The grey man's race: Difference between revisions
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== Behind the scenes == | == Behind the scenes == | ||
The Grey Man's race is never given a name, with him referring only to "[his] colleagues" and other such periphrases. One obvious interpretation is that they are the [[Guardian of Time|Guardians of Time]], as they are stated to be responsible for introducing manichaean duality to the universe; the ''Grey'' Man would thus be positioned as a midway point between the [[Black Guardian]] and [[White Guardian]], filling a part similar to the balance-bringing [[Red Guardian]] in [[Craig Hinton]]'s unrelated effort to expand the Guardians' ranks. Although the "grey man's race" and Guardians are discussed separately in {{cs|A History of the Universe (short story)}}, they are not brought up in {{cs|Falls the Shadow (novel)}}. | The Grey Man's race is never given a name, with him referring only to "[his] colleagues" and other such periphrases. One obvious interpretation is that they are the [[Guardian of Time|Guardians of Time]], as they are stated to be responsible for introducing manichaean duality to the universe; the ''Grey'' Man would thus be positioned as a midway point between the [[Black Guardian]] and [[White Guardian]], filling a part similar to the balance-bringing [[Red Guardian]] in [[Craig Hinton]]'s unrelated effort to expand the Guardians' ranks. Although the "grey man's race" and Guardians are discussed separately in {{cs|A History of the Universe (short story)}}, they are not brought up in {{cs|Falls the Shadow (novel)}}. However, the Grey Man is shown to have the same abilities of control over [[the Doctor's TARDIS]] that the White Guardian does in [[TV]]: {{cs|Enlightenment (TV story)}}. | ||
As the first sapient race, who used their position to impose a metaphysical "structure" on reality in the [[early universe]], they also strongly recall the [[Time Lord]]s as they would go on to be reimagined in ''[[Faction Paradox (series)|Faction Paradox]]'' (for which [[Daniel O'Mahony]] would go on to write), as the [[ | As the first sapient race, who used their position to impose a metaphysical "structure" on reality in the [[early universe]], they also strongly recall the [[Time Lord]]s as they would go on to be reimagined in ''[[Faction Paradox (series)|Faction Paradox]]'' (for which [[Daniel O'Mahony]] would go on to write), as the [[Homeworlder]]s of the [[Great House]]s. {{cs|Crimes Against History (short story)}}, for example, opens on an explanation of the Homeworlders' origins which strongly recalls ''Falls the Shadow''{{'}}s account of the grey man's race, and brings caveats to their description as humanoid or a species at all, thus explaining their distinction from the [[first humanoid]]s in ''Falls the Shadow''. | ||
{{quote|The first sentient life in the universe develops. The culture in question can ''reasonably'' be described as humanoid, and immediately begins to imprint its own ideas about how things should work on the universe around it, hence the proliferation of humanoid forms throughout the rest of history. As the first self-aware tenants of creation, this primal culture can't strictly be considered "alien", or even a species, as such: these are the ones who set the template for the rest of sentient life, and therefore can only be considered a force of nature, or at the very least a force of history.|[[PROSE]]: [[Crimes Against History (short story)|Crimes Against History]]}} | {{quote|The first sentient life in the universe develops. The culture in question can ''reasonably'' be described as humanoid, and immediately begins to imprint its own ideas about how things should work on the universe around it, hence the proliferation of humanoid forms throughout the rest of history. As the first self-aware tenants of creation, this primal culture can't strictly be considered "alien", or even a species, as such: these are the ones who set the template for the rest of sentient life, and therefore can only be considered a force of nature, or at the very least a force of history.|[[PROSE]]: [[Crimes Against History (short story)|Crimes Against History]]}} | ||
However, within ''Falls the Shadow'', the [[Seventh Doctor]] seemed to be certain that the Grey Man "was not a Time Lord", and the Grey Man seems to refer to them as separate from himself. | However, within ''Falls the Shadow'', the [[Seventh Doctor]] seemed to be certain that the Grey Man "was not a Time Lord", and the Grey Man seems to refer to them as separate from himself. |
Revision as of 15:50, 6 December 2024
The Grey Man was one of an ancient race who influenced the structure of the universe, whom he called "[his] people" or "[his] colleagues" (PROSE: Falls the Shadow [+]Loading...["Falls the Shadow (novel)"]) and who were referred to in one history book as the grey man's race. (PROSE: A History of the Universe [+]Loading...["A History of the Universe (short story)"]) Although the Grey Man manifested in a human-like body, which he could replace if it was destroyed, he referred to a separate species who had appeared after his own kind as the first humanoids.
By the Grey Man's account, his race existed before the origins of life; (PROSE: Falls the Shadow [+]Loading...["Falls the Shadow (novel)"]) by the history book's account, it had been formed alongside other forces such as the Guardians in Event One. (PROSE: A History of the Universe [+]Loading...["A History of the Universe (short story)"]) The Grey Man related:
Fifteen thousand million years ago, the cosmos formed during Event One. There was a hydrogen rush which defined the parameters of the mate- rial universe. The implications and resonances of Event One go beyond that simple explosion, but they don’t concern us… Suns formed. Systems formed. Life blossomed on a million planets. And when the first cells spawned in the first oceans on the first world, I was there, with my people, watching.
Behind the scenes
The Grey Man's race is never given a name, with him referring only to "[his] colleagues" and other such periphrases. One obvious interpretation is that they are the Guardians of Time, as they are stated to be responsible for introducing manichaean duality to the universe; the Grey Man would thus be positioned as a midway point between the Black Guardian and White Guardian, filling a part similar to the balance-bringing Red Guardian in Craig Hinton's unrelated effort to expand the Guardians' ranks. Although the "grey man's race" and Guardians are discussed separately in A History of the Universe [+]Loading...["A History of the Universe (short story)"], they are not brought up in Falls the Shadow [+]Loading...["Falls the Shadow (novel)"]. However, the Grey Man is shown to have the same abilities of control over the Doctor's TARDIS that the White Guardian does in TV: Enlightenment [+]Loading...["Enlightenment (TV story)"].
As the first sapient race, who used their position to impose a metaphysical "structure" on reality in the early universe, they also strongly recall the Time Lords as they would go on to be reimagined in Faction Paradox (for which Daniel O'Mahony would go on to write), as the Homeworlders of the Great Houses. Crimes Against History [+]Loading...["Crimes Against History (short story)"], for example, opens on an explanation of the Homeworlders' origins which strongly recalls Falls the Shadow's account of the grey man's race, and brings caveats to their description as humanoid or a species at all, thus explaining their distinction from the first humanoids in Falls the Shadow.
The first sentient life in the universe develops. The culture in question can reasonably be described as humanoid, and immediately begins to imprint its own ideas about how things should work on the universe around it, hence the proliferation of humanoid forms throughout the rest of history. As the first self-aware tenants of creation, this primal culture can't strictly be considered "alien", or even a species, as such: these are the ones who set the template for the rest of sentient life, and therefore can only be considered a force of nature, or at the very least a force of history.
However, within Falls the Shadow, the Seventh Doctor seemed to be certain that the Grey Man "was not a Time Lord", and the Grey Man seems to refer to them as separate from himself.