Ti: Difference between revisions
TheTraveler (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
(Gone to Pot, Out of universe, added category, needs major cleanup) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
== | {{Infobox Object | ||
|Object name = Ti | |||
|image=[[Image:Docdodec.JPG|250px]] | |||
|type = | |||
|origin = Unknown | |||
|appearances = [[DW]]: ''[[Meglos (TV story)|Meglos]]'' | |||
}} | |||
Ti (pronounced tai or tie)is the dodecahedron as stated first by the male Savant Didricks who argues against the Dion Lexa in the arguing chamber in Meglos Part One, he says,"...and trusted to death no doubt! How can there be any respect for a creed that practices primative sacrifice? Are you making sacrifices now in the name of your monsterious myth?...No this should be said before all Tigella, the dodecahedron is no god!" | Ti (pronounced tai or tie)is the dodecahedron as stated first by the male Savant Didricks who argues against the Dion Lexa in the arguing chamber in Meglos Part One, he says,"...and trusted to death no doubt! How can there be any respect for a creed that practices primative sacrifice? Are you making sacrifices now in the name of your monsterious myth?...No this should be said before all Tigella, the dodecahedron is no god!" | ||
Line 9: | Line 15: | ||
Ti, which is, through out the episodes, refered to as she, is both the Dodecahedron and a metaphysical form conjured through beliefs. The blessings of Ti through the Dion Oath show this metaphysical connection to the power that the dodecahedron contains. | Ti, which is, through out the episodes, refered to as she, is both the Dodecahedron and a metaphysical form conjured through beliefs. The blessings of Ti through the Dion Oath show this metaphysical connection to the power that the dodecahedron contains. | ||
{{Gone to Pot}} | |||
{{Oou}} | |||
[[Category:Objects]] |
Revision as of 16:18, 22 July 2008
Ti (pronounced tai or tie)is the dodecahedron as stated first by the male Savant Didricks who argues against the Dion Lexa in the arguing chamber in Meglos Part One, he says,"...and trusted to death no doubt! How can there be any respect for a creed that practices primative sacrifice? Are you making sacrifices now in the name of your monsterious myth?...No this should be said before all Tigella, the dodecahedron is no god!"
Again the dodecahedron is said to be a god by General Draham Mcgregor when he speaks to Meglos, he says,"But what you're asking us to do is impossible...and they guard that dodecahedron with their lives,to them its a god."
Meglos informs us that Ti the dodecahedron was made on Tigella and is an extremely potent power source, which the Dions and Savants are using only at a fraction of its potential. (Its potential is about twelve times that of what it's current output is. Meglos says its equal to all the energy in the Universe.)
Ti, which is, through out the episodes, refered to as she, is both the Dodecahedron and a metaphysical form conjured through beliefs. The blessings of Ti through the Dion Oath show this metaphysical connection to the power that the dodecahedron contains.
It's unclear what's wrong with the article, because the editor who placed this tag here didn't enumerate the page's problems.
These problems might be so great that the article's factual accuracy has been compromised. Talk about it here or check the revision history or Manual of Style for more information.
It currently has too much of a real-world perspective. It may also be written primarily in the present tense. Please check the overall content against our Manual of Style, consult the talk page and revision history for any relevant notes, employ the past tense, and then remove this message.