Pretty much how my writing brain works: I have a major revelation. About the metaphysics of vampires. And how they relate to demons, angels, and gods. And how all of this is just an instantiation of Thomist metaphysics, and accounts for the problem of vampire souls and disappearing gods in my story
(
Read more... )
Comments 12
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
I mean what sounds like a similar realization about vampires, or rather the mythic understructure.
Reply
What I realized was that for my purposes, the conversion to vampire has got to be an alternate type of transsubstantiation -- what once was human undergoes substantial change to become a vampire, and that new substance is not a soul that has a collection of carnal accidents (there's a phrase for you), but rather another sort of immaterial non-soul that projects the outward appearance of many of the same accidents that the former human had. Vampires have no souls not because their souls went elsewhere but because their souls transmuted into something else altogether. Moreover, the rules for killing them are different because there is no actual flesh that the vampire spirit inhabits and depends on for incarnation -- for a vampire flesh and spirit is all one thing. Likewise, it's trickier to kill demons, angels, and gods than to kill men, because immortals have not flesh to discorporate from, merely the appearance of flesh. This also accounts for why the gods disappear after they die. ( ... )
Reply
MKK
Reply
Reply
Also for me, much like taking notes with pen or keyboard, the act of recording a thought has the effect of simultaneously committing it to memory. It's like it needs to leave my brain and transfer to another medium before I can memorize it - so that along with the original thought, I now also have a memory of recording that thought. The medium doesn't seem to matter.
Reply
Reply
Leave a comment