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Divines have been worshiped or at least highly respected and feared by many cultures. From their earliest days, they have been named after virtues (though with later era Divines this is less true); as such they may be viewed as symbols or direct embodiments of those virtues. However, throughout the [[Divine Cycle]] it is clear that a Divine's name does not have to determine its choices or values. | Divines have been worshiped or at least highly respected and feared by many cultures. From their earliest days, they have been named after virtues (though with later era Divines this is less true); as such they may be viewed as symbols or direct embodiments of those virtues. However, throughout the [[Divine Cycle]] it is clear that a Divine's name does not have to determine its choices or values. | ||
==COUNTER/Weight== | ==''COUNTER/Weight''== | ||
{{Quote | {{Quote | ||
| We could have made them look like anything, but we made them look like us. | | We could have made them look like anything, but we made them look like us. | ||
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[[The Autonomous Diaspora]] began creating additional Divines during its second encounter with Rigour, although the terms Divine and Candidate were invented in news reports after they'd already been deployed.<ref>[[COUNTER/Weight 37: Visions from Windows, Or: The Last Time the Bomb Dropped]]</ref> | [[The Autonomous Diaspora]] began creating additional Divines during its second encounter with Rigour, although the terms Divine and Candidate were invented in news reports after they'd already been deployed.<ref>[[COUNTER/Weight 37: Visions from Windows, Or: The Last Time the Bomb Dropped]]</ref> | ||
==Twilight Mirage== | ==''Twilight Mirage''== | ||
{{Quote | {{Quote | ||
| For a long time, we thought we were building mirrors. But now we know better: we were setting fires. | | For a long time, we thought we were building mirrors. But now we know better: we were setting fires. | ||
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The Fleet places Divines into three generations. The first generation are those designed by humans, the second generation are those designed by humans and AIs, and the third are those designed by other divines. Each generation drifts further in naming conventions from an origin in democratic virtues, and each generation increasingly reflects the fundamental differences between divines and humanity.<ref>[[Twilight Mirage 01: The Beloved Dust]]</ref> | The Fleet places Divines into three generations. The first generation are those designed by humans, the second generation are those designed by humans and AIs, and the third are those designed by other divines. Each generation drifts further in naming conventions from an origin in democratic virtues, and each generation increasingly reflects the fundamental differences between divines and humanity.<ref>[[Twilight Mirage 01: The Beloved Dust]]</ref> | ||
==PARTIZAN== | ==''PARTIZAN''== | ||
{{Quote | {{Quote | ||
| These things that we call Divines, whether we think of them as our weapons, or our highways, or our saints or gods or mirrors: they aren't ours at all. | | These things that we call Divines, whether we think of them as our weapons, or our highways, or our saints or gods or mirrors: they aren't ours at all. |
Revision as of 02:50, 23 July 2022
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A Divine is typically a large synthetic being with incredible power. Their relationships with other beings range from domination to service to partnership to non-intervention. Divines are often piloted by another being (this role has been filled by humans, synthetics, Apostolosians and other beings in the past), a role which has been given multiple names: Candidate[notes 1], Excerpt[notes 2], and Elect.
Divines have been worshiped or at least highly respected and feared by many cultures. From their earliest days, they have been named after virtues (though with later era Divines this is less true); as such they may be viewed as symbols or direct embodiments of those virtues. However, throughout the Divine Cycle it is clear that a Divine's name does not have to determine its choices or values.
COUNTER/Weight
“
We could have made them look like anything, but we made them look like us.”
The first machine that would come to be called a Divine was Rigour, created by Dr. Irene Klipsch-Dove for the Orion Conservation Conglomerate in order to optimize working efficiency in frontier worlds. Relatively soon after, built as weapons against it, came Liberty and Discovery and Righteousness. Rigour eventually caused the near-total destruction and splintering of humanity across the stars.
The Autonomous Diaspora began creating additional Divines during its second encounter with Rigour, although the terms Divine and Candidate were invented in news reports after they'd already been deployed.[1]
Twilight Mirage
“
For a long time, we thought we were building mirrors. But now we know better: we were setting fires.”
The Divine Fleet's Resonant Orbit originally consists of a fleet of 300 Divines.
The Fleet places Divines into three generations. The first generation are those designed by humans, the second generation are those designed by humans and AIs, and the third are those designed by other divines. Each generation drifts further in naming conventions from an origin in democratic virtues, and each generation increasingly reflects the fundamental differences between divines and humanity.[2]
PARTIZAN
“
These things that we call Divines, whether we think of them as our weapons, or our highways, or our saints or gods or mirrors: they aren't ours at all.”
Divines are foundational to the culture of the Divine Principality. The constellations of Asterism, "organizational diagrams and schema that are meant to 'clarify' your position in society",[3] understand Divines, the Elects and the leader of each Stel in a harmonic three-way leadership held above citizens and the Adrift (non-citizens).[4] They are viewed as either true embodiments of their names (Progressive Asterism) or reflections of the traits of the Principality (Received Asterism).
Due to the internal conflict presumed by the Principality's structure, there are treaties in place which allow the wreckage of Divines or their Elects to be reclaimed.[5] The Principality has the ability to revive destroyed Divines indefinitely, giving them power over their lives and deaths.[6] It is also able to assert control over their behavior to some degree.[7][8] Some Divines still rebel: the Divine Providence struck back at the Principality the moment it was turned on, but as punishment it was deactivated. Providence was labeled a "heretic Divine", as are any Divines that exist outside the Principality.[9]
Notes
References
- ↑ COUNTER/Weight 37: Visions from Windows, Or: The Last Time the Bomb Dropped
- ↑ Twilight Mirage 01: The Beloved Dust
- ↑ Road to PARTIZAN: Armour Astir (Pt. 1), 00:09:08 - 00:09:34
- ↑ Part of a hierarchical structure like The Great Chain Of Being in medieval Christianity; Road to PARTIZAN: Microscope (Pt. 1), 01:13:40 - 01:14:16
- ↑ PARTIZAN 03: SHORESIDE RECOVERY - DINNERDATE, dossier
- ↑ The Road to PARTIZAN 09: Microscope Pt. 1
- ↑ PARTIZAN 36: The Witch in the Glass Pt. 2
- ↑ The Road to PARTIZAN 07: Beam Saber Pt. 2
- ↑ PARTIZAN 27: Millennium Break: She said, "To Win We Must Play!", dossier