Havok wrote:Here is a question. Who gives a fuck if it is canon if it is not in continuity?
For starters, when words are used correctly then people can have a conversation and understand each other. When they don't, then people have to start making assumptions about what the other person means.
It really does help to be on the same page when discussing something. So when getting an answer from authors or other people that would know about the official continuity policies, it's nice to know what they are talking about when they use the words
canon and
continuity. ("Terms like 'canon' and 'continuity' tend to get thrown around casually, which doesn't help at all." - Chris Cerasi.)
Havok wrote:Your example of Blue 5 vs. Red 5... You can argue all you want that they are both canon, but Blue 5 has been DIRECTLY contradicted by the movie, so again, who gives a fuck,? It is completely irrelevant to... anything. It doesn't matter. It is ink on paper. It is meaningless. No argument is going to be made or won using the info. It is relegated to trivia.
By choosing a simple and obvious contradiction I was hoping to get the idea across clearly. I'm at a loss as to how it could have flown over your head.
You need something that matters in the debate? How about the size of the
Executor? Range and firepower of turbolasers? The definition of a
Base Delta Zero operation? Just about any technical discussion involves taking admissible evidence (
canon sources) and attempting to find a consensus on what it all means after filtering out contradictions and outliers (
accepted continuity).
Let's take the size of the
Executor. Some canon sources peg it at 8 km or 12.8 km. Even though these sources are clearly in contradiction with the canon movies, they are still admissible evidence -- they are still canon sources. The movies show the
Executor as at least 17.6 km. So 17.6 was the length accepted in continuity. But then another source came along and said that the
Executor is 19 km. That does not contradict the films (where a lower limit was the best that could be gleaned), so 19 km became the length in accepted continuity.
But the sources that give the contradictory information
do not lose canon status. They are still admissible evidence. Conceivably, another source could come along and rationalize one of the lower numbers as another class of starship. Were that to happen, the words on the pages wouldn't magically gain or lose canon status; they stay just as admissible as they have been. Continuity is what changes. The interpretation of the admissible evidence is what changes.
The reason for this becomes clearer when we look at things that are more controversial and up in the air due to conflicting evidence: both sides present their arguments with their supporting evidence. Then a new book comes out and the cycle continues.
Batman wrote:And Blue 5 ISN'T canon. That's the whole point of the layered canon system (however shoddily it might have been implemented over the years).
The point is to develop a consistent continuity from canon sources. Are you telling me that the ANH novelization isn't a canon source? Or that it has parts that are not admissible evidence?
Canon refers to the source, not the status of a snippit within continuity:
Star Wars Gamer wrote:Canon refers to an authoritative list of books that the Lucas Licensing editors consider an authentic part of the official Star Wars history.
Batman wrote:The novelisation says Blue, the movie says Red, therefore RED is canon while BLUE is not. Same reason Executor class SSDs AREN'T canonically 8 km long, the second DS WASN'T canonically a measly 160 km across and ISDs DON'T canonically have a cruising speed of a mere 40,000c.
Lower tier canon information STOPS being canon when it contradicts Higher tier canon.
You're using the word "canon" as if it means both
canon and
continuity. It does not.
Let me ask you: which descriptions of turbolaser behavior are canon and which are not?
The way fans have viewed turbolaser behavior has changed a lot over time, but they all use a different subset of the evidence, all of which are admissible evidence, or canon. Depending on which theory one subscribes to, certain quotes may have to be reinterpreted in order to make things fit due to the contradictory nature of the evidence, but at no point does any of it become inadmissible evidence, or non-canon.
Under your insane interpretation, this would be impossible because some evidence would lose canon status and become inadmissible because it apparently contradicts the movies. Or would it magically regain canon status when someone interprets the quote in a way that doesn't contradict the films? When two people have two different views with two mutually-exclusive descriptions that both fit with the films, which quote is considered canon and which one is not?
The answer is that
all the evidence is considered canon (at different tiers). You cannot have a proper debate otherwise.
Later...