ruleslawyer said:
Now who's being cocky?
Allow an old man his ironies, sometimes?
ruleslawyer said:
In myth, legend, and fantasy literature, coming back from the dead is a big deal. Aesclapius is punished by the gods for bringing a dead man back to life... and is half-divine to boot in any case, being the son of the god of healing, no less. Isis's resurrection of Osiris is central to Egyptian mythology, in the same way that Christ's resurrection from the dead is central to Christian theology.
I was asked to find examples. I found those. I was asked to find more specific examples. I found those, too. And now, those examples are being nitpicked. I'm shocked.
Sooner or later, someone is going to reframe the question as, "Okay, Molonel. Find me an example in the oral storytelling of the Indians in the lower southeast section of Alaska where a 5,000 gp gem is required to bring a mortal hero back from the dead. Ha! Can't do it, can you?"
I freely confess: I cannot.
ruleslawyer said:
In Norse mythology, the efforts required are even more striking. Even the king of the gods, Odin, cannot bring his son back from Niflheim without an effort that proves impossible until the end and remaking of the world.
Okay, the efforts required are more striking.
It still happens.
ruleslawyer said:
Please cite that one for me. Hercules is brought to live among the gods after he dons the poisoned robe, but a) is a demigod, creating the annoying problem of being unable to die despite the fact that he's in great pain, and b) doesn't really "die" in the first place. Rather, he gets DvR 1, in a sense.
He asked for a mortal example. Hercules was not yet a god. Ergo, he qualifies. He's dying, nothing can save him, and divine power rescues him. This qualifies as an example.
ruleslawyer said:
In a fundamentally different form. Reincarnation is absolutely, positively NOT "raise dead," any more than the Christian concept of the resurrection of souls at the Rapture is. That analogy is fundamentally flawed.
In your opinion.
Throughout the discussions we've had on this subject, Reincarnation was right there alongside Raise Dead, Resurrection and True Resurrection as an option to bring a character back. It wasn't the preferred option, but it was there.
Heroes and lives cycling back from the dead is a fundamental part of world mythology. My analogy is not flawed.
ruleslawyer said:
I think the point that Delta is trying to make is that waving one's hands and raising someone from the dead without real consequences *is* antithetical to the vast majority of mythological and legendary themes. Most resurrection myths exist precisely to suggest to us how important and vast death is, and to promise something greater and more mystical that endures beyond the body. Raising the dead is a lot more like the super-EMT situation mentioned earlier.
Well, people keep acting like it's some foregone conclusion that Rez, True Rez and Raise Dead have never appeared in literature, myth, fantasy or legend. That is absolutely, positively and demonstratably false.
You can keep refining the question until you get the answer you want.
But it is a valid tool in a DM or GM's toolbox, and every bit as valid - no more, no less - than other tools people use to continue the story when, by all accounts, characters should be dead. It has precadent, and it is valid.
Korgoth said:
Every? That's a pretty amazing claim! How about this one:
"'Say not a word,' he answered, 'in death's favour; I would rather be a paid servant in a poor man's house and be above ground than king of kings among the dead.'"
- Achilles, Odyssey Book XI
Looks like I "smoked you", as you say.
Except that the assumption that everyone wishes to return from the dead was not mine. In Greek mythology, Hades was a place of dust, loneliness and silence.
Nice quote, by my clothes aren't even steaming.
Keep trying, though.