The first is a must, the second is unreasonable.SandChigger wrote:if unpopular and they forgot to turn on the snoopers before eating.

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And maybe even more than a hundred years with taking the Spice. Miles Teg was, what, 300 years old? It's possible a generation could span over a century...orald wrote:The Corrino dynasty tells you absolutely nothing about how many standard years a "generation" is(a generation has no accurate time meaning anyway), since being the Emperors they recieve just about the best medical care and could easily rule 100 years each before being succeeded.
2. the term of years, roughly 30 among human beings, accepted as the average period between the birth of parents and the birth of their offspring.
And maybe even more than a hundred years with taking the Spice. Miles Teg was, what, 300 years old? It's possible a generation could span over a century...
I have to assume that with the spice, people are fertile for much longer. Assuming that's true, why wouldn't the generation span increase?orald wrote:Argh, it's not a normal generation at all, that's the point.
From Dictionary.com:
Generation...2. the term of years, roughly 30 among human beings, accepted as the average period between the birth of parents and the birth of their offspring.
Now, they're still human, not stupid, song loving Elves that don't get children and need horney human warriors to show them what to do with an Elf-chick, so they'll still be reproducing at a human rate(i.e 25-30 years).
Well, Teg was still fertile at a ripe old 300 years, so it's actually entirely possible in the Duniverse.Monarchic generation isn't a reproductive generation. It only refers to the time between succeeding monarchs, which can be 1 day to 100 years and byond.
So:And maybe even more than a hundred years with taking the Spice. Miles Teg was, what, 300 years old? It's possible a generation could span over a century...
You won't find any 100 y-o guy waiting for the right lady to settle down and make babies.
I understand what you’re saying here that Melange lengthens the period of human fertility, but why do you assume that it would also weaken the procreative desire. As that is the only reason, I can think of, for the time span from the birth of one generation to the next to increase. People will always want to make babies with or without Spice.Phaedrus wrote:I have to assume that with the spice, people are fertile for much longer. Assuming that's true, why wouldn't the generation span increase?
One of Paul's first prescient dreams(at a very young age) was of Chani's death.Anathema wrote:I don't see how that's a flaw. Paul and the rest were slated for Arrakis at that point and the downfall of the Atreides was pretty much a given seeing what he could do about it (nothing). Those dreams were simply glimpses of the path he was going to be forced on.
Paul, caught by wonder at the persistent Fremen mythos, felt a heart constriction, a thing inflicted upon his lifeline: adab, the demanding memory. He recalled his childhood room on Caladan then . . . dark night in the stone chamber . . . a vision! It'd been one of his earliest prescient moments. He felt his mind dive into the vision, saw through a veiled cloud-memory (vision-within-vision) a line of Fremen, their robes trimmed with dust. They paraded past a gap in tall rocks. They carried a long, cloth-wrapped burden.
And Paul heard himself say in the vision: "It was mostly sweet . . . but you were the sweetest of all . . . "
Adab released him.
"Quiet!" Paul held up a hand. "Did you hear that?"
"Hear what, m'Lord?"
Paul shook his head. Duncan hadn't heard it. Had he only imagined the sound? It'd been his tribal name called from the desert -- far away and low: "Usul . . . Uuuussssuuuullll . . . "
"What is it, m'Lord?"
Paul shook his head. He felt watched. Something out there in the night shadows knew he was here. Something? No -- someone.
"It was mostly sweet," he whispered, "and you were the sweetest of all."
"What'd you say, m'Lord?"
"It's the future," Paul said.
That amorphous human universe out there had undergone a spurt of motion, dancing to the tune of his vision. It had struck a powerful note then. The ghost-echoes might endure.
"I don't understand, m'Lord," the ghola said.
"A Fremen dies when he's too long from the desert," Paul said. "They call it the 'water sickness.' Isn't that odd?"
"That's very odd."
"Chani . . ." Tandis said.
"Is dead," Paul whispered. "I heard her call."
It was mostly sweet . . . but you were the sweetest of all . . . "
Where's KJA to note that FH made a "mistake" by having one version say "but" and the other "and" as the connecting word between the two parts of the sentence?"It was mostly sweet," he whispered, "and you were the sweetest of all."
=P"I am an Atreides," Paul whispered, and then louder: "It's not right that I give up entirely the name my father gave me. Could I be known among you as Paul-Muad'Dib?"
"You are Paul-Muad'Dib," Stilgar said.
And Paul thought: That was in no vision of mine. I did a different thing.
Logic can't tell you what's going to happen in a battle that you haven't seen reports from.As the Reverend Mothers watched in awe, Leto laid out for Idaho the exact points for ambushes, detailing the size of each force and even some of the specific personnel, the timing, the necessary weapons, the precise deployments at each place. Idaho's capacious memory catalogued each instruction. He was too caught up in the recital to question it until Leto fell silent, but a look of puzzled fear came over Idaho then.
The future of prescience cannot always be locked into the rules of the past. The threads of existence tangle according to many unknown laws. Prescient future insists on its own rules. It will not conform to the ordering of the Zensunni nor to the ordering of science. Prescience builds a relative integrity. It demands the work of this instant, always warning that you cannot weave every thread into the fabric of the past.
-Kalima: The Words of Muad'Dib, The Shuloch Commentary
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/autho ... rbert.htmlOne of the best things to come out of the home computer revolution could be the general and widespread understanding of how severely limited logic really is.