspect strongly that the Almighty in the Dresdenverse is just that:  Almighty.  There is no "close to..." because no matter how much power you add to your existing power, you never reach infinite power... which is the Almighty.

Angels -- both Fallen and not -- allege that they were there at the beginning of time, that they saw the original Act of Creation.

As witnesses, their universe-spanning powers not needed.

None of the other powers we've seen onscreen have raised a similar claim; no Faeries, no Gods, etc.

 
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Yuillegan on September 26, 2019, 12:06:17 PM
Fair enough Dspringer, I will take that as feedback. :) I need to work at convincing people and I did write a lot of text. I don't want to distort too much from the OP at this stage so I will leave it alone for now.

We both agree that Mab and Archangels are not the same level, but to correct you statement that they are in the same business but not the same level, see the below quote from Summer Knight. I put it in my last post but I admit it probably got hidden in all that text.

Quote
"Of course" Lea said. "They each exist in opposition. Each wields vast power, wizard - power to rival the archangels and lesser gods.
(SK, Ch 23, p172)
I have bolded the relevant bit. Lea is telling Harry about Mab and Titania after he has just looked at the with the Sight. As I said, this got retconned later in the series. Some still believe it is the case the Mab and Uriel are at the same level, but considering how unrestricted Mab is compared to the Mothers and/or the Archangels (in terms of her ability to influence and act in the mortal plane, her ability to show up regularly, and several WOJs) it is pretty obvious that Jim restructured his power rankings in the series.

I will leave you with this WOJ though:
 
Info about really powerful beings
The Mothers are extremely powerful beings, I mean, they’re really really well, you can tell because they hardly ever show up on the real world. In the Dresden Files universe if you don’t show up on the real world, it’s because you’re too big to walk around there. For instance,  I think in the third book, when the Dragon is talking about how the Earth couldn’t bear his weight, it’s not that the Earth itself would literally crack, it’s that reality would have issues trying to contain him, because every time he coughs, it would bend around like Neo in the Matrix. So, they spend most of their time NOT on the real world, they spend it hanging around in the Nevernever, all the really heavyweight guys do that. If you’re in the real world, well, the problem is that you’re in the world, and you’re kind of mortal, and something could come along and try and whack you, if they’re fast enough, or good enough, or lucky enough. Which makes Odin a kind of special guy, because he doesn’t mind it, he thinks it’s awesome. But anyway, you can always tell. If there’s folks who don’t show up in the real world, it’s because they’re super big. So, like, an angel shows up, and it’s just sort of a whispered presence that one person is aware of, that’s because he’s just too big to show up here, it’s a giant sandbox, and he’s got to be very very careful to not squash the sandbox. So, he just shows up for that one bit.
Kiama Australia Q&A

He is referring to when Uriel whispers to Dresden at the end of Ghost Story. He often uses the term angel and archangel interchangeably for Uriel, because Uriel is of course both. Species and rank. I have bolded the relevant bits so that you can see that Jim is comparing the two. He isn't saying they both add up to exactly 8 miles high, but they are both mountains. That puts them well beyond almost everything else, except the Walkers and the Old Ones. There is WOJ on that too.


One other thing that is relevant to the OP - in Welcome to the Jungle (the DF graphic novel), Harry encounters Hecatean Hags. These have skin like tank armor, razor sharp claws, glamours, more and stronger magic than Dresden does at the time, and are extremely long lived (having survived since ancient Greece). They were Hecate's greatest fans, her cult, and take a hell of a lot to kill. They are attempting an ascension rite. Bob tells Harry that this was how Hecate came to be in the first place. I think that is highly significant. She was a powerful witch (either mortal or monster like the Hags) and then completed her rite of ascension to become a god.

If Hecate is all the Queens of Faerie, and the Fae only came into being relatively recently, and Hecate herself only ascended several thousand years ago, and the Angels and Archangels existed before Time was a thing (WOJ plus multiple book references to witnessing the beginning of Creation) - then is how could Hecate be so powerful? Could she really match beings that existed before the parts she is made of existed? Even her magic?

G33k - I agree. TWG (Almighty) is just plain beyond anything we have encountered. That is pretty clear - and I am not biased I don't believe in God. Don't mind if others do either though. But I think it is clear that is what Jim has set. TWG is literally everywhere and sees everything, and in particular knows everything (and in the series Power and Knowledge seem to go hand in hand). No other beings have we seen have that much power.

Just to correct you - it is NOT just that the angels allege their origins as being before time, there is WOJ to support this.

@longshotauthor In the Dresden Files, are the fallen 4.6 billion years old or approx 4000? Big bang vs God making everything really.
@GiftedMonster How do you know that before the Big Bang, God didn’t say “Let there be light.” :) It’s fantasy fiction, Ashely, not theology 
@GiftedMonster Though for the record, the Dresden universe angels have been around since before time was a Thing. #TemporalHipsters

We don't really know their involvement with the act of Creation itself, we just know they were there "when" it happened (which by the way is an oxymoron, you can't have a when before Time). Yeah, no other beings apart from them have made that claim or connection. So I would say it is pretty relevant.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: dspringer1 on October 01, 2019, 10:48:14 PM
Fair -

Although you quote implies that archangels are equivalent to lesser gods.  Given they can destroy galaxies, it tells you something about the power of greater gods.  :)

Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Yuillegan on October 02, 2019, 06:53:18 AM
That quote is now outdated. Jim has actually retconned that information.

Since Summer Knight things have changed significantly in the Power rankings :)
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: g33k on October 02, 2019, 06:11:14 PM
That quote is now outdated. Jim has actually retconned that information.

Since Summer Knight things have changed significantly in the Power rankings :)

Do we have a nice neat (and current!) WOJ'ed ranking/list?
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Yuillegan on October 03, 2019, 08:21:32 AM
The short answer, g33k, is no. No one power ranking list tied up with a bow.

There are however several WOJ's that deal with power rankings. The substance gets a bit confused, as the way Jim seems to view Power is a combination of the term that is used in physics (the rate of heat transferrence or "doing work") and the term in social and political theory (authority and leverage), and skill level seems to fit in as well. Jim has said that Molly in someways is much more powerful than Dresden as a wizard (including before Cold Days) due to her exceptional talent for veils, psychomancy and illusions (both physical and mental). What I think he is really talking about here is how useful a wizard is in certain circumstances, or how dangerous a wizard is to both mortals and the magical community. Wizards normally are not too worried by veils and physical illusions as the Sight (and various tools like the grey ointment) allow them to pierce those constructs. However, Psychomancy gives Molly a real edge over most Wizards as their training is quite limited. But all her skills make her in some ways much more dangerous and influential on a larger scale than Dresden can be to the mortal world. But we often (like Dresden) think about it in terms of who would win this slugfest, so that shapes our views.

In the series however it has been noted by many readers that there are power creeps, retcons and inconsistencies over time. I think there are several threads on these boards alone, not to mention on other platforms such as reddit.

This makes ranking individuals in the Dresden Files a tricky prospect at best, as there is insufficient information for many beings and inconsistent examples (some which are believed to be intentional). 

Jim has also talked about what makes the Merlin (Arthur Langtry) the most powerful Wizard in the world. Right off the bat is his control of the White Council, one of the most powerful and influential organisations in the magical (and probably mortal) world - both as the man who manages their significant financial interests (Jim has said he could ruin countrie's economies with the wealth that the White Council has available to it), and the chief administrator he can mobilise great movement in the entire world. Even if he had no magic at all, that would make him tremendously powerful. Remember he commands the Blackstaff, the Wardens (and potentially has some oversight over THE Warden), several thousand Wizards,  and to some degree the Gatekeeper (although he seems very respectful of Rashid's boundaries), and probably any other positions we don't know of yet. But he also is incredibly strong magically speaking too (his natural gifts for Wards and mental communication aside, he probably has more knowledge of deep magic and other secrets that perhaps only he is privy to like a President or some such). He would also likely be an extremely accomplished Wizard in most areas of magic due to his advanced age and position - the Wizards wouldn't have elected just anybody to the role. Not to mention, he is know to be a strong and highly capable politician. It is no accident he leads the White Council - his ambition and force of will would have got him there. Which doesn't make him deadlier than Rashid, or more likely to win a magic brawl than Ebenezar. But the sum of his power (in terms of both physical, personal, political and social) is far greater than theirs. Which is why he is respected. This is what Jim is getting at.

What does this mean in terms of Gods, Archangels and Faeries Queens etc? That we probably shouldn't look at it in terms of "who could win that arm wrestle". But as the famous WOJ about who could take Mab discusses - there are several beings that have the necessary horsepower tp do it. So Jim brings it back to physical terminology. But then he reminds us at the end, that Mab is more than her muscles - her office, her lands, her armies all contribute to the sum of her power. Which make her far more formidable than most, even those that might out-muscle her. Only a few really completely over-match her, all things considered.

To give a really great Q&A answer from one of Jim's AMA's
Quote
6)Do you prefer to sit down and crunch the numbers on feats of strength and power output for your supernatural creatures, or do you prefer to just look at the scale of the effect and figure out what seems right for the story and tier of entity?
6. Both. :)

2012 Reddit AMA:
Quote
sapph42: You’ve talked about beings who were on similar (or greater) power levels as Mab – Titania (obviously), Drakul, and Ferrovax to name a few. However, I believe that list was generated before Changes. Where does Odin fall on that list? Hypothetically (assuming they exist), where would entities such as Zeus or Quetzalcoatl fall?
Jim: 4) Your question presupposes a linear hierarchy–which isn’t surprising, since the series has come from Harry’s viewpoint, and Harry is a straight-lines kind of thinker. Power is a much more nebulous thing than that, and something that is problematic to quantify. I think a reasonably simple argument could be made that Molly is a /much/ more powerful wizard than Dresden, for example. And in many situations, she probably is. Dresden tends to think in terms of “who would win this slugfest” when he’s dealing with the supernatural world because, well, of all the slugfests.
Odin isn’t gonna slugfest with you. He /could/. But that isn’t the Allfather’s style. Odin saw you coming last year, and he made his countermoves to what you’re doing right now a week and a half ago. For guys like him, fights are what happen when you /fail/ to win with /real/ power–knowledge and forethought.
Of course, sometimes everyone’s knowledge and forethought cancels each other’s actions out, and then it’s time to get all Monday Night Nitro. No one in the Dresden Files universe is really sure how that would shake out. But everyone on that level knows that they might be about to find out

I am not going to find all the threads that relate to this for you, they are out there if you want to do your own research. But it is generally accepted that in the early series Jim had not established all the rules and structures fully yet, hence later inconsistencies in the books. :)

Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: morriswalters on October 03, 2019, 10:17:13 AM
Mab will be as strong or as weak as Jim needs her to be as required by the story.
Title: Re: Mab's Limits
Post by: Yuillegan on October 03, 2019, 10:52:53 AM
Of course, but that applies to any character in any given tale.

We can still extrapolate information however based on the rules that the series has set up. So it isn't unreasonable to guess at her relative power to other beings of the series.