WARNING: The following post may contain pointless conjecture on an extremely silly topic. Walls of text may or may not also follow. Also, be aware, nerditis runs rampant here.
*Ahem*
Now that thats over with lets get to the topic. I've been seeing many philosophy threads lately and I thought I would give my thread a little twist. Yes I know that I am a complete and utterly hopeless nerd for even considering talking about the topic to this depth, so please refrain from telling me.
So, I've been thinking a lot lately about the opposing philosophies in the Star Wars Universe.
For now I'll just stick with the underlying complexities of the Sith and Darth Bane's Rule of Two.
The Sith at its core, the Sith principles are a perverted form of Darwinism. Basically its, "those that aren't strong enough to compete, shouldn't be allowed to leach off others."
This is very problematic for large groups of Sith, since they are constantly fighting for power, they have no energy left for fighting their real enemy, the Jedi. This of course also has its exceptions. As is the case with the great Sith Lords.
Its been said that the power of Jedi and Sith has diminished gradually since their respective inceptions. This is most likely true. Part of the reason that Sith usually got weaker as leadership changed hands was because the leaders never taught everything they knew to their students in an attempt to keep them from ascending. This is why every couple of generation there is an exceptionally strong Sith that comes along. This was why Exar Kun became so powerful, he found a holocron containing basically everything the Freedon Nadd had ever learned.
The reason is that you had massively powerful Sith Lords holding the order together. The likes of Marka Ragnos and Ajunta Pall were so apparently powerful, that they held the Sith together through the total fear. No one would dare go up against Ragnos. Consequently, Ragnos ruled until he dies a natural death, an unheard of prospect among the ranks of Sith.
The teachings of the Sith demand the regular and brutal replacement of their leaders. However, the followers can only become the leaders once they grow strong enough to kill the previous leader. The leaders of course knew what the teachings dictated and sought to distract their followers with in-fighting.
However, this only works when there is a massively powerful leader in place. As the strength of the ranks diminishes with each generation, the leaders become less strong, and the role of leadership changes hands ever more quickly. If the trend is allowed to continue (as it was in KOTOR), there is essentially no one strong enough to take over, and the Sith implode.
Here is where Bane's Rule of Two comes in. It was truly ingenious, for all the right reasons. It essentially allows the Sith to continue to live on forever, and it simultaneously allows the Sith to practice their teaching, albiet in micro form.
This is what I find so fascinating about this Sith. On the one hand you have both Master and Apprentice trying to kill each other constantly, and on the other hand, they can also focus on destroying the Jedi.
This is also why I like Darth Sideous so much and why I loath his apprentices. Sideous could use (and consequently manipulate and distract) his apprentices to cement his power base. The apprentices should have been contemplating how to kill Sideous in his sleep in order to become the master rather than doing his dirty work. But instead Sideous insured that he would never be challenged by his apprentices.
Then there is Vader. *sigh* Vader as much as I hate to say it, wasn't a very good Sith. He knew enough about the Sith to know that he was supposed to eventually kill Sideous, but he never even attempted it in the time he was the apprentice. Just so you know, I don't count The Force Unleashed as canon because the attempt at overthrowing Sideous was just despicable from a story point of view. In my opinion, the entire game was just a half-assed attempt at shoring up this (albeit minor) plot hole.
I want to talk about special exceptions in the Sith (Revan, Kreia, and Nihilus), but I already have a wall of text to being with, so I think I'll save THAT wall of text for some other day.
Anyway, what does anyone else think? Any flaws you can percieve? Anything not clear? I'd be happy to elaborate even more.
*Ahem*
Now that thats over with lets get to the topic. I've been seeing many philosophy threads lately and I thought I would give my thread a little twist. Yes I know that I am a complete and utterly hopeless nerd for even considering talking about the topic to this depth, so please refrain from telling me.
So, I've been thinking a lot lately about the opposing philosophies in the Star Wars Universe.
For now I'll just stick with the underlying complexities of the Sith and Darth Bane's Rule of Two.
The Sith at its core, the Sith principles are a perverted form of Darwinism. Basically its, "those that aren't strong enough to compete, shouldn't be allowed to leach off others."
This is very problematic for large groups of Sith, since they are constantly fighting for power, they have no energy left for fighting their real enemy, the Jedi. This of course also has its exceptions. As is the case with the great Sith Lords.
Its been said that the power of Jedi and Sith has diminished gradually since their respective inceptions. This is most likely true. Part of the reason that Sith usually got weaker as leadership changed hands was because the leaders never taught everything they knew to their students in an attempt to keep them from ascending. This is why every couple of generation there is an exceptionally strong Sith that comes along. This was why Exar Kun became so powerful, he found a holocron containing basically everything the Freedon Nadd had ever learned.
The reason is that you had massively powerful Sith Lords holding the order together. The likes of Marka Ragnos and Ajunta Pall were so apparently powerful, that they held the Sith together through the total fear. No one would dare go up against Ragnos. Consequently, Ragnos ruled until he dies a natural death, an unheard of prospect among the ranks of Sith.
The teachings of the Sith demand the regular and brutal replacement of their leaders. However, the followers can only become the leaders once they grow strong enough to kill the previous leader. The leaders of course knew what the teachings dictated and sought to distract their followers with in-fighting.
However, this only works when there is a massively powerful leader in place. As the strength of the ranks diminishes with each generation, the leaders become less strong, and the role of leadership changes hands ever more quickly. If the trend is allowed to continue (as it was in KOTOR), there is essentially no one strong enough to take over, and the Sith implode.
Here is where Bane's Rule of Two comes in. It was truly ingenious, for all the right reasons. It essentially allows the Sith to continue to live on forever, and it simultaneously allows the Sith to practice their teaching, albiet in micro form.
This is what I find so fascinating about this Sith. On the one hand you have both Master and Apprentice trying to kill each other constantly, and on the other hand, they can also focus on destroying the Jedi.
This is also why I like Darth Sideous so much and why I loath his apprentices. Sideous could use (and consequently manipulate and distract) his apprentices to cement his power base. The apprentices should have been contemplating how to kill Sideous in his sleep in order to become the master rather than doing his dirty work. But instead Sideous insured that he would never be challenged by his apprentices.
Then there is Vader. *sigh* Vader as much as I hate to say it, wasn't a very good Sith. He knew enough about the Sith to know that he was supposed to eventually kill Sideous, but he never even attempted it in the time he was the apprentice. Just so you know, I don't count The Force Unleashed as canon because the attempt at overthrowing Sideous was just despicable from a story point of view. In my opinion, the entire game was just a half-assed attempt at shoring up this (albeit minor) plot hole.
I want to talk about special exceptions in the Sith (Revan, Kreia, and Nihilus), but I already have a wall of text to being with, so I think I'll save THAT wall of text for some other day.
Anyway, what does anyone else think? Any flaws you can percieve? Anything not clear? I'd be happy to elaborate even more.