zompist wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2019 11:59 am
I don't get the rancor... so far as I can see, Rye is mostly saying that if Tolkien's lore is true, then neither the elves nor their languages should look like things that developed from a long process of evolution.
Well, see my responses to all the other "this is the one true way to conworld" posts we get here. Rye's presenting his own aesthetic preferences as though they were somehow the dictates of reason, rather than being entirely subjective preferences with no more a priori basis than those that he's attacking. Look at that word there - "should". He is indeed telling us that the elves and their languages shouldn't look like this - but that's nonsense. That's a moral-aesthetic judgement! The most he can rationally reach is "they more probably would look like this" - but, a) who ever said they wouldn't, Tolkien never claimed to set out to describe the 'most probable' world, and why 'should' he have? - and b) even taken on its own merits, the claim is baseless. As a result, it reads more like one guy's rather naive attack on religious faith than an actual argument about conworlding.
For instance, there's no good reason why elven bodies should have the design failures that biological evolution saddled us with, and there's no good reason why a semidivine language creator should end up with a language that looks like a typical human language.
But this argument makes no sense, because clearly there ARE good reasons! Here's five...
1. Tolkien wanted it that way. Tolkien is the author, so his tastes absolutely are a great reason why things would be that way. Again, Tolkien never claimed to be setting out to describe the 'most realistic' world (indeed, that ambition makes no sense in fantasy anyway - the most realistic world is always the real one...), so failing to do so is hardly a failure. Given a range of coherent, plausible worlds, why shouldn't an author pick the one they find most interesting?
2. Tolkien was writing stories for people to read. Making his elves more familiar makes it easier for us to understand and empathise with them.
3. From Tolkien's point of view, it's easy to tell what an omnipotent creator would want their sapient species to be like: just look at the only other sapient species that an omnipotent creator has created. God, from Tolkien's point of view, made man in his own image, so it should hardly be surprising if he also made elves in his own image. After all, even the Valar take on humanoid forms. Suggesting that God would make elves fundamentally different from humans seems rather presumptuous about God's sense of taste - how does Justin Rye have a direct line to God? Of course, God
could have made elves very different indeed, but given that, without any input from the needs of evolution, God already chose to make one species look like this, it's hardly ridiculous to suggest that he might do so with another. And on that last point, Rye gets the order of causation wrong: humans and other species aren't the way they are because evolution made them that way - evolution is the way it is in order to make humans the way God wanted them made. From the Catholic point of view, at least, and it hardly makes sense to critique an author without at least considering his own objectives in the process. Tolkien wanted to praise and adulate God. Suggesting that species would not be as they are without evolution demanding that they be that way - that is, suggesting that evolution's requirements are prior to, and outweigh, the desires of God, would not meet Tolkien's objective. Similarly, all human languages were devised by God, so it's hardly surprising that Tolkien's ideas for other languages devised by God would look rather like the God-devised languages he studied himself. What other blueprint is there for what God likes and doesn't like in his languages?
4. Tolkien explicitly is not writing an alternative world, a replacement for our world, or even a distant planet - he's writing about the history of our own world. In his world, humans today are descendents of the humans who interacted with elves. In that world, God designed humans and elves to live together and learn from one another, and so it should hardly be surprising if He decided to design them so that they would immediately recognise one another as kindred! And in particular, regarding the languages, in Tolkien's world, all languages today - English, Finnish, Welsh, etc - are descended from the languages that humans devised for themselves (or had devised for them) after learning the languages of the elves, and then further modified by prolonged contact with the languages of the elves. So of course those languages must resemble human languages! In particular, because the languages on Europe were in contact with elvish languages for longest, it's the languages of Europe that most resemble those Elvish languages - in Tolkien's world, Quenya wasn't modeled on Finnish, nor Sindarin on Welsh, but rather Finnish and Welsh, no doubt through many rounds of substrate influence on the languages of invading groups, have simply best preserved echoes of that primordial Elvish influence on human language. Rye's attack only makes sense if he begins by denying the world-internal justification for the way things are in Tolkien's story, which is obviously a wrongheaded way to go about analysing something. He's ignoring the justifications and then claiming that there aren't any.
5. It makes no sense to talk about what an unfathomable, inscrutable intelligence would or would not do. By definition, we can't understand it. Rye thinks that if God existed, every language would end each sentence with a checksum, but the assumption that God would think like a computer scientist is just as arbitrary as the assumption that God would think like a philologist who loved Welsh (and remember, to the Catholic there are already examples of what God would do if, with omnipotent power, He chose to create ideal languages for His anthropomorphic worshippers - they're called human languages). He thinks that God would have each child 'hatch' knowing the only language they'd ever need, so there would be no need for language change - but that's just as arbitrary a theory of God as Tolkien's theory that God loves languages and language change and intentionally made it so that people would constantly be changing their languages (and again, for the Catholic it's clear that God's a big fan of there being lots of languages rather than just one, because
there's lots of languages rather than just one. And if God's not a fan of it (i.e. language change is evil) then it must be a necessary evil, presumably as the result of free will, because otherwise it wouldn't exist.)
And it's also fine to shake things up and imagine how we might do something differently.
Of course - I don't conworld like Tolkien myself. But my issue is when somebody moves from "can" to "should", and from "could" to "would". In particular, given that Tolkien is, almost everyone would I think agree, a more succesful conlanger and conworlder than Justin Rye (certainly commercially and probably aesthetically), it seems counterintuitive for him to adopt such a disparaging tone in criticising him.