• @ceenote
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    881 day ago

    I’d expect Galadriel to be very much in the “The only good orc is a dead orc” camp. That’s based purely on vibes, I don’t recall anything about it in the LOTR books and I never could finish The Silmarillion.

    • @[email protected]
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      761 day ago

      All elves are in that camp, and within the bounds of LotR I think they’re right? It’s definitely a setting with objective, and cosmic, Good and Evil.

    • @[email protected]
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      341 day ago

      Tolkien also wrote the orcs as pretty explicitly “always evil”, at least in lord of the rings and the hobbit. He seemed to be conflicted about making an always-evil race, but that IS how it’s written in those books.

      • @[email protected]
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        261 day ago

        at least in lord of the rings and the hobbit

        On the other hand Tolkien was quite clear on that the story was told from the perspective of the protagonists. Not least through the strong insinuation that the in-universe book that Bilbo started, Frodo continued, and Sam finished, is if not the book we are reading, at least an important source for it.

        Lord of the rings telling them as evil mostly shows that’s how the fellowship saw them.

      • @MyPornViewingAccount
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        111 day ago

        Pretty sure theres a letter or two where he wrote that orcs could be saved, should they turn from evil, but he also didn’t know how any of them would ever know to do so.

      • @[email protected]
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        91 day ago

        Wasn’t it because they didn’t have any Will? Their entire drive to do anything was completely enslaved by whoever was controlling them: as long as they were controlled by an evil willpower they’d also be evil.