Er, Galahad - you do realize it is [a) technically possible and (b) perfectly acceptable to edit posts you are quoting from so that you don't reproduce the entire post in your reply, don't you? If not, I'd be happy to explain the procedure.
Shadow Ships have sentient beings at the centre of their ships.
Technomages have Shadowtech built on to them.
True, but in both cases, and especially in ther former, the effect was deicdely negative. "Once you've been put inside one of those ships, you're never the same again." Frankin is never able to cure the teepsicles or find a safe way to remove their implants. The tech embedded in the Tecnhomage is also malign, in both its origins and its effects, until Galen is able to master it and bring it under his control. (And even then its origins remain a problem, as would have been seen in Crusade.)
So perhaps the shadows did build the GM, and left a TechnoMage in charge. This TM would then have become one with the tech and removed the shadow programming so Draal could take over.Technomages have shadowtech in them, grown into them, intertwined throughout their nervous system.
All the technomages were trying to master the tech, to bring it under their control. Rigid control was their way of preventing the Shadow (chaos) programming from having its way all the time. What Galen did was to free the tech of the Shadow (chaos) programming, and become one with the tech. At the end of The Passing of the Technomages trilogy ("Invoking Darkness" pg. 313-314), Galen is not "controlling" the tech. Rather, he has a symbiotic, synergistic, and very positive relationship with it. All Galen has to do is think of what he wants to happen, and if it's within the tech's ability, it...just...happens.
Re-read Invoking Darkness pg. 308 "It couldn't be true....." through pg. 314.
Isn't it annoying that so many years after the series there are still mayor questions unanswered?
As for the Centauri - I'm not impressed. Some have prophetic dreams, but only of their own deaths. A few, exclussively female, have more general visions
Londo also has that dream about the shadow vessels passing overhead, but I agree that they seem generally to be the kind of vague prophecy that only makes sense after the event, when it's too late to be any practical use.
Technomages have shadowtech in them, grown into them, intertwined throughout their nervous system.
All the technomages were trying to master the tech, to bring it under their control. Rigid control was their way of preventing the Shadow (chaos) programming from having its way all the time. What Galen did was to free the tech of the Shadow (chaos) programming, and become one with the tech. At the end of The Passing of the Technomages trilogy ("Invoking Darkness" pg. 313-314), Galen is not "controlling" the tech. Rather, he has a symbiotic, synergistic, and very positive relationship with it. All Galen has to do is think of what he wants to happen, and if it's within the tech's ability, it...just...happens.
Re-read Invoking Darkness pg. 308 "It couldn't be true....." through pg. 314.
.....why would the shadows make a machine that goes against their philosphy, and then modify it.
Wasn't it intentionally lost?
Or, possibly ...I suspect it's either a reverence issue (again) or part of the rules of the game with the Vorlons
Perhaps they suspect that altering the past might be capable of altering the present.
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