Hypersmurf
Moderatarrrrh...
TYPO5478 said:Yes, but as mvincent pointed out, "some creatures are not."
Some creatures are not living. Constructs and undead are not living, but they are otherwise active. A dead creature is neither.
Exactly my point, although you seem to interpret "destroyed" as simply "rendered inoperable" rather than "obliterated". If the corpse is still intact after destruction as a Construct, isn't it still a legal target for animate objects? Can you simply reanimate a destroyed animated object over and over?
I don't think 'destroying' a construct or undead requires obliteration, but I wouldn't consider it to be entirely undamaged. I'd say yes, a destroyed Construct is a valid target for Animate Objects, but it may not be animated in exactly the same fashion. For example, a carpet might, after being destroyed as an animated object, be somewhat shredded - if it were animated a second time, it might behave more like a bundle of ropes than a single sheetlike surface. It's a DM call as to how a damaged object behaves when animated... just as it's a DM call as to how an undamaged object behaves.
But nothing about one that has been a Construct in the intervening period. Are we to assume that Constructs are implicitly included?
A creature who has been animated as an undead creature (subsequently destroyed) cannot be Raised, for example; the text in the Resurrection spell is to clarify that this restriction does not apply to Resurrection.
Since no spell imposes a restriction on bringing back a creature whose corpse became a Construct in the interim, no clarifying text is required to permit it.
-Hyp.