![]() The reason why I think knowledge was the main factor in this corruption is because of Saruman: he studied the Ring-lore in great detail, and knew exactly what the Ring could do. These desires are far harder to push aside, especially during a war like that, when it is you job to destroy the Ring and Sauron, and hence will prove a far greater obstacle for your mind to resist. It only was after he learned more about the Ring and what it could do: rule over the other Rings and their bearers, and dominate other beings with your will using the Ring, that his visions would've become grander in scale: visions about him ruling the world, overthrowing Sauron, helping the world to be a better place and protecting the Shire he held so dearly from changing. You also have to take note how he acted during the 17 years between Bilbo's Party and the day he learned about what that ring he had actually could do: after all this time, he seemed to be just like Bilbo in terms of corruption. ![]() Meanwhile, Frodo had been given incredibly much information about what the Ring was. He still was very attached to it though, but he didn't need that much of his inner strength, morality and willpower to stop himself from doing evil things. So the visions of what he could do with the Ring were based solely on that, so these would be quite harmless. I think the difference lies in their knowledge about the One Ring: Bilbo knew it could made him invisible, and that's it. There are other Tolkien-themed subreddits out there! Say hello to our friends in the following places: We're looking at starting a wiki for these common ones. Try searching before posting a new thread: odds are we've already covered some of the "classic" questions ("Who is Tom Bombadil?", "What happened to the Blue Wizards?", "Why couldn't the Eagles just take the Ring?" etc). Please make use of r/TolkienBooks and r/TolkienArt for these. Posts/comments centring entirely on promotion will be removed. You can share your content, but in a discussion-based format. Links are allowed, so long as they contribute to the discussion. No posts that are simply links or title-only. (Some more obscure topics we will allow.) There are other spaces on Reddit to discuss the movies, games, fanfiction, AI-generated content, etc. This sub is intended primarily for serious posts, although humour in discussion is still welcome.ĭon’t discuss topics that stray too far away from having the centre of attention on Tolkien and his works. Stick to the topic instead of commenting on others. No insults, and no aggressive or passive-aggressive comments. For the full descriptions of the rules, follow this link.Īlways keep in mind that we are all human beings, so treat others how you would like to be treated. Multi-reddit of ALL Tolkien Themed Subreddits!īelow are our general rules.Wondering what books there are to read? See /u/ebneter's great postįull list of All Past Reading Discussions and Other Posts of Note Please see our frequently asked questions. Welcome to r/tolkienfans! This subreddit is a space for the Tolkien nerds of reddit to debate and discuss the whole Tolkien mythos.
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