Yes
Paul was tested because the BG couldn't rule out that he might be the KH. That Jessica gave Paul some BG training was not really a surprise or reason for alarm. (Count Fenring was tested for the same reason; the BG were suspicious of any male who showed promise as the KH. He passed the test, but the observations of the Reverend Mother who administered the test indicated that Fenring was not the KH. And his wife, a BG and acquaintance of Jessica, was able to control him anyway.)The Dog Lord said:But I don't think they would have needed to test Paul if Jessica had trained him so much, correct? I don't think they were expecting him to be trained up in BG ways which is why they weren't controlling over his upbringing. Once they found out he had been trained so much, they decided to test him. I may be making all of that up, but I could have sworn that was the explanation for why they weren't trying to control him sooner as a potential KH.powerbelly said:All BG take the test of humanity. They tested him to see if he had the potential to be the KHThe Dog Lord said:They didn't plan on Paul being the KH. Jessica was supposed to produce a daughter. I believe she may have trained Paul beyond what the BG expected as well which led the BG to test whether he was "human."The Debt said:But again, if he is the fruition of the BG plot, why is he hostile to the BG? Or rather why did the BG aid in the creation a monster they cannot control?Claude! said:Yep. Kind of like how Finkle is Einhorn and Einhorn is Finkle, the Madhi is the Kwisatch Haderach and vice versa.YouBet said:There is quite a bit of this concept shared in the novel though. It's not just DV's interpretation.The Debt said:
Having not read past Dune (20 years ago), I dont understand the focus on the Kwisatch Haderach because the fremen focus on the Mahdi.
When Paul comes to full bloom as the Kwisatch Haderach he isnt what the Reverend Mother or the BG wanted....he is something beyond their grasp.
Yes he is the Kwisatch Haderach, but he is also something more.
DVs interpretation (saw it a 2nd time) makes the fremen myth just a reinterpretation of the BG myth...or rather the BG implanted the concept of the myth into the fremen mythos in order to aid in the fruition of a Kwisatch Haderach from their lands.
I think of it as competing religious orders (BG and fremen), both have the foretelling of a god-man, but the fremen hold the true religion.
Quad Dog said:
Paul was the first, but eventually rejected it based on the future he saw. Leto II picked up the title, and fulfilled the prophesy, but not in the way the BG thought would happen.
Super cool they actually built that much of the harvester and put it out in a real desert to begin with. https://t.co/HMDEoyx3ys
— Alex B. (@firstshowing) November 7, 2021
NE PA Ag said:
Minor point because we all know what's being talked about, but it's Kwisatz Haderach, not Kwisatch.
Also, I thought Lynch's Alia was plenty creepy, but in a really awkward kind of way, especially when she used 'the voice'. The dubbing was horrible.
Finally, and this is getting well into the later books, but isn't Leto II the real Kwisatz Haderach?
israeliag said:
They said three navigators actually came. I believe there were five or six with the spiced filled helmets on, but three had staves. I'm assuming the ones carrying staves were legit navigators.
Wasn't it a bit of a "trade secret" type thing.Duncan Idaho said:
Put me in the camp that says the navigators weren't shown and the guys in the spice helmets weren't full navigators. I seem to remember something about no one seeing a full navigator in person. Even the other members of the guild.
I assumed they where the equivalent of these guys in '84 Dune:Duncan Idaho said:
Put me in the camp that says the navigators weren't shown and the guys in the spice helmets weren't full navigators. I seem to remember something about no one seeing a full navigator in person. Even the other members of the guild.
Having only read Dune and no sequels, there's not a lot in there about how the Space Guild ships work. I get the impression the sequels go into it more (same thing with the navigators, they're very sparsely detailed in the first book).schmendeler said:
I just noticed this (I may be slow). Is that another planet being glimpsed through the guild ship? I didn't think they worked that way.
This is the Reverend mother's ship heading down to Caladan.
You should read the books. That is essentially what the Guild is. They control all of the interplanetary travel from what I remember. Now, hopping from say Earth to the moon or Mars? Not sure. But Earth to Arrakis, yes.TCTTS said:
I kind of love the idea of the guild basically being the universe's Uber, capable of transporting entire fleets, and that's what the big, hallowed-out, cylindrical ships are. Shaped like that for whatever reason. But yeah, is it also possible that, say, every planet has a big, cylindrical structure in orbit, and each one is more like a portal/wormhole access point that the navigators somehow control?
Regarding your first sentence, yes that's exactly what they are in the books. No interstellar travel occurs without the guild. And the guild can't function without the spice.TCTTS said:
I kind of love the idea of the guild basically being the universe's Uber, capable of transporting entire fleets, and that's what the big, hallowed-out, cylindrical ships are. Shaped like that for whatever reason. But yeah, is it also possible that, say, every planet has a big, cylindrical structure in orbit, and each one is more like a portal/wormhole access point that the navigators somehow control?
Book spoilers.TCTTS said:
I kind of love the idea of the guild basically being the universe's Uber, capable of transporting entire fleets, and that's what the big, hallowed-out, cylindrical ships are. Shaped like that for whatever reason. But yeah, is it also possible that, say, every planet has a big, cylindrical structure in orbit, and each one is more like a portal/wormhole access point that the navigators somehow control?
Quote:
Ok, I think I finally get the subtle way they incorporated the concept of folding space in the new film.
When you see the giant cylindrical ships in the atmosphere, if you look closely, you can see that within the cylinder, the space looks entirely different from the outside of the ship. If I'm interpreting this right, I think what the film is trying to convey is that the folding of space occurs inside the cylinder, and that there are multiple ships like this already around the universe orbiting the major planets of the Landsraad.
So we are seeing space being folded in the new film, just not in the trippy psychedelic way that Lynch did it or what was described in the book - instead, it's done in an efficient, industrial way that's so normal to the universe now that it's almost mundane - you just fly your ships through the cylinder, and arrive where you're intending to go
Right. There isn't a lot in the books so it is open to interpretation. I liked the idea of folding space like folding paper and lining up two holes. You would be able to see through.TCTTS said:
That's what I assumed/gathered from discussion here.
Doing a quick search, this seems to be the main consensus for the DV/movie version, though…Quote:
Ok, I think I finally get the subtle way they incorporated the concept of folding space in the new film.
When you see the giant cylindrical ships in the atmosphere, if you look closely, you can see that within the cylinder, the space looks entirely different from the outside of the ship. If I'm interpreting this right, I think what the film is trying to convey is that the folding of space occurs inside the cylinder, and that there are multiple ships like this already around the universe orbiting the major planets of the Landsraad.
So we are seeing space being folded in the new film, just not in the trippy psychedelic way that Lynch did it or what was described in the book - instead, it's done in an efficient, industrial way that's so normal to the universe now that it's almost mundane - you just fly your ships through the cylinder, and arrive where you're intending to go
That said, the space inside the cylindrical structures looked normal/perfectly see through to me. In other words, no distortion. Anyone else?
Yes, and the hope of the Bene Gesserit is to breed "The One" that can perform the same function as the Guild, no? (bend space and time)powerbelly said:Book spoilers.TCTTS said:
I kind of love the idea of the guild basically being the universe's Uber, capable of transporting entire fleets, and that's what the big, hallowed-out, cylindrical ships are. Shaped like that for whatever reason. But yeah, is it also possible that, say, every planet has a big, cylindrical structure in orbit, and each one is more like a portal/wormhole access point that the navigators somehow control?
In the book the guild ships work like wormholes. You pull in the back and they fold space and you drive out the front.
The KH will have the power to access all the genetic memories of his ancestors as far back as the beginning. The KH will be able to "see where we cannot". Somewhat similar concept, but not the same thing as folding space.PearlJammin said:Yes, and the hope of the Bene Gesserit is to breed "The One" that can perform the same function as the Guild, no? (bend space and time)powerbelly said:Book spoilers.TCTTS said:
I kind of love the idea of the guild basically being the universe's Uber, capable of transporting entire fleets, and that's what the big, hallowed-out, cylindrical ships are. Shaped like that for whatever reason. But yeah, is it also possible that, say, every planet has a big, cylindrical structure in orbit, and each one is more like a portal/wormhole access point that the navigators somehow control?
In the book the guild ships work like wormholes. You pull in the back and they fold space and you drive out the front.