Divine2021
Hero
Cold iron typically was thought to be able to damage the fae—you saw this in works by Poul Anderson who was a direct influence on Gygex.
I feel like you have just reduced everything down to my opinion is wrong because it doesn't match yours, which is also something humanS have done for some time to dismiss other people's beliefs. Your belief that everything is natural is no more right or valid than my belief that some man-made creations are unnatural.Ah. But the words "natural" and "unnatural" are trying to describe the universe around us. And the universe is under no obligation to make sense. At best, we must change our view to match reality, not insist reality matches our views.
It has been made abundantly clear that what "made sense" to humans a thousand years ago was very often just wrong. Today, it "makes sense" to a lot of people to discriminate between fellow humans based on color of skin, nation of origin, gender, sexual orientation, or religion. That's how well "makes sense to me" works as a route to understanding.
We make progress in understanding not by choosing what makes sense, but instead based on what we can demonstrate with reasoning and experiment. So, greater reasoning than that would be called for.
Words evolve. There is unnatural in the sense of the supernatural vs. natural, which is probably from 1500's, and then there's unnatural in the sense of artificial, which has no association that I can see with the supernatural and the 1500's.Because... history doesn't exist?
The word "unnatural" dates back to the early 15th century - early to pre-Renaissance, a time in which mankind had much less understanding of the physical word than it does now. Use of the term to mean "artificial" is attested from 1746. Its meaning of "not in accord with accepted moral standards" meanwhile goes back to the 1520s.
So, the word is more associated with the moral state of being than the physical state of being. Since we are stil concerned with morals, the word still exists.
Termite mounds. Beaver dams. Bird nests. These things exist because a living thing forced them to happen. But, they are required for the "natural" existence of the animals that build them. How, then can those things be unnatural?
Check this out - humans digestion has evolved to take advantage of cooked foods, such that cooked foods are now the "natural" diet of humans.
Arguing about what counts as natural vs unnatural first requires us to understand why we want to make the distinction. If you rest on the "definition" of the word first, there will always be edge cases to cause argument, because, ironically, the natural word is not clean cut into natural and unnatural things.
I feel like you have just reduced everything down to my opinion is wrong because it doesn't match yours
Termite mounds, nests, and hills, etc. are not natural, despite being created by animals. They are built.
As for why we want the distinction, I'd say it's for the same reason that we have ground and sky. Hot and cold. Light and dark. Mammals and fish. Reptiles and birds. We like to categorize things so that we can more easily communicate about and study them.
Yeah, I can't get behind this. Where do you draw a line? Honeycombs aren't natural because bees construct them? These things are all in and of nature.Termite mounds, nests, and hills, etc. are not natural, despite being created by animals. They are built.
I wasn't aware I needed to produce a thesis; I was stating an opinion on what I feel is natural or unnatural. Yeah, the words "natural" and "unnatural" are words being used (by me and others) to describe how I view the universe. Just like any other descriptive word or should we debate every descriptor the English language has?But I haven't said it is wrong. I have said the support behind it doesn't look very solid.
I wasn't aware I needed to produce a thesis; I was stating an opinion on what I feel is natural or unnatural.
I personally draw the line at things like honeycombs and ant tunnels. However, what @Umbran mentioned above is interesting. I don't think natural and unnatural are both on a spectrum, though. Natural is well, the natural state of things. Unnatural, though, could be seen as being a spectrum. On the one end near natural would be things like honeycombs and ant hills which are deliberately constructed, and on the other end would be things like Dyson spheres.Yeah, I can't get behind this. Where do you draw a line? Honeycombs aren't natural because bees construct them? These things are all in and of nature.
Does a stick used as a tool by an ape become unnatural as soon as the ape breaks off or twists a piece to make it function better as a tool?I personally draw the line at things like honeycombs and ant tunnels. However, what @Umbran mentioned above is interesting. I don't think natural and unnatural are both on a spectrum, though. Natural is well, the natural state of things. Unnatural, though, could be seen as being a spectrum. On the one end near natural would be things like honeycombs and ant hills which are deliberately constructed, and on the other end would be things like Dyson spheres.