I have no idea how I missed seeing this thread before now, but I did. You are having some interesting and intense conversations here, so for now I will just say "hello" until I get acclimated. I hope to converse with some of you soon.

Moderators: December, bac, Bronze Haired Girl, cullengirl
December wrote:Grayce, Rings, Andy -- thank you.
I don't know why this didn't register more strongly on me when I read it. Clearly I need to ignore my inner resistance and go back and read this chapter properly.
It's possible that Stephenie designed it that way but I don't think it's likely. If we look at the way Stephenie designed Alice's visions, I would say she believes in free will. This is because the her visions show the future isn't determined. It changes as people's decisions change. So, given that, I would say Bella chose (unconsciously) to create these hallucinations of Edward to relieve her of her pain. It wasn't fate or predetermination or the like that brought the hallucinations to Bella. She chose her fate.GrayceM wrote:Do you think Stephenie designed it this way or am I seeing signs that no one else does?
I'm 99.9% confident that Stephenie is a very strong believer in free will.Twilight<3 wrote:It's possible that Stephenie designed it that way but I don't think it's likely. If we look at the way Stephenie designed Alice's visions, I would say she believes in free will. This is because the her visions show the future isn't determined. It changes as people's decisions change. So, given that, I would say Bella chose (unconsciously) to create these hallucinations of Edward to relieve her of her pain. It wasn't fate or predetermination or the like that brought the hallucinations to Bella. She chose her fate.GrayceM wrote:Do you think Stephenie designed it this way or am I seeing signs that no one else does?
Well, if you look at it that way, that there were four books in the saga, then of course you could say it's fate. That this character is on a set line of a predetermined life created by Stephenie Meyer. However, if you actually look at it as its own world, not as a world created by Stephenie Meyer, then it would be free will. If there were fate in this book, Alice's visions would remain constant. Nothing would change because it would all be "fate," not a future created by our own decisions and actions. Alice's visions do change to people's different decisions, though, which is proof each and every character in the books have free will.GrayceM wrote:Maybe I'm at an advantage then...having known before reading the first book that there were 4 in the series, I guess I didn't take the break up and the whole of New Moon as seriously. Like I knew that it wasn't really over because it wasn't an ending to the story.
I can see how it would have simply gotten her out of the pain of loss had I not know that this was a temporary situation. Having looked at it as temporary, it's as though every decision she makes whether by grand design, fate or whatever you call it, put her a step closer to the events bringing Edward back into her life.