Maxperson
Morkus from Orkus
Okay, we're getting somewhere. Because you might be able to tell my comment was heavily sarcastic.
In the case of Luke and Leia's sibling relationship being revealed, or Holmes's hypothetical sock pattern being commented upon, there was no change in the relationship or sock pattern made upon the revelation. There was no change made because there was nothing to change. No relationship was transformed into a sibling relationship. No sock pattern was suddenly turned into argyle. What happened is new information was made available to us, and our understanding changed.
In the case of Luke and Leia, it made us go "Oh crap!" because we realize they didn't know and they made out that one time because they had no idea. In the case of Holmes's socks, it makes us go "Well, that is indeed a thing. I'm not sure I even considered it before now to be honest" (if I'm working and doing an analysis of a Sherlock Holmes story, I might pause to consider why Doyle felt it significant to mention the pattern of the socks, but I digress).
The thing didn't change. Our understanding did because we were presented with new information. That's where I see a lot of disconnect between your position and Hussar's from the position of Imaro and the others. Luke and Leia being revealed as siblings in Empire is seen on your side as a retcon and a change in Star Wars itself. For the others, it's a change in the understanding of Star Wars. Once established, it was always already true, even in the first film. It's new information that allows us to go back and see the first movie with a changed perspective, but it doesn't change the movie.
You dig?
Yep! Whereas the whole Greedo shot first debacle is such a heinous crime because it really did change canon.
P.S. I'm glad you are posting. If you were as silent as Jeff is, I was going to start referring to you as Ridley, patron saint of XP
