Subject: On youth (and the thing we're all forgetting).
Author:
Posted on: 2014-09-04 09:18:00 UTC
I was thinking about the issue of children on the front lines, and something occured to me that I don't think we've considered before: the Flowers may well prioritise recruiting the young.
The PPC operates on different rules to the rest of reality; specifically, large portions of it function around the Laws of Narrative Comedy, and equally large portions around belief - 'unless you hadn't noticed'.
The synergy of those two suggests something very interesting: that what happens in missions - how Narrative Comedy plays out or doesn't - is heavily influenced by what the agents believe will happen. As a non-mission example, in Crashing Down, Steve was able to convince the universe to allow him to escape by way of an awful pun - because he believed that was how things work.
Which suggests the very interesting idea that young agents - agents who believe that they can't get hurt and have it still be funny - are unlikely to get hurt, because the Laws of Narrative Comedy, influenced by their belief, won't let them. They don't think the story should go that way, and so... it doesn't.
Compare someone older - say, Dafydd. He's seen a lot in his time; he knows that stories can be full of drama and seriousness, and that sometimes bad things happen to the protagonists. And so he spends his time fighting off the urge to abuse his powers, healing injured colleagues, and ultimately dying, because he believes that's how stories go.
You don't want kids who are too young, because they're likely to not think protagonists are allowed to kill the bad guys - which is a problem for Action agents. But 12-14-year-olds are all about wanton violence against villains - without yet thinking that the heroes will suffer for it.
If you want to tie it into plothole theory - Legal's enforcement of the Laws of Narrative Comedy seems to be along the lines of controlling the plotholes generated by agents' beliefs. Yes, agents are plothole generators just like Mary-Sues - they subconsciously warp the world to fit their idea of how things should be - but Legal restrains the effects of those plotholes to keep them from damaging canon.
Or, from our perspective: Suethors write plotholes and let them run rampant. PPCthors write a good story, and justify the plotholes as Narrative Comedy. We are our agents' subconsciouses - and we're also Legal.
Bottom line: kids don't get hurt or angsty because they don't believe they will. Adults do because they believe they will.
hS