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Fellows,
In my trilogy "Dythus," there are two basic divisions between all creatures: Being or Beast. The division emerges when one applies Mark 12:30, "And you shall love the LORD your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength. This is the first commandment." Both Beasts and Beings have all but one of these attributes (heart, soul, mind, bodily strength) in common, and that exclusive one is, of course, the soul. Any animal can reason, solve a riddle, build impressive architecture, and a few can learn math and speech. Therefore, a Beast can use the mind, same as a Being. Any animal can experience emotions of loyalty, sadness, and happiness. Therefore, a Beast can use the heart, same as any Being. Any animal can use its physical body to overcome and assist another. Therefore, a Beast can use their strength the same as any Being. However, can a Beast use its soul? No, because it does not have one. And curiously, because it has no soul, a Beast is limited intellectually (can an animal teach itself, or is it merely taught?), emotionally (can an animal write music, poetry, and so on?), and physically (will an animal buffet its own body? Though a Beast's strength can often overcome a humans', will it seek to make itself yet stronger?). Therefore, because they have the benefit of the Soul, Beings assume lordship of my world (and this one as well, you may notice). The Soul is simply the God-shaped hole in the Being that must be filled - the quest of every Being to find It leads to their incredible ability to learn, adapt, and create. In addition, curious bi-products emerge such as imagination, wisdom, religion, political government, art, and theory. In the real world, we like to call it "the thing that makes us most human" - because it genuinely does!
The Beasts are all in common: Dragons, Griffins, Fairies, Goblins, Common Animals, Talking Animals (which in my series, in order to uphold the "Beast or Being" ideology, must be taught to speak by a Being, and cannot learn it themselves, though they can be taught by each other - granted not very well), and so on. The Beasts, because they lack a soul, have no God-shaped hole within them. They are therefore easily tamed or simply untamable. With the guidance of Beings (especially a certain one named Palavini), many have reached levels of great intellect and artistry, even to the point of wearing clothes, cooking their food, walking on hind legs, and carving furniture for their burrows. However, once removed from tutelage, a Beast will slowly regress to its natural state. One side note to go with this idea of training animals to be like people, is not a domesticated dog or cat merely a creature who's adopted human habits and dropped their wild ones?
The Beings are divided into races: Dwarves, Humans, Vulgrak, Hak'tal (though this is a big debate among the intellectuals of my world), Shelo (also a big debate), Giants, Fauns, and several others. Each race represents a worldview. For instance, the Dwarves represent New Darwinism, Agnosticism, or Aristotelean Atheism, depending on which kind of Dwarf you pick (Black Bearded, Brown Bearded, or Red Bearded). The Beings rule the governments of my world, and fight with each other most often. However, a series of battles called The Wild Wars is the first between only Beings and Beasts.
Though I could go into more depth, this is the basic summary of my Genre of Race in the world of my protagonist, Dythus. The neat thing about this ideology is its theoretical questions, which are very fun to sort out - for instance: can a Being lose its soul (it's happened in the real world), and if it does, will it regress into a Beast?
This page is officially open for discussion and comment.
Desiderio Domini, Palavini
_________________ He is worthy of all praise, and my praise is unworthy.
Last edited by Pavalini on July 24th, 2010, 11:00 am, edited 1 time in total.
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