Entmoot
 


Go Back   Entmoot > J.R.R. Tolkien > Middle Earth
FAQ Members List Calendar

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 12-07-2004, 02:40 PM   #1
Elemmírë
avocatus diaboli
 
Elemmírë's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Himring
Posts: 1,582
Elvish Perception of Time

In another thread, we brushed up against the subject of how Elves perceive the passage of time, especially as compared to how Men perceive it. There seemed to be some differences of opinion regarding this topic.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wayfarer
Right, Pytt. Perhaps I should clarify exactly what I was nitpicking: Elves would conceive the idea of time differently from humans - immortality or even long life nescessitates a somewhat different outlook than mortality does. But they would not percieve its passage any differently.

This distinction is certainly splitting hairs (even for me ), but it's nescessary to counter the all-too-frequent assumption that elves somehow experience existance more slowly than humans. That is false - elves experience time the same way that humans do (which is a large part of the reason they constantly attempted to halt it in places like Rivendell and Lorien), they simply have a longer adult lifespan and so experience more of it. A 144 year old elf would expereince the same duration that a human would if they lived the same time - there's nothing qualitatively different between the way humans and elves (and Maiar, and Valar, and Rodents) experience the passageof time.
In Fellowship of the Ring, it is said, concerning this topic:

Quote:
Nay, time does not tarry ever, but change and growth is not in all things and places alike. For the Elves the world moves, and it moves both swift and very slow. Swift, because they themselves change little, and all else fleets by: it is a grief to them. Slow, because they do not count the running years, not for themselves. The passing seasons are but ripples ever repeated in the long long stream. Yet beneath the Sun all things must wear to an end at last.
Any ideas?
__________________
~ I have heard the languages of apocalypse and now I shall embrace the silence ~

Neil Gaiman
Elemmírë is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-07-2004, 02:49 PM   #2
BeardofPants
the Shrike
 
BeardofPants's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: San Francisco, CA <3
Posts: 10,647
I think it comes down to the differentiation between the perception of time. That is, building upon what shannon said, the passage of time passes as physically the same as the time that mortal men run on, BUT the perception of time is differentiated between the mortal and immortal kindred.
__________________
"Binary solo! 0000001! 00000011! 0000001! 00000011!" ~ The Humans are Dead, Flight of the Conchords
BeardofPants is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-07-2004, 02:51 PM   #3
Attalus
Swan-Knight of Dol Amroth
 
Attalus's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: On the Bay of Belfalas
Posts: 1,125
Arwen Undomiel

My take is that the Elves percieve Time just as Men do. As Wayfarer says, immortals just have a different attitude to it. Even humans, as they grow older, see Time differently than children or adolescents do. One of my older patients told me recently that he hadn't even finished breakfast hardly before it was time for lunch. Probably something like that but exponentially different must happen to the Elves.
__________________
"What song the Sirens sang, or what name Achilles assumed when he hid himself among women, though puzzling questions are not beyond conjecture." - Sir Thomas Browne, Urn Burial.
Attalus is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-07-2004, 02:57 PM   #4
Wayfarer
The Insufferable
 
Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 3,333
Really, I'd bet anything that Elves experience the same things, juston a longer scale.

Recently I found myself looking back and saying 'Man, 2004 is almost done already? Seems like just yesterday it was just 2003. And the whole Y2K thing seems like it was just a little while ago'. Somehow, I imagine that if I were to live for another thousand years, what's to say I wouldn't look back and say 'Man, it's 3000 already? Seems like it was just 2000 a few days ago.'

In fact, I'd go so far as to say that elves don't even percieve time differently. The difference is in the way they remember past events (having much more history to recall) and the manner in which they anticipate future events (without the sense of urgency that comes from being mortal). Since experience only occurs in the present, and time proceeds equally for all entities, any different perception of time is wholly subjective.
__________________
Disgraced he may be, yet is not dethroned,
and keeps the rags of lordship once he owned
Wayfarer is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-09-2004, 08:24 PM   #5
Elemmírë
avocatus diaboli
 
Elemmírë's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Himring
Posts: 1,582
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wayfarer
In fact, I'd go so far as to say that elves don't even percieve time differently. The difference is in the way they remember past events (having much more history to recall) and the manner in which they anticipate future events (without the sense of urgency that comes from being mortal). Since experience only occurs in the present, and time proceeds equally for all entities, any different perception of time is wholly subjective.
I don't think this argument is logical WF. Let's look at our lifespan as compared to an insect's. Many insects' lifespans are over within the passage of a single season. I cannot believe that one season would appear as long for an insect is it would for us.

This seems a bit like saying that everyone sees the world the same way, no matter how large or small they are. If an amoeba had eyes , it could never perceive the world around it the way we do.

And I would like to see you try to prove that time proceeds equally for all entities.
__________________
~ I have heard the languages of apocalypse and now I shall embrace the silence ~

Neil Gaiman
Elemmírë is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-10-2004, 12:48 AM   #6
Sister Golden Hair
Queen of Nargothrond
Administrator
 
Sister Golden Hair's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Akron, Ohio - USA
Posts: 7,121
I don't think that the Elves even considered the passage of time until they met Men and especially when Men died. The Sil says that when Beor died "the Elves saw for the first time the swift waning of the lives of Men and the death of weariness that they knew not in themselves." So, the notice and effects of time came with Men to the Elves maybe.
__________________
"Whither go you?" she said.

"North away." he said: "to the swords, and the siege, and the walls of defence - that yet for a while in Beleriand rivers may run clean, leaves spring, and birds build their nests, ere Night comes."

AboutNewJersey.com - New Jersey
Travel and Tourism Guide
Sister Golden Hair is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-11-2004, 03:21 PM   #7
ItalianLegolas
Tolkien-aholic
 
ItalianLegolas's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: somewhere in the solar system... more specifically NJ...
Posts: 712
to elves, hundreds, or even thousands of years could be like human days, even though the same amount of time is passing
__________________
What was lost is now found.
ItalianLegolas is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-11-2004, 04:10 PM   #8
Embladyne
Honourary Elitist Inklette
 
Embladyne's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: between the mountains and the sea
Posts: 704
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sister Golden Hair
I don't think that the Elves even considered the passage of time until they met Men and especially when Men died. The Sil says that when Beor died "the Elves saw for the first time the swift waning of the lives of Men and the death of weariness that they knew not in themselves." So, the notice and effects of time came with Men to the Elves maybe.
This makes a lot of sense to me. At least more so than the theory that time seems to pass at different rates for different races. With such long lives, the Elves would have no reason, I believe, to mark time as humans do, and it would have little importance to them until they became familiar with races that time did have a large effect upon. And once they noticed the effects of time upon humans, Elves were still removed from these consequences, so I don't believe they would see the passage of time as humans do, even then.
__________________
Even on the pinnacle of a palace a crow does not become an eagle.

My DA page

Last edited by Embladyne : 12-11-2004 at 04:15 PM.
Embladyne is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-11-2004, 10:30 PM   #9
Sister Golden Hair
Queen of Nargothrond
Administrator
 
Sister Golden Hair's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Akron, Ohio - USA
Posts: 7,121
Quote:
Originally Posted by ItalianLegolas
to elves, hundreds, or even thousands of years could be like human days, even though the same amount of time is passing
I disagree with this. The Elves were not really unlike humans, except in their fates and endurance. They live and experienced time the same. The thing with the Elves was that they lived for so long that time became an enemy in a way that stalked them.
__________________
"Whither go you?" she said.

"North away." he said: "to the swords, and the siege, and the walls of defence - that yet for a while in Beleriand rivers may run clean, leaves spring, and birds build their nests, ere Night comes."

AboutNewJersey.com - New Jersey
Travel and Tourism Guide
Sister Golden Hair is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2004, 01:03 PM   #10
Attalus
Swan-Knight of Dol Amroth
 
Attalus's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: On the Bay of Belfalas
Posts: 1,125
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sister Golden Hair
I disagree with this. The Elves were not really unlike humans, except in their fates and endurance. They live and experienced time the same. The thing with the Elves was that they lived for so long that time became an enemy in a way that stalked them.
Yes, I agree. Tolkien said in the Letters that we and the Elves are biologically the same species, since interbreeding produces fertile offspring. Perhaps they perceive the passing of time, to paraphrase Einstein's famous observation, more like the time spent with their lover than in the dentist's chair, but they live in the same continuum as mortal folk.
__________________
"What song the Sirens sang, or what name Achilles assumed when he hid himself among women, though puzzling questions are not beyond conjecture." - Sir Thomas Browne, Urn Burial.
Attalus is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-15-2004, 08:59 AM   #11
Lefty Scaevola
AngAdan
 
Lefty Scaevola's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Boerne, Texas
Posts: 856
A key to understanding their view of time is their memory, which is photographic. Legolas says that "to Elves memory is more like the waking hours than like a dream". Their can experience their lives of hundreds of years ago as if it were today through their memory. Thus passage of time is not slow, but does not matter much. All their past life is as current to them as is today, its one large combined experience to them, rather than a sequence with the oldest parts fading away before the new. Thdy have no past, but rather a huge present and near present.
__________________
Gaius Mucius Scaevola
Older, richer, and wiser than you
"Mighty are the Ainur, and mightiest among them is Melkor, but that he may know, and all the Ainur, that I am Iluvatar, those things that ye have sung, I will show them forth, ... And thou, Melkor, shalt see that no theme may be played that hath not its uttermost source in me,"

Last edited by Lefty Scaevola : 12-16-2004 at 06:09 PM.
Lefty Scaevola is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-15-2004, 10:37 AM   #12
Sister Golden Hair
Queen of Nargothrond
Administrator
 
Sister Golden Hair's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Akron, Ohio - USA
Posts: 7,121
Yes. This is much like what Finrod tried to explain to Andreth in the Athrabeth. Good point Lefty.
__________________
"Whither go you?" she said.

"North away." he said: "to the swords, and the siege, and the walls of defence - that yet for a while in Beleriand rivers may run clean, leaves spring, and birds build their nests, ere Night comes."

AboutNewJersey.com - New Jersey
Travel and Tourism Guide
Sister Golden Hair is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-02-2005, 02:36 AM   #13
Minielin
Elven Warrior
 
Minielin's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: I dwell in possibility.
Posts: 247
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lefty Scaevola
Thus passage of time is not slow, but does not matter much.
I agree with this- I think elves have the same perception of time as mortals, but it's really a 'moot point. Hehe.
__________________
"...then how shall I
Revive the dying tones of minstrelsy,
Which linger yet about lone gothic arches,
In dark green ivy, and among wild larches?"

Interdum feror cupidine partium magnarum Europae vincendarum.
Minielin is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-02-2005, 06:05 AM   #14
Wayfarer
The Insufferable
 
Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 3,333
Well... the idea which I keep having is that an elf might think of time differently because he has experienced so much more of it.

It sort of ties into aging. When the two are newborn, they are completely indistinguishable. When they are very young, they are still very similar. Then they start to diverge.

I think at the age of 10, a human and an elf would think of time in almost the same fashion. At the age of 100, they would be biologically different (one young and one old), and so might have different expectations, but they would still think of the past in essentially the same way.

Now, if you were to take a human (say, Tuor) and grant him the longevity of the Eldar, he would experience hundreds, maybe thousands of years. I don't think that Tuor would experience time or percieve its passage any differently when he was mortal - but he would certainly think of it in a slightly different way when he was 1000 than he did when he was 50, but only in the same way that a human in their 60s thinks of time differently than someone in their teens - because they've experienced more.

It's not a matter of there being anything essentially different - it's the matter of perspective. Much like the way someone who has never left the town of their birth might have differing opinions of distance than someone who has circumnavigated the globe.
__________________
Disgraced he may be, yet is not dethroned,
and keeps the rags of lordship once he owned
Wayfarer is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-12-2005, 07:00 PM   #15
Embladyne
Honourary Elitist Inklette
 
Embladyne's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: between the mountains and the sea
Posts: 704
At the moment, I'm taking a bio class on the mechanisms the human brain uses to store memories, and it's interesting to reread this thread with what we've discussed in the class in mind.
I wonder if the way in which elves recall memories would vary from that of the average human, since elves seem to consistantly have such vivid memories. Maybe it would just be the way in which they perceive the recalled memories....
__________________
Even on the pinnacle of a palace a crow does not become an eagle.

My DA page
Embladyne is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-21-2005, 04:33 PM   #16
ItalianLegolas
Tolkien-aholic
 
ItalianLegolas's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: somewhere in the solar system... more specifically NJ...
Posts: 712
Now that I'm, reading one of the many Tolkien encyclopedia's, I have a new theory.

If a Valarian Age is more or less 1000 years long in mortal time, and since the elves (in my mind anyway) are kind of like men who are closer to Valar, perhaps elves experience 500 years in the same amount of time that Men experience 1000 and gods experience 100
__________________
What was lost is now found.
ItalianLegolas is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-21-2005, 11:15 PM   #17
Wayfarer
The Insufferable
 
Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 3,333
No.

You're missing the point. Completely. Men, Elves, and Valar are all subject to time - one second passes at the same speed for everyone, unless some sort of temporal distortion has occured (which it hasn't). If they did exist in an altered time rate, humans would move twice as fast as elves and ten times as fast as the valar (basically). That's just not the way it works.

There are differences in the scale of measurement, but those are only for convenience. There isn't any difference in the rate at which events are experienced,
__________________
Disgraced he may be, yet is not dethroned,
and keeps the rags of lordship once he owned
Wayfarer is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-22-2005, 01:51 PM   #18
Elemmírë
avocatus diaboli
 
Elemmírë's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Himring
Posts: 1,582
I don't know if this is exactly what ItalianLegolas is getting at, but if so, I likewise have wondered if time passes differently in Valinor than in ME... I don't have the quotes to prove it right now...

...and my mom is pulling me off the computer so I can't add anything more right now...
__________________
~ I have heard the languages of apocalypse and now I shall embrace the silence ~

Neil Gaiman
Elemmírë is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-22-2005, 02:17 PM   #19
ItalianLegolas
Tolkien-aholic
 
ItalianLegolas's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: somewhere in the solar system... more specifically NJ...
Posts: 712
that was pretty much what i was going for, it was just a random idea I got when I was reading anyhow.
__________________
What was lost is now found.
ItalianLegolas is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-24-2005, 02:13 PM   #20
Sister Golden Hair
Queen of Nargothrond
Administrator
 
Sister Golden Hair's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Akron, Ohio - USA
Posts: 7,121
I forget exactly how it was explained about how time passed in Valinor in the Years of the Trees, but they went through cycles of 12 twelve hours, and one would wax ehile the other waned. However, I would think for all the lived in Middle-earth, that they experienced the passage of time the same, after the rising of the sun and moon.
__________________
"Whither go you?" she said.

"North away." he said: "to the swords, and the siege, and the walls of defence - that yet for a while in Beleriand rivers may run clean, leaves spring, and birds build their nests, ere Night comes."

AboutNewJersey.com - New Jersey
Travel and Tourism Guide
Sister Golden Hair is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply



Posting Rules
You may post new threads
You may post replies
You may post attachments
You may edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Theology III Earniel General Messages 1007 07-02-2008 02:22 PM
can someone translate into elvish... Sminty_Smeagol Lord of the Rings Books 4 09-14-2007 12:59 AM
Elvish Minstrels: music as a battle tactic? Elemmírë Middle Earth 6 08-08-2006 06:16 AM
Why wasn't Gollum turned into a wraith? CAB Middle Earth 98 06-27-2006 05:41 PM
Nature of Elvish Consciousness easterlinge Middle Earth 11 08-26-2001 10:00 PM


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:07 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
(c) 1997-2019, The Tolkien Trail