
Can't help asking - why do you think its interesting? I mean... what does this say to you?
This. Power does not corrupt. Power is not a sentient being, and has no such capacity.Voronwë the Faithful wrote:Just to elaborate on this, Shippey points out that the first person to make this statement was Lord Acton, in 1887, ironically (given Tolkien's Catholicism) in a strongly anti-Papal letter. He adds that William Pitt said something somewhat similar about a hundred years earlier, but that before that, the idea apparently was not attractive, and indeed might even have been thought perverse. Shippey indicates that the Anglo-Saxon concept was more that "power exposes" one's failings, rather than power itself causing the corruption. Shippey says:N.E. Brigand wrote:As Tom Shippey has observed, that old chestnut isn't very old.River wrote:Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. The Ring is that old chestnut personified.
Shippey's answer is that arguably it does not, considering the fact that while some people (Sméagol, Boromir, Denethor, etc.) are very susceptible to the Ring's corrupting influence, other's (Frodo himself, Sam, Faramir, etc.) are much less susceptible. His answer is that the Ring is in fact "addictive". Just as some people are more inclined to alcoholism or drug addiction, so to are some people more susceptible to the Ring's corrupting influence. Shippey argues that Tolkien's deliberate inclusion of such a modern concept provides a strong argument against his critic's charge that he was engaged in "merely insulated 'ivory tower' escapism.Tolkien is certain to have felt the modernity of his primary statement about the Ring. one has to wonder then why he made it and how he related it to the archaic world of his plot. Does Lord Acton's Victorian proverb, in Middle-earth, ring true?
Not quite, IMO, though Tolkien may have disagreed.Primula Baggins wrote:The possession of power corrupts? And the possession of absolute power corrupts absolutely?
It doesn't in Tolkien, not quite; Sam at least (we can argue) is not corrupted absolutely, and even Frodo falls only at the last moment.
I wonder if the corrupting influence, the thin end of the wedge, is whether one believes one can use that power for good purposes, to save people one is responsible for protecting. That's virtuous, certainly!
But even though Ring indirectly does corrupt the Shire, it's pretty clear that neither Sam nor Frodo foresees this. There is nothing they directly feel responsible for protecting that the Ring can help them protect. That's their advantage over Gandalf, Galadriel, Aragorn, Boromir, Denethor, even Faramir. Their strength is that they don't have power.
IMO, and I'm sure others have said this.
You say that now. But just you wait until those vines crash through your window, and choke you in your sleep!Dave_LF wrote:I think I fully agree with the Anglo-Saxon take, which I missed the first time around. It is a subtle distinction, but an important one--the implication is that everyone is already corrupt, but most people are simply too powerless for it to show very much. If hobbits were less susceptible to the ring's influence, it was because they were less corrupt to begin with, having been born without much of the lust for power, wisdom, and wealth than men, elves, and dwarves possessed. The one time we got to see ring-corruption growing in a hobbit's mind, it took the form of wanting to turn the whole Earth into a garden, which really isn't that corrupt.
I've always interpreted this a little differently, in line with Gandalf's statement that "I would take it out of a desire to do good." Yes, Sam's power fantasy is to turn Gorgoroth into a garden, pretty harmless. But I don't think he would have stopped there, in the same way Gandalf or Galadriel wouldn't have stopped with using the Ring to defeat Sauron.The one time we got to see ring-corruption growing in a hobbit's mind, it took the form of wanting to turn the whole Earth into a garden, which really isn't that corrupt. Smile
See Terry Pratchett, Witches Abroad.Morwenna wrote:Not at all; but one must be sure that the aid really is in the asker's best interest, not just what the giver thinks it ought to be. Yes, sometimes the giver really does know best, but one should always examine one's motives.
There are a lot of examples on both sides, of course.
Back to Tolkien, it seems to me that the Ring acts as an amplifier, but not simply of the human weaknesses. It is a sentient agent that zeroes in on the particular quality that would make the wearer vulnerable to the desire to put it on and use its power. This is not necessarily a weakness of character, it can very well be a virtue - the desire to protect one's homeland and people, as with PtB... sorry, Boromir, or to turn a defiled desert into a flowering gardenland.'It's a big responsibility, fairy godmothering. Knowing when to stop, I mean. People whose wishes get granted often don't turn out to be very nice people. So should you give them what they want - or what they need?'
Death nodded politely. From his point of view, people got what they were given.
In other words, the Ring amplifies many of the things Buddhism tells us we need to reject. So there's a strong connection between the philosophy infusing caution about the Ring as expressed by LOTR's "good guys," and Buddhism, I would argue.(1) life is suffering, (2) the cause of suffering is desire, (3) to be free from suffering we must detach from desire, and (4) the "eight-fold path" is the way to alleviate desire.