Voadam
Legend
Nisarg said:Yes, this is the "biological theory" I had mentioned.
I guess my next question for you then would be, how does it have a detrimental effect? What is the nature of this detrimental effect? How does it manifest?
Is it psychological or purely physiological? If its purely physiological, then the detrimental effects would in no way depend upon realization of the "horrible truth" of what you experience or observe... this seems pretty incongruent with most of the Mythos stories and themes.
To explain: In most mythos stories, the protagonist starts to lose sanity when he begins to "realize" the awful truth, reading a book of forbidden lore, or witnessing a childe of yog-sototh or what have you; and gaining some sliver of understanding of... something... that means that all they thought they knew was wrong.
Yet according to the "radiation" theory, theoretically an illiterate could lose SAN just by looking at the words of a Mythos book he is incapable of reading. It seems to rob the setting of the psychological aspect of horror that makes Cthulhu stand out from mere "gore" style horror.
That's why I think that the "radiation" theory may well have merit but there has to be something more, or that it has to be fleshed out to explain the psychological aspects of the Mythos terror.
Nisarg
Structure equals function. The brain is a physiological organ. Do things to the biochemistry and you get behavioural, psychological effects. Certain mental disrders can be linked to chemical imbalances in the brain and treated with drugs to balance things again.
Yes, an illiterate staring at sigils of elder sign power will have sanity loss, just like a literate who studies them intensely. Imprinting the signs on your visual cortex causes reactions in your head. Part of the manifestation could be "the growing horror of realization that reality is not how we think of it" so it is a symptom of the problem, not a cause of it. So an illiterate cultist may still want to clutch that mythos book and keep it by his side always for the feeling it gives him, like carrying the bible as a talisman against evil. It is the power inside, not necessarily the writing, although reading exposes your brain more directly than mere proximity.
And this jibes with our understanding of paradigm shifts about reality. People don't go horribly insane when they study the Hesisenberg Uncertainty principle, many don't like it or irrationally struggle stubbornly against accepting it, but very few people go insane over it. But in the Mythos you find out that reality is actually that funky "out there" and they get woogy. Not people who hear second hand and have it explained to them, but people who experience it directly.
Ooh, a flying squid. Many IRL would say "neat" as many do upon seeing strange undersea creatures. However if there is something about them that affects your brain directly it explains why it would universally incite detrimental long term mental effects.


