champooon, on 19 August 2010 - 11:34 AM, said:
ansible, on 19 August 2010 - 06:41 AM, said:
Mostly I agree with you, which is why I think it's odd that Tattersail was specifically mentioned to be over 200 years old.
Tattersail's age was only mentioned because it was directly involved in the story, her internal monologue in whether she was cradle snatching Paran, as she was comparing both their ages/experiences and whether it was suitable for them to get it on!
Paran is 22 or so at the time; whether Tattersail is 100 or 200 wouldn't make much relative difference. It's still got the potential for the old woman/young man stigma. It is rare that we see humans that live to be over 100 unless they are a mage or using alchemy. Yes, many important people end up living longer, but I'm talking about the average person. Someone said Dujek was 80; he wasn't young by any means, though probably more fit than the average real human who is 80.
Conversely, most of the mages we encounter are long-lived. I don't think anyone in this thread has ever made a statement to the contrary, including myself. It is indeed obvious, and I'm not sure where anyone got the idea that it was being questioned.
My question was simply how much longer mages usually live than normal humans. It's not ten years extra and it's not a thousand, but somewhere in between. I don't think we have a good sense of that number, which is why I asked.
We sail in and out of Time, then back again. There is only one ship, the captain says. All the ships we hail between the galaxies or suns are this ship.