Re: Love Triangle Discussion
If each side had an equal amount of "evidence" you might have a point. And that might have been the case in 1997, but with the release of the compilation and myriad companion books it's simply not so.
I'm curious to understand what you mean by an equal amount of evidence? As far as i understand about any concept of evidence... nothing is "equal" One piece of evidence can RELATE to another but never be equal.. based soley on the fact that each piece of evidence is not explaining nor defining the same concept. If you are talking about the # of evidences, even that is a fallacy because # does not equal worth... and again... I will bring up the fact that for whatever side you believe in.. it is circumstantial evidence, seeing the fact that at the heart of this argument, we are arguing over a story, and any credible person who can dissect a story knows that without EXPLICIT knowledge, meaning, literal words, that the author dictates, nothing can be canonically said. IF it isnt explicitly said in the story. it isn't fact.. it is an interpretation, and more importantly, your interpretation. It holds absolutely no more clout than any other single person who shares the same knowledge as you but comes to a different conclusion. Hell.. one will be hard pressed to even suggest that because you feel yo hold more knowledge than another that your interpretation is right. Its sucks, but its the truth. A big fallacy when understanding Eastern literature is that it holds the same conclusive sway as western literature. And I'll give one piece of evidence to solidify this.. FFVIIAC. From a western audience perspective (as a whole mass media mind you) that movie has a very substandard plot. Its hard to follow.. its hard to make sense.. its damn weird. But.. if you understand a eastern concept of storytelling.. one is able to understand where they are coming from, what they are trying to accomplish, and ultimately, that like most eastern literature, they leave it up to the reader ( in this case the viewer) to interpret what they see.