mankoi
Mankoi
mankoi

What you said was “It really doesn’t make sense once schools of the Force were introduced.” What that means is it did make sense until schools of the Force were introduced, then it did not. That’s not the same as saying it never made sense.

Anyway, put it this way: a force sensitive is someone who can use the Force. A

No, I’m not repeating what you said. You said was: “Do these distinctions exist in the new canon? Jedi was a generic term for force wielder in the extended universe. It really doesn’t make sense once schools of the Force were introduced.”

In other words, stating new introductions meant the old use of a term no longer

The new canon isn’t very specific, so it’s hard to be sure. That being said, there’s absolutely no reason to think there isn’t. Jedi has never properly functioned as a generic term for a force wielder. Luke Skywalker was able to use the Force (not very well, but he could do it) before he was considered a Jedi and

General Grievous had to have his... everything removed. He’s a thing that happened in Star Wars, and if he’s still alive after having most of his body removed, Darth Maul being alive is nothing.

What greyman33 said. Also, if you prefer, the Jedi we normally speak of are actually “Light Jedi” (as opposed to Grey and Dark Jedi) all three groups having their own ideologies. But because you normally run into Light Jedi, when people tend to assume that if someone talks about a Jedi without a modifier, they mean a

It’s not even a problem if the Jedi weren’t so god damn literal about it. The idea that you have to be in control of your feelings, let go, and accept loss without it clouding your judgement seems perfectly in keeping with the Jedi. What the Jedi actually do is go “But that’s hard! Wouldn’t it be easier if we just

The big question here is... what kind of doors, and are they/can they be locked? Bad guy running away? Bam. Locked safe door in his path. Considering the number of chase scenes heroes have to put up with, it could help. Even in the open, you just have to make more doors. If the doors do not lock, or do not start

Even if you don’t see them as friends, the story works on terms of their individual character arcs. Tony’s past experiences have left him with no actual trust in himself. He doesn’t necessarily believe that the accords are right, but after the disaster of Age of Ultron, he doesn’t think he’s capable of making

I’d... check your figures again there. No main or supporting protagonist die in season 1 of Firefly, the two you quote are from Serenity. So that’s a season of TV without a major death. The only two Dollhouse characters you quote are also offed in season 2. Angel ran for five seasons, but you only have six characters

I saw it as more of an admission that he really wasn’t Captain America anymore. Not that he didn’t want to be, but, like he said, he put his faith in individuals. He was given that shield when he was a soldier fighting to protect a system he believed in. He stopped believing in those systems. He doesn’t trust them to

CA and WS’s relationship is literally on exhibit at the Smithsonian. And he explains how he knew about the Winter Soldier program early on. Black Widow leaked a shit ton of Hydra files onto the open internet. So that takes care of the knowledge part. As for any other things he needed to do... a Special Forces member

I’d say any plan that depends on Tony Stark acting like a petulant five year old is actually pretty solid.

That being said, I think most of the petulant 5 year olding was not actually part of the plan. Zemo’s plan is just to get hold of a particular video tape, then get Tony Stark, Captain America and Winter Solider to

I... advise you against ending any internet comments with a one word insult like “Sad.” or “Lame.” It... just makes you sound like Donald Trump. Which was maybe your intention. It’s the internet. People make jokes. I get that. But... if it was your intention... dear god, why?

I don’t remember that at all. ... I remember it APPEARING for minutes at a time...

Nah. Joss almost never kills people to raise the stakes. He usually just does it because he hates joy and wants to kill it, bit by bit.

I’m doubting the film is a two hour commercial for Black Panther and Spider-Man, considering that neither character is in much of it. They show up for a few set pieces, not a lot else.

As for conflict... yeah, it’s not a hugely plot driven film. It’s more of a character film. Which is masked by a bunch of fight

No.

Sometimes the brain and body don’t match. It’s not clear cut which one is “wrong” or which one is “right.” For example, it’s fully possible for someone to have two X chromosomes and develop a male body. People are made of chemicals and chemicals are unreliable. So, for whatever reason, we don’t know what, some

Actually the other grad student in my lab is about the only person who rarely talks about it. It’s the post-docs who talk about it most, and they are, essentially, professional researchers. It’s all they do. Trust me on this, I’ve been listening to the professionals in the field too. That’s... pretty much what being a

I actually study psychology too, I’m on a doctoral path, and let me tell you, you can’t swing an e-prime validation key in my lab without hitting someone talking about the replicability crisis. Actually it’s a huge topic in some required first year grad courses. Believe me, if people inside the field weren’t taking it

Well, there’s not a whole lot I can say to that as... what you’re basically saying here is that you have the general feeling a lot of psychology isn’t very good. I can offer up the case that some fields, and some research, is quite good. Like I said, I feel that, while cognitive psychology has issues with stats at