I don't think Luke was seriously planning it out, but it says bad things about Luke that he pulled his lightsaber out at all. That's my hang up.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-06-13 02:56amAgain, the idea that Luke went to the hut intending in advance to kill Ben is 100% completely baseless. It has not a single scrap of canon evidence for it, and quite a bit against it. Pretending its an either/or, as though either option is equally credible or has some basis, when you have provided zero evidence for that, is disingenuous, and I think you know it.FaxModem1 wrote: ↑2019-06-12 10:21pm Here's the problem with that. Either, A. Luke decided to check up on his nephew and didnt just contemplate it in his mind, but did the physical action of pulling out his lightsaber, decided killing his nephew in his sleep was his best plan of action, waking up his nephew, or B. he sensed the darkness before then, and decided to go to Ben's hut to murder him, which means he straight up decided to murder him, with premeditated thought behind it. This is, as pointed out earlier in the thread, akin to a cop not liking what he sees in his nephew's diary after the kid makes some comments at training, and without talking to him about it, decides to kill him in his sleep, draws out his pistol, and chambers a round, pointing it at the kid.
I've pointed out how baseless this is, repeatedly and in detail. I have asked for evidence, repeatedly. You have kept evading that and just saying "well maybe Luke planned to preemptively murder him". Yeah, and maybe the Second Coming of Jesus Christ is sitting in my backyard wearing a tutu, but I have absolutely no evidence of that fact, and if I advanced it as a serious argument, I'd rightly be thought a lunatic. If you persist in pursuing this completely baseless argument despite my having demonstrated repeatedly that it is baseless, and given that I do not believe that you are an imbecile, I can regretfully only conclude that you are being dishonest.
See, the situations are comparable, because Jedi don't try violence unless it's the only action available. There's a reason they were known as diplomats and peacemakers . Its comparable because a lot of teachers of martial arts stress resolving problems by running away, talking them out, etc. They don't want their students waging a war on all the criminals in the city. The Jedi act similarly, meditating on courses of action before doing so.No, of course not, and again, no one is saying Luke was right, but the situations are not remotely comparable. I am not a psychic capable of reading minds and seeing the future, and some asshole throwing a punch does not have the power to throw galactic civilization into chaos, which a high-end Force user potentially does.That's a few steps beyond impulsive. The fact that you and TRR are ignoring how out of character this is for Luke shows how out of step you are. In real life, I'm sure someone has cut you off in traffic, or shoved you, maybe even thrown a punch. Do you immediately go for your Glock? Or do you try and act as an adult?
And in this case, Luke could still have, you know, tried talking to his nephew about his problems. The fact that it's never considered, as far as we know, says bad things about his growth as a Jedi. Luke could have woken Ben up, and had a long discussion with him about what he saw. He could have left the hut and thought about it, he could have even have just stood there, with dark thoughts about killing Ben. Instead, he pulled out and ignited his lightsaber. There's several levels of self control Luke bypasses, and it betrays his character because he had several options to explore, which didn't occur to him.
Okay, maybe I'm not explaining this right. If Luke really was a Jedi master, he'd know that his students would have problems with the dark side. Same way he did when he was younger. Those teachers guide the students out of it, and help them. Or at least try to. That Luke really went to murder first instead of walking Ben through his problems says that Luke lost a lot of who he was, that he's not recognizable as either the character he was, or as the character he was becoming. As Ray245 argues, they want to tear down the symbols of the original trilogy, and they are doing so beyond recognition.Right, because a guy who can have visions of the future having a vision that someone is about to become a mass murderer is totally equivalent to not liking their facial expression.Now, are either of you spending decades of your life learning peace, quiet contemplation, pondering mysteries and learning self control, and while also acting as a teacher for those in similar positions that you've been in, like Luke supposedly was? I'm trying to imagine the last time I had a meditation teacher bring out a knife because he didn't like a student's facial expression while in meditation. If you can't imagine the same thing happening, then you need to deal with how badly written The Ladt Jedi is.
These are all ridiculous false analogies, and I won't dignify them with further response. No one is saying you have to personally like the film, but please don't misrepresent canon so you can "prove" your personal dislikes are objectively bad. It just makes your argument look weak.
A monk teacher will not be perfect, but he will at least be better at handling emotionally sensitive situations than a Vietnam veteran who still has flashbacks about what happened in his past by unconscious triggers. Which sounds more like what Luke was in the OT, and which sounds more like the Luke of the ST?
That's my problem, he was already there, and only stopped because he had a Telltale Heart moment, and saw the eyes of his murder victim. If you consider the main character of the Telltale Heart a natural outgrowth of Luke Skywalker's character from the OT, then the film's backstory is solid. If you don't, you might have the same problems I do.I know exactly what Luke did. As to why he didn't think about it... well, he did. He ultimately reconsidered and didn't strike Ben dead. Which to me lends credence to the idea that it was not premeditated, cold-blooded attempted murder. If Luke had thought it out, and truly believed it was necessary, do you think he would have faltered in the moment of action? Luke is no strange to violence. He's not a man to back down easily from a course of action once he believes that its right.You're not getting this. Luke didn't just have an immediate thought about it after the 'horrible discovery ', he pulled out and ignited his fucking lightsaber. I don't get why this point is sailing over your head. Why did he pull out the lightsaber at all? Why didn't he think about it, and then meditate on it? Why is Luke's natural impulse to go for murder? Why is he so gung ho about it? Does he murder several sleeping people so that it's second nature by now?Do you really think he couldn't have killed Ben if that had been his intent?
Okay, dumb question, but are you familiar with weapons at all? I don't mean like the kitchen knife, I mean guns, swords, etc. Because anyone familiar with such things knows to respect them. To only use them when training with them, performing maintenance on them, or actually using them on others. The Jedi are pretty much the same way with their lightsabers, save that they also use them as a light source or to cut through things.
To consciously pull out a weapon like that shows that Luke was getting ready to murder his nephew. He wasn't just entertaining thoughts or being tempted, he was so far gone that he was committing action.
Except that Luke had had decades to build up who he was. Except that the dark side isn't like heroin, and is more of dealing with your own demons, for they will come at your worst moments. And even taking your ridiculous heroin analogy, should we have seen Yoda occasionally considering murdering some younglings in the PT, because he's had students turn against him in the past? Or has he outgrown those failures and became better because of it, because he's since reflected on it and knows why that part is in him.And no, I don't think his natural impulse is murder. But I do think that those who have been tempted once by the Dark Side can be tempted again. Luke showed on Endor that he is capable of rash violence toward a member of his family when the people he loves are in danger. He stopped himself then, just like he did here, but just because you resist once doesn't mean the temptation will go away, any more than taking heroin once without getting addicted means its safe for you to have heroin in the future.
Luke should have dealt with that anger a long time ago. Not become on the verge of relapse when he sees something that scares him. And Luke in the OT never considered murdering people, that was never who he was. He fought in anger at times, but he also should have had context from then on of who he could and should be.
State of mind, sure. Actually pulling out his weapon? Is he that broken?On the contrary, I think its a reasonably plausible explanation, or at least a partial explanation. Luke has experienced first hand what a powerful Dark Sider can do. Of course that is going to have an effect on his state of mind, especially in this situation.Thus is why I'm bringing up Luke's possible PTSD, which you ignore, because I guess you don't consider that it would have to be the only explanation that makes sense, as it doesn't fit the wise teacher monk mold Luke was becoming.
A man? No. A monk who believes life is sacred, has spent not only years, but decades learning who and what he is, and growing into something better by adhering to the Jedi Code, and is also a generally compassionate man that values his family and has some sort of relevance in his life, yeah, I'd kind of wonder about his character if murder is so natural to him that he brings out a deadly weapon to kill his sleeping nephew, only to be stopped by the look of his nephew's eyes. I'd seriously wonder what happened to him in Nam. And why Leia and Han ever trusted their kid to him in the first place.This is ridiculous. A man must be in the habit of routinely murdering people to be ever tempted toward preemptive violence under any circumstances?Luke either is used to murdering people with his lightsaber that its natural habit, or this scene is out of character for him.