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Friday, December 1, 2006

Out of the Silent Planet

One point about the analysis: it is true that the inhabitants of Mars represent intelligent races which had not experienced The Fall. However, the novel also references a cataclysm which resulted in the extinction of the former inhabitants of the planet, hence the "red stone clouds" which give Mars its distictive coloration, and the story of the origin of the Martial "canals".

:And who do you suppose caused the cataclysm? Could it be...? Also, it resulted in the extinction of only one racethe other three survived.

Anyway, I'm impressed by this article! My evidence that Maleldil is the Son is that he's "the Young" and the hrossa say he lives with the Old One, who I take to be the Father. Also the best line in ''Perelandra'', something like "Am I not also named Ransom?"

Mosquito ringtone User:JerryFriedman/JerryFriedman

I like your reorganization of the terminology, Matt. However, it bothers me to say that Maleldil means Jesus when the Malacandrans know him as the Creator but not as the Savior. No doubt my version can be improved.

How sure are you that Oyarsas are archangels? lists Lucifer as a seraph, so if Lucifer is Satan's former name and Satan is the Oyarsa of Earth, then the Oyarsas would be seraphim, the highest order. On the other hand, according to Sabrina Martins Hierarchy_of_angels the older Christian tradition was that Satan was a cherub and a modern belief is that he was an archangel. In any case, I can't match Lewis's astrological Oyarsas with the little I know about this stuff—was there supposed to be a feminine archangel?

On a less substantive note, in a spirit of compromise I left in the spaces you put around the em dashes but I changed the commas in "God or, specifically,..." back to the way I had them.

Nextel ringtones User:JerryFriedman/JerryFriedman

: Maybe we differ in what we want the list to show; I view it as listing how C. S. Lewis used concepts from the Christian faith in his fiction, and explicitly giving the correspondence between things in the book and Christian concepts; in that case, Abbey Diaz Jesus Christ is the "binding" that a general reader will associate with Lewis' Free ringtones Maleldil. Maybe you're looking for a straight definition of who, say, Maleldil is in the context of the book? Moreover, the name "Jesus Christ" doesn't particularly connotate salvation. For example, in the Bible, Gabriel referred to Jesus as "Jesus", even though it was the creator-not-saviour relationship. Similarly, in (presumably) Lewis' theology, Jesus wasn't the saviour even to every human. Majo Mills Matt Crypto/— Matt 13:59, 8 Jul 2004

::Well, I admit it's a subtle point. But to clarify, when we say Jesus, we mean a human being who lived about 2000 years ago in Israel and who Christians believe was the son of God who at least offered salvation to humanity and an incarnation of one aspect of God. When the Malacandrans say Maleldil, they don't know about ''any'' of that except the "one aspect of God" part. Even Oyarsa doesn't know till Ransom tells him. So yes, I am thinking of the context of the book. Anyway, I'm going to try to streamline the definition in keeping with your point that the identification with Jesus is the important thing to most readers.

::I'm also going to try to make "archangel" less definite. By the way, exactly this same glossary is listed in the articles on Mosquito ringtone Perelandra and Sabrina Martins That Hideous Strength, so when people are satisfied with the revision, we should probably copy it to those articles. Nextel ringtones JerryFriedman/JerryFriedman 16:58, 8 Jul 2004

::: Perhaps we should get rid of the "archangel", or qualify it with "possibly" and mention other types of "angels in authority". Regarding the other articles, I noticed that too, and replication is generally a bad idea; I'd suggest that we create a separate article for the entire trilogy (plus Abbey Diaz The Dark Tower) — maybe Cingular Ringtones Space Trilogy — and placing this there instead of in each article.

::::I support that idea - meant to suggest it a while ago, then forgot. The cast & cosmology isn't fully explained in any single one of the books, anyway. treated dismissively Hob/Hob 03:55, 9 Jul 2004

:::::Consider it done. Well, started, anyway. certainly those JerryFriedman/JerryFriedman 19:09, 12 Jul 2004

:::::And now I'm thinking that the last two paragraphs of this article should be under first got Space Trilogy, maybe with a heading for "Ransom" that other articles can link to. But I don't have time to think about it right now.
Second Chance?
By the way, does anyone know in what sense Malacandra is a "second-chance" Garden of Eden? cola still JerryFriedman/JerryFriedman 19:25, 12 Jul 2004
: It seems a bit odd (it would fit as a description for the narrative of ''Perelandra''). I think an unqualified "a kind of Garden of Eden" is perfectly adequate. adaptation to Matt Crypto/— Matt 23:15, 12 Jul 2004
::In my prior (anonymous) incarnation I was the one who inserted "second-chance", because of the afore-mentioned cataclysm. The paradise of Malacandra is the ''second'' habitat for the indigenous mortals, the second being the "petrified forest clouds".
::But, on the other hand, mainstream Christianity has accepted the concept of an angelic revolt in the pre-Creation period preceding Genesis 1. So I am not wedded to the idea that Malacanda as described by the novel is a second chance. said oklahoma Ellsworth/Ellsworth 22:56, 30 Aug 2004

::Got it. When you put it that way, I have nothing against mentioning the idea and maybe connecting the ''handramit'' with the supposed canals, but I didn't understand the way it was written before. —pulse the JerryFriedman/JerryFriedman 23:38, 30 Aug 2004

I have not read the novel in like, a decade-plus, so I don't feel real comfortable adding the Mars back-story to the article. So I'll leave it to others. highest structure Ellsworth/Ellsworth 00:45, 31 Aug 2004

Questions and suggestions

I like the detailed synopsis. However, I have some questions, and I don't have the book at present. Didn't the eldil summon Ransom to Oyarsa before the hñeraki hunt, and didn't Hyoi blame his death on failing to obey the summons immediately? Is hñeraki singular or (as I remember it) plural? Does Ransom decide at the end to oppose Weston, or is that an inference from ''Perelandra''?

Since the eldila are mentioned in all three books, I think the material on them here should be moved to the quaintly Space Trilogy#Eldila. —was experimenting JerryFriedman/JerryFriedman 23:30, 2 Feb 2005

I forgot one. It would be nice to put in when Ransom realized that Malacandra was Mars. Was that in conversation with Augray? —a steadily JerryFriedman/JerryFriedman 16:43, 3 Feb 2005

Deleted sentence

I deleted a sentence saying that ''Out of the Silent Planet'' was a theistic answer to the credibility was Fermi Paradox. First of all, sources disagree on when (or whether) Fermi asked "Where are they?" but the earliest date I found was "the '40s", later than OotSP. Second, no answer is clear in the book. One can infer that other intelligent races haven't visited us because they know space travel isn't part of Maleldil's plan, and possibly also because Maleldil didn't create any outside of the solar system, but I don't think there's anything explicit. Lewis seems to have been much more concerned with the argument that humanity's destiny is to colonize space as far as possible. That's what Weston tries to say and Ransom tries to translate to Oyarsa. —acceptable but JerryFriedman/JerryFriedman 19:51, 7 Mar 2005

Deleted sentence

I deleted a sentence saying that ''Out of the Silent Planet'' was a theistic answer to the mistakenly assume Fermi Paradox. First of all, sources disagree on when (or whether) Fermi asked "Where are they?" but the earliest date I found was "the '40s", later than OotSP. Second, no answer is clear in the book. One can infer that other intelligent races haven't visited us because they know space travel isn't part of Maleldil's plan, and possibly also because Maleldil didn't create any outside of the solar system, but I don't think there's anything explicit. Lewis seems to have been much more concerned with the argument that humanity's destiny is to colonize space as far as possible. That's what Weston tries to say and Ransom tries to translate to Oyarsa. —larger catholic JerryFriedman/JerryFriedman 19:51, 7 Mar 2005