Dune: The Darkest Possible Future | What's Worse Than the Jihad?

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In this video we discuss the darkest possible future that could have occurred in the Dune saga. This was a future foreseen by Leto II and potentially Paul Atreides as well.
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  • @jeervin
    @jeervin7 ай бұрын

    I always thought that Paul did not become the God Emperor because he was not born with the memories of his ancestors. He could not sacrifice his individual humanity, but his son who never really had that chance could choose it. The abomination was needed for the salvation of humanity.

  • @Reddkomet

    @Reddkomet

    7 ай бұрын

    He also refused to give up Chani too

  • @jamesespinosa690

    @jamesespinosa690

    7 ай бұрын

    Oh wow!!! That's a really interesting observation!!!! Thank you for sharing!!

  • @Yarblocosifilitico

    @Yarblocosifilitico

    7 ай бұрын

    I can't blame him. Leto II might be the most badass character ever, due to that decision alone.

  • @jamesmontalvo5026

    @jamesmontalvo5026

    7 ай бұрын

    Paul is too afraid to walk the golden path so he curses his son to walk it in his stead. Leto confronts him about it and calls him out for it. Pretty dark man. Great novels!

  • @Muggle1983

    @Muggle1983

    7 ай бұрын

    @jeervin I think you explained this very succinctly and accurately. 100% agree with you.

  • @carolynallisee2463
    @carolynallisee24637 ай бұрын

    There was a fundamental difference between Paul and young Leto that ultimately determined how they would react to the requirement of becoming a worm-human hybrid. This was that Paul, unlike his son, hadn't been born to a mother super saturated with spice, and thus, pre awakened. Thanks to his presience (?) Paul was able to do some pretty unpleasant things, but he was still solidly human. Leto, on the other hand, had to fight from birth to retain his humanity... and his sense of self had already been weakened by the time he finally chose to take up the Golden Path. What becomes clear in Children of Dune is that Leto and his sister Ghanima knew about the Golden Path long before the events in the book play out, they had discussed it, and both knew that one of them was going to have to adopt it. Ghanima was equally capable of taking up the challenge, but she didn't know if she had the mental and emotional strength to see it through to its end. Leto, on the other hand, having been supersaturated with spice not once, but twice, was already one personality amongst many when he adopted the sandtrout skin. With the weight of millions, if not billions, of human lives to support him through the thousands of years of slow metamorphosis, he believed he had enough humanity (or the memories of it) to see him to the conclusion of the Golden Path. And unlike his father, with his own individuality already subsumed in the collective Other Memory, he wasn't afraid of losing something already buried in the myriad.

  • @axelfury3189

    @axelfury3189

    7 ай бұрын

    The concept of the Golden Path suggests that a prescient being can see humanity's future and guide it to avoid self-destruction. However, the very nature of prescience's has limitations, as evidenced by Jessica and Thufir: Jessica, as a trained Bene Gesserit with some prescient abilities, and Thufir, a Mentat, are both skilled in the art of prediction. Yet, they find themselves unable to prevent the Duke's fate. This raises questions about the infallibility of the Golden Path. Does it truly provide a clear roadmap to navigate humanity's fate, or does it merely offer a narrow and limited perspective? It becomes unclear whether one can truly foresee all consequences and outcomes, or if prescience merely presents a narrow perspective on the future.

  • @AdamBlack

    @AdamBlack

    7 ай бұрын

    @@axelfury3189 Its limited. Paul exlains this in messiah. There are dark paths. itrs even limited by interfence by Navigators. and Some People were always immune ( shaddams IV ferret like assasssin ) Mentats dont have Presience. ( but the skills do seem to help when you do) Paul, later Duncan are also treained as Mentats. Paul is partly a superhuman as he is trained in most of the Guilds including swordsman, Benee gesserit, some Zen Sunni Philosophy and Mentat skills the later books assert over and over again that Prescience is a trap. Its subjective to confirmaton bias and the Boostrap paradox. Navigators have partial Prescience, its how they are able to navigate. The Golden Path Ended the Monopoly power where one person could control all of humanity ; by inducing the scattering , people travelling so far into unknown space they cant return. No ships, siona genes and No sheilds, hiding from prescience it also stopped the threat that self replicating hunterseekers could evolve to destroy all of humanity.

  • @astralax

    @astralax

    7 ай бұрын

    Beautifully articulated!

  • @scratthesquirrel5242

    @scratthesquirrel5242

    7 ай бұрын

    prescience = pre (before) + science (knowledge) 👍😊 the trick to remembering words is to know the roots

  • @astralax

    @astralax

    7 ай бұрын

    @@scratthesquirrel5242 Science means 'truth', not 'knowledge'.

  • @perceivedvelocity9914
    @perceivedvelocity99147 ай бұрын

    Leto was ruthless because he loved humanity. His only goal was to prevent our species extinction. He would do anything to achieve his goal. He would sacrifice anything to prevent a extinction event from happening. Paul saw the same visions as Leto. Paul could not make the sacrifices necessary save humanity in the long run. Paul was his father's son and could not live with the things that he had to do. Leto was a mix of his mother and father. Chani was a person who could make hard choices and sacrifice herself. Leto was able to do what he did because he had the strength of both of his parents.

  • @loboilustrado

    @loboilustrado

    7 ай бұрын

    What I don't understand is why he leaded the Muad'Dib's Jihad? that's like a weak leadership or did it prevented something worse?

  • @perceivedvelocity9914

    @perceivedvelocity9914

    7 ай бұрын

    @@loboilustrado IMO Paul chose the lesser of two evils. If he didn't act humanity would have gone extinct in the near future. He allowed the Jihad to happen because he couldn't find another path that would save humanity. The guilt that he felt after the Jihad made him walk into the desert. Unfortunately the Jihad was not enough. It just delayed our extinction. Leto had to become the God emperor to make the changes that were required to prevent all of humanity from being destroyed.

  • @Despotic_Waffle

    @Despotic_Waffle

    7 ай бұрын

    @@loboilustrado From my understanding, Paul basically went with the flow of the visions he saw, there's multiple times in the book where he's just regretting the choices he's making but prefers it over the Leto path. There's also a point where he knows he's gone too far to go back, that even if he dies he'll just become a martyr and make the Jihad even stronger.

  • @yurimodin7333

    @yurimodin7333

    7 ай бұрын

    @@loboilustrado I think that's a 2 part situation. 1 The Fremen demanded the jihad to fulfill their false prophecies, 2 he basically drove the Landsraad to irrelevance and setting the stage for LetoII

  • @Karamazov9

    @Karamazov9

    7 ай бұрын

    What’s the point of humanity existing if we’re miserable?

  • @anonperson3972
    @anonperson39727 ай бұрын

    Leto the second was a hero. He painted himself a villain, while actually creating a tyranny that actually caused minimum loss of life and suffering. There is a great example where he had to kill some historians, to add to his infamy he executed them by burning, but he had actually sedated them so they wouldn't feel anything. He even discusses at great length how he is priming the culture to admire exploration, while restricting that thing. It was a tyranny, but a carefully constructed one, not the brutality of a despotic ruler.

  • @AL-lh2ht

    @AL-lh2ht

    7 ай бұрын

    Cope

  • @gokiburi-chan4255

    @gokiburi-chan4255

    7 ай бұрын

    literally missed the whole point of the saga lmao

  • @jamesespinosa690

    @jamesespinosa690

    7 ай бұрын

    He is an archetypal 'benevolent dictator' no??

  • @milton_foward

    @milton_foward

    7 ай бұрын

    @@gokiburi-chan4255 I mean... what he says isn't that off in that regard, but we have to keep in mind that WORM DUDE COULD LITERALLY SEE INTO THE FUTURE. So it's not comparable to ANY real dictatorship / tyranny. Maybe it says that the only benevolent dictator is one who is omniscient? (???). Idk, just thinking thoughts.

  • @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan

    @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan

    7 ай бұрын

    I've heard people describe Joseph Stalin like this. 'It was all needed to win WW2'

  • @pbbbht
    @pbbbht7 ай бұрын

    I've met a shocking amount of Dune fans that have read through God Emperor of Dune and did not understand that the invisibility to prescience was the bulk what Leto's Golden Path was (the Scattering being the other part).

  • @jamesburke3413

    @jamesburke3413

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes. Thank you.

  • @heretic-668

    @heretic-668

    7 ай бұрын

    I would actually reverse that order: The Scattering was what was needed to save humanity; the propogation of invisibility to prescience throughout humanity was what was necessary to prevent anyone else from ever undoing what Leto II was doing.

  • @yurimodin7333

    @yurimodin7333

    7 ай бұрын

    @@heretic-668 and removing humanity's dependence on spice via No-Ship navigation

  • @sillypuppy5940

    @sillypuppy5940

    7 ай бұрын

    Invisibility to prescience was the most important. It makes humans unpredictable, so that if a subsequent entity gained prescience, it could not use it to enslave humanity. Remember that in the prequels, the machines were desperately trying to understand humanity - they failed, and the Butlerian Jihad happened. Probably one of the most incomprehensible things in human existence is religious fervor; imagine an immortal machine being able to control it.

  • @owenwiltshire7577

    @owenwiltshire7577

    7 ай бұрын

    also not being trapped in one persons prescient vision, vs being invisible, to exist outside of it... ie had the spice and worm forced a future upon humanity?

  • @chasmosaurus3
    @chasmosaurus37 ай бұрын

    I always thought the darkest future would be a prescient despot. Imagine a Harkonnen as a Kwisach Hedarach. Mankind would turn forever inward serving the capricious whims of the despot. Civilizations wouldn't expand and grow since absolute control would be necessary. Change would be the enemy. Any threat would be completely and immediately eradicated.

  • @Aaronsbookreviews

    @Aaronsbookreviews

    7 ай бұрын

    never thought of that.

  • @ticallionz

    @ticallionz

    7 ай бұрын

    Paul was 1/4 Harkonnen - his maternal grandfather was the Baron

  • @spudthepug

    @spudthepug

    7 ай бұрын

    @@ticallionzbut imagine if Feyd was the Kwisatz Haderach…Paul may have Harkonnen blood but he was not raised as a Harkonnen.

  • @masterpython

    @masterpython

    7 ай бұрын

    The original plan was for Feyd to hook up with an Atreides daughter for the final breeding

  • @AdamBlack

    @AdamBlack

    7 ай бұрын

    That is literally what happened. Leto is a cruel prescient despot. Duncan Idaho considers him as evil as a harkonen. And tries to kill him over and over.

  • @karlhorvath3882
    @karlhorvath38827 ай бұрын

    Man the parallel of Paul not taking on the task to save Humanity and letting his kids deal with it, matches to real world leaders always deferring the hardest problems to another generations problem.

  • @holllyify

    @holllyify

    7 ай бұрын

    What if Paul couldn’t do that, and foresaw that Leto was the only way forward? There are so many reasons hinting he just wasn’t born for this. For instance, Paul was raised as a human, had feelings and a life of his own. He also wasn’t born with the knowledge of his ancestors, unlike Leto, that actually leveraged this curse to "build" a supra human personnality that could take the only good decisions for thousands of years. Or he wasn’t born with fremen genes that allowed a symbiosis with the worms (body that saves water, more tolerant to spice,…) Or simply Leto had a twin that understood him and supported him on his choices. Or Paul needed to become an historic figure and Leto needed to become the Tyrant in order for the plan to work. Etc etc.

  • @user-wy1et9dk9w

    @user-wy1et9dk9w

    Ай бұрын

    I don’t think that’s a fair assessment of Paul’s inability to follow the golden path.

  • @ArlindoBuriti

    @ArlindoBuriti

    Ай бұрын

    Is not that... Paul just could not do it... you need to think like this guy can see the future... he could not do it... same with the sister, she would break before the golden path could be finished.

  • @resher

    @resher

    Ай бұрын

    Such is the way throughout human history.

  • @bryndawdy3420

    @bryndawdy3420

    Ай бұрын

    It's also a parallel of Paul's forefathers failing to settle their own scores

  • @c.w.simpsonproductions1230
    @c.w.simpsonproductions12307 ай бұрын

    I think this also ties in with the question of why Leto II didn't wipe out the Ixians to avert this apocalyptic future. Because Leto II knew that it would ultimately fail. That type of fear and thinking is exactly what led to Shaddam IV trying to wipe out the Atreides, and it ultimately led to his defeat and precisely what he feared coming to pass. No matter how skilled his Fish-Speakers were, there's no way Leto would have been able to completely eradicate the Ixians. And those Ixian survivors would likely have created the very hunter seeker weapon Leto II feared out of pure desperation or vengeance.

  • @natestowes5867

    @natestowes5867

    7 ай бұрын

    This helps with my questions of why didn't he just stop the Ixians. But even still you don't need to eradicate entire civilizations to stop the creation of this killing machine.

  • @Fridaey13txhOktober

    @Fridaey13txhOktober

    7 ай бұрын

    A self-replicating doomsday weapon.

  • @luvr381
    @luvr3817 ай бұрын

    The hunter-seeker in the first book was not programmed, it was steered by a human controller.

  • @jdbarcelo

    @jdbarcelo

    7 ай бұрын

    Right. 100%. I am confused by this Hunter seeker theory.

  • @zoltanposfai3451

    @zoltanposfai3451

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jdbarcelo Agreed the Seeker / seeking connection is too thin. He may be trying to retrofit the BH/KJA thingamabobs into the proper story?

  • @TheGavrael

    @TheGavrael

    7 ай бұрын

    @@zoltanposfai3451 I think exactly this. BH/KJA, in my opinion, did a great disservice to Frank's work.

  • @Xaris192

    @Xaris192

    7 ай бұрын

    Seconded, thirded and then quadrupled. While I notice why enhancing the hunter-seekers with an AI could possibly lead to human extinction, I don't think it is the primary reason behind the God-Emperor's motivation, as it is not hinted in the saga in any way, at least as far as I remember. (Keep in mind I only read original 6 books... I might eventually pick up the other ones, but I've heard so much negative opinions on them I'd like to contemplate the original Herbert's work - pun intended - at least for now.)

  • @craigstege6376

    @craigstege6376

    2 ай бұрын

    An AGI could interface with swarms of them with no discernable pause in processing. It'd be like seeing a PC controlled army in an RTS at work, only the stakes are genocidal defeat, not a loss screen. An AGI implementing itself into a self replicating swarm of them would be a gray goo/nanopocalypse scenario.

  • @RubyMarkLindMilly
    @RubyMarkLindMilly7 ай бұрын

    The Dune saga is so rich and complex it's a fascinating universe Herbert created

  • @martinlagrange8821
    @martinlagrange88217 ай бұрын

    Duncan was important to Leto's breeding program thanks to his death at the blades of the Sardaukar, at variance with Paul's vision "Duncan was with him in that vision" - through clearly Duncan had avoided the grip that a prescient would have on setting a waveform-collapse on the local universe. Leto then back-bred Duncan with the Atreides to re-inforce this ability to disappear from prescient view and manipulation - resulting in biological mimesis that made humans invisible to prescience, in the form of Duncan's descendant, Siona Atreides. By the time of Heretics of Dune, almost all of humanity in the old Empire had Siona genes, so that the saying 'By the thousand sons of Idaho' and 'The nine daughters of Siona' takes on more meaning - within the 10,000 years after the fall of Leto II, the spread of these genes both within the Empire and the Scattering, allowed Bashar Miles Teg to reflect "Atreides, all of us...." I'm always suprised that the Bene Gesserit never picked up on this - but, then, as in the appendix from Dune (the Report on Bene Gesserit motives as compiled for the Lady Jessica) this seemed to be the clumsiness they often demonstrated - being blindsided by events where their assumptions proved wrong - and failing to learn from those mistakes in turn. Hence Leto II considered teaching them an even tougher lesson because "They are so close to what they should be, and yet so far..."

  • @marquistf1996

    @marquistf1996

    7 ай бұрын

    This is very interesting! Though I never got the impression that Duncan was able to avoid prescient manipulation/subjugation more so that Paul’s vision was weaker then and he wasn’t capable of seeing the future in a very clear and accurate way, which he was able to do later in the series. I believed he repeatedly recreated Duncan because he was the only person Leto could travel the millenniums with. Who else would have tolerated this? Not gurney, or stilgar, or thufir hawat. Duncan was loyal to a fault and was particularly appealing to Letos most recent ancestors, Leto the first Paul and jessica. Not saying your theory is incorrect and tbh it’s more interesting than my theory but I’m just sharing my opinion. Love this series.

  • @AdamBlack

    @AdamBlack

    7 ай бұрын

    I m not seeing it. The purpose Duncan Idaho played was never finished. ( He started to gain prescience against the New Facedancers technology their tachyon web ) . But this was after having thousands of lives and essentially Other Memory. If anything, Duncan was Hypervisible to Letos Prescience, a known quantity, which is the main reason he kept using him bringing him back. He was able to avoid all of Duncans many assasination attempts too. Except for he one with Siona . Siona Genes actually existed in Dune. Shaddams Furtive Assassin , Count fenring had them. He was described as a failed KH whos ability was in furtiveness, avoiding being noticed including Prescience.

  • @michaeloliver7525

    @michaeloliver7525

    6 ай бұрын

    @@AdamBlackIdaho’s purpose was fully realised in the escape of the no-ship from the face dancer/hive mind entity personified by Marty and Daniel. Idaho in his Chapter House incarnation - the amalgam of all of his ghola versions - is instrumental in the continuance of the thinnest thread of the Golden Path. Machine intelligence wasn’t the ultimate threat to individuated human expression - it was the face dancer/hive mind personified in Marty and Daniel. That the no-ship escapees take Van Gogh’s ‘Thatched Cottages at Cordeville’ to remind them of what it is to be human is such a masterful touch by Frank Herbert.

  • @AdamBlack

    @AdamBlack

    5 ай бұрын

    @@michaeloliver7525 I kind of agree with most of your points. I do think Duncan was hypervisible to Leto. And the strong implications during heretics Chapterhouse is the present in the Empire was Letos future. I don't remember Ultimate Duncan was doped with Siona genes. He escaped their tachyon net. The biggest mystery is what happens next. By that I mean does Frank turn it into a Trilogy, or do another time jump. If Dune7 was a direct sequel he's set it up for Duncan gaining prescience. Or much more. ( I don't believe his son will ever release the notes. ) Marty and Daniel have ability beyond the BG and Leto. They have a metastable SELFs outside multiple personas. Like joss Whedons Dollhouse . We also see Duncan was given secret abilities by the Tleilax. Since Frank set it up, it's possible in 7 he unlocks Face Dancer abilities. Or gains BG sharing, including from regular humans. He set it up so there was a parallel to Scattering Facedancers gaining Meta consciousness and Duncan from integrating past lives. Do you think Facedancers operate as a hivemind? Or do you just mean the group mind of Dany and Marty types?

  • @luismartinez399
    @luismartinez3997 ай бұрын

    There's a glimpse of another dark future at the end of Dune Messiah: "Again he stumbled. Chani, Chani he thought. There was no other way. Chani, beloved, believe me that this death was quicker for you . . . and kinder. They'd have held our children hostage, displayed you in a cage and slave pits, reviled you with the blame of my death. This way . . . this way we destroy them and save our children."

  • @iamb34

    @iamb34

    2 ай бұрын

    what? I need more of these posible futures

  • @AllTheArtsy

    @AllTheArtsy

    Ай бұрын

    that's just for Chani and the Atreides if the Fremen broke faith with Paul

  • @purpledragons1146

    @purpledragons1146

    Ай бұрын

    I never actually got this. There was too many Fremen loyal to Paul and Chani. Stilgar and the other loyalists would never have let Chani be enslaved.

  • @CarolinaHernandez-bv1nh

    @CarolinaHernandez-bv1nh

    29 күн бұрын

    @@purpledragons1146but it could be the other houses that succeeded to killing Paul and then blame Chani for it. Since they’re loyal to Paul (and not Chani) they can also be vulnerable to believe that his concubines killed him out of irrational anger that he’s simply dead. That or other Houses will simply blame Chani and imprison her even if it’s obvious it wasn’t true. The common Fremen can’t do anything about it if there is no emperor.

  • @purpledragons1146

    @purpledragons1146

    29 күн бұрын

    @@CarolinaHernandez-bv1nh Chani was the niece of Stilgar, the most respected Fremen naib and one of Emperor Paul's closest advisors. The Fremen under Stilgar never would have let Chani be blamed for Paul's death and would have brought the real conspirators to justice.

  • @colinchildress1251
    @colinchildress12517 ай бұрын

    Another Dune video? You know Quinn is addicted to this series when he's still making stuff about it in 2023. Love the videos, man. Keep up the good work!

  • @MeUngaBungaButYouAreWorst

    @MeUngaBungaButYouAreWorst

    7 ай бұрын

    Another nude video indeed !

  • @APOKOLYPES

    @APOKOLYPES

    7 ай бұрын

    we all are, Dune is just that good a story

  • @Jantonvid

    @Jantonvid

    6 ай бұрын

    That and the money involved in views

  • @c.w.simpsonproductions1230
    @c.w.simpsonproductions12307 ай бұрын

    One moment that resonated with me was a scene between the God-Emperor and Malky. We don't see their dialogue, but it's clear that Leto II told Malky about his visions of the Ixians creating the hunter seeker and asked him if the Ixians could not do it. And Malky simply sighed and chided Leto II, because no matter what, the Ixians couldnt stop. Because even with the warning of what they would create, they would simply assume that they could avoid such an outcome because of their confidence in themselves.

  • @NaatClark
    @NaatClark7 ай бұрын

    An interesting idea is that part of Leto's golden path was actually helping humanity to overcome their aversion TO technology. Not only did he not crack down on the IXians but he was enamored with their machines, going so far as to have a dictaphone that could literally read his thoughts. Him getting rid of most of the universe's natural spice forced people to use computer navigation in their ships. By Chapte House the Bene Gesserite are even making cyborgs out of people.

  • @Upgraayd
    @Upgraayd7 ай бұрын

    I am always fascinated that Count Fenring had the trait that Leto II was looking for in his own breeding program, except he couldn't pass it on.

  • @lecamaroni2279

    @lecamaroni2279

    2 ай бұрын

    You mean the invisibility? He was only invisible because he was another oracle, also, he was close to a KH

  • @Upgraayd

    @Upgraayd

    2 ай бұрын

    @@lecamaroni2279 I wasn't aware fenring was an oracle. just an almost kh.

  • @Upgraayd

    @Upgraayd

    2 ай бұрын

    @@lecamaroni2279 i don't think he was. i only read frank's books though so maybe i am missing something

  • @lecamaroni2279

    @lecamaroni2279

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Upgraayd read them again, he is. He is really close to being a KH but his genetics lead to a dead end. The only reason he was invisible to Paul was because he is also a oracle or his prescience was strong enough to hide from other oracles at least

  • @Upgraayd

    @Upgraayd

    2 ай бұрын

    @@lecamaroni2279 nah I don't think prescience was ever mentioned for him. He specialized in furtiveness. I think you should read it again. In any case it isn't worth an argument.

  • @yourcheapdate4564
    @yourcheapdate45647 ай бұрын

    Nice one Quinn. I've been re-reading the original 6 books over the last year and I'm in Heretics now. I love how everyone is still trying to figure out what the hell the god emperor was actually trying to do. His ways were not understood during his long life and cannot be understood even through hundreds and thousands of years of study. He was written so well as a detached all knowing being, but at the same time a living raw nerve! Such a great character. Wish we knew more about his sister's life though. Is there a book by Herbert's son or Anderson or the two of them about her that I missed?

  • @Noun-fq8tj

    @Noun-fq8tj

    7 ай бұрын

    only expansion we got on any of the years between 3 and 4 is in the Dune Encyclopedia, which is... canon/noncanon- depends whom you ask. The entry on Ghanima in there is all we get. imo it's more canon than the stuff his son and Anderson did if only because Frank himself endorsed the work, but gave disclaimer that history was constnatly changing and things in the Encyclopedia were still open to change, but w/e I'm ranting now

  • @yourcheapdate4564

    @yourcheapdate4564

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Noun-fq8tj This is just the kind of thing I was looking for, I never went to the encyclopedia, so this is great info for me. I read all the son and Anderson books back in early 2000's too and found them lacking. I appreciate the direction, not a rant, just great info, thanks again!

  • @yurimodin7333

    @yurimodin7333

    7 ай бұрын

    She is reduced to irrelivance.......one of the worst outcomes for the twin sister of the god emperor who must now live with the agony of her death after having the intense bond of being pre-born together.

  • @williamsteveling8321

    @williamsteveling8321

    7 ай бұрын

    @@yurimodin7333 except she's not irrelevant. Her descendants contribute to the reality that is the gene which allows humanity to survive. Her path was far less arduous, but extremely beneficial in the long run. We don't know the names of the 1400 or so humans which survived the bottleneck. But they're existence is why we are all here. Sometimes notoriety is not remotely related to relevance

  • @kevinrussell1144

    @kevinrussell1144

    5 ай бұрын

    I read the first three Dune books with mixed reactions. THEN I started God Emperor....it was a WTF moment. I instantly concluded Herbert had completely jumped the shark, or jumped his own worm, or had completely 180'd himself and was swimming upstream against his own backside. I've never given another Dune clone or Gola even a shot at wasting my time. Yeah, I watched the new movie to see how the story translated, but I am not INVESTED in Dune stock. I'll keep my interest in cash, at least until the dollar completely crashes out. Cash is the spice of life, but not life itself.@@Noun-fq8tj

  • @kurtroscoe8971
    @kurtroscoe89717 ай бұрын

    As someone who tried and failed to get into Dune, I am immensely grateful for your ability to break down its high concepts and character motivations. The ending of Children of Dune made me not want to bother with God Emperor after Lato said he would be a worse tyrant than his father. Maybe I'll give it another shot when I have an avaliable audible credit.

  • @AdamBlack

    @AdamBlack

    7 ай бұрын

    No no no. You were correct not to read it. read the cliffs notes, skip directly to Heretics of Dune. Letos is tyrant, hes a monster. Book 4 has very little action and is claustrophic. everything in this video is mentioned in a small blurb of letos Journals.

  • @manakin5

    @manakin5

    2 ай бұрын

    You really should read God Emperor. It is a remarkable story with a very compelling character. The devil is in the details. Reading past it will only make you understand appreciate Heretics and Chapterhouse less, because you will not grasp why the sisterhood thinks what they do and acts how they do.

  • @marquistf1996
    @marquistf19967 ай бұрын

    I believe Leto was coerced into this by his grandmother. She was poisoning him to death with spice and basically forcing him to put on the trout skin so he could escape. Not to mention that Aaliyah told the twins that in order to truly appreciate their memories they had to grow and make their own. Which they both agreed with. Leto was super young and didn’t have a full understanding of what he was giving up despite his vast knowledge of other memory.

  • @JAzzWoods-ik4vv

    @JAzzWoods-ik4vv

    7 ай бұрын

    But it wasn’t jessica who drugged him! In Jacurutu we later learn the orders to give Leto spice came from Alia (rly vladimir harkonnen)

  • @WeyrleaderZor
    @WeyrleaderZor6 ай бұрын

    You always have such cool insights and explain things so well. It's been 20 years since I read these books and you talk about them with deep knowledge, but also very accessibly for people that don't know or remember all the details you mention and reference. One of the best.

  • @djkehoe4480
    @djkehoe44807 ай бұрын

    Glad to see you haven't forsaken the smaller videos. Still Quinn, with all these Dune videos, you should do some super cuts of all Dune videos besides just the playlist. All of the Explained in five minute episodes, all of the Ultimate guides together, etc etc for example

  • @erickalbani546
    @erickalbani5467 ай бұрын

    It is so good to see you back to Dune! It's awesome to see you covering other series, don't get me wrong, but I started following you all those years ago and you were covering dune a lot; it feels nostalgic

  • @Vinypod3
    @Vinypod36 ай бұрын

    Man there´s no other youtuber like you explaning with such love and appreciation to Science Fiction books, the music, the audio, everything...This is the best channel to go deeper in this genre, keep bringing this amazing content! 👏👏

  • @jeffdeupree7232
    @jeffdeupree72327 ай бұрын

    I’ve pondered a lot about why Leto II couldn’t just wipe out the Ixians. I suppose the Ixians were in some way inevitable. (Not trying to mix franchises, here.) Even if the Ixians were to be wiped out, there would someday arise another technological culture. The threat could only be delayed. Leto needed to reshape humanity to survive enemies of its own creation. The no-gene was the best, lasting solution. Don’t just remove a threat, but make us capable of surviving any threat.

  • @Yarblocosifilitico

    @Yarblocosifilitico

    7 ай бұрын

    Leto II didn't wipe out the Ixians because he needed a technological center, and the known evil is better than the unknown one, because you can control the former, whereas you might not be able to control the later.

  • @eoinstanley1188

    @eoinstanley1188

    7 ай бұрын

    He was also in love with an Ixian at the end of his reign

  • @KohuGaly

    @KohuGaly

    7 ай бұрын

    The issue was not just the Ixians. The real issue is that Butlerian Jihad is fundamentally flawed. It only takes one idiot bending the rules a little, or sticking to letter instead of the spirit, to create an intelligent rival to humanity. - It might be Ixians making smarter and smarter machines, pushing the boundary of what counts as "non-thinking machine" and end up enslaving intelligent AI that rebels, or worse, not make the AI smart enough to to understand what user means by "make more paperclips". - It could be Telelaxu creating face dancers that rebel (they are not literal machines, but they are enslaved intelligent non-humans). - It could be a prescient human-worm hybrid (or even mutated human), that abandons his own sense of humanity and starts prioritizing his own survival over survival of humans. (hint: This is why Paul didn't trust himself become worm God, he already once picked saving his own skin over preventing Jihad with body count in billions, even while he was still human) - It could be actual aliens discovering humanity and concluding its too dangerous to be left alive (btw this is an example of the very laws of nature not following butlerian jihad)

  • @peoplez129

    @peoplez129

    2 ай бұрын

    The problem is, even no-fields could be nullified, so it was really just kind of pointless. But of course the Ixians were inevitable, because eventually a monopoly on space travel without a human/spice component would come into play, as it was far more convenient. The further in the past the machine uprising was, the less people would take heed and fear its warnings, believing they could just do it more carefully this time, even though it wouldn't matter how carefully they did it, eventually sentience would arise, because you can't build enough safeguards into the system that a thinking machine couldn't eventually get around.

  • @Unit-3475

    @Unit-3475

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@peoplez129Naturally, null fields do not provide 100% protection. But in the long term and on the scale of the universe, they create measurement error in calculations. And the more people use them independently of each other, the more the number of unaccounted variables increases. The more their variability increases. The more the probability of error increases. At a certain point, making prescience useless.

  • @ravenward626
    @ravenward6267 ай бұрын

    It has been a while since I read the books, so my recollection may be a bit muddied. Something I recall picking up from Frank's books was that Paul, if not also Leto, considered their prescience to be a kind of curse. Maybe I imagined it but I thought Frank was making reference to concepts in physics like collapsing the superposition of probabilities through observation. I thought he was trying to suggest that seeing the future was like opening the box in Schrodinger's metaphor. Once observed, future events became crystalized removing any surprise and paradoxically any choice since the future observed would also include your knowledge of the future, and the actions you chose in response. The golden path was the best and possibly only way to avoid a myriad of cul-de-sacs to human existence. Moreover I got the sense that Paul was frightened to look any further forward for the chance that he might see, and therefore doom humanity to, a worse fate.

  • @michaeloliver7525

    @michaeloliver7525

    6 ай бұрын

    Completely agree with your reading. The face dancer /hive mind entity personified by Marty and Daniel is something akin to pan-prescient and nearly omnipotent - Idaho and the other no-ship escapees avoid the future/net the hive mind has ‘laid out’ (ie planned/closed) for them. This is the Golden Path that Leto II put in train but never ‘foresaw’ for precisely the reasons you outline.

  • @ColmanRetro

    @ColmanRetro

    Ай бұрын

    ⁠This is also why Leto II was so persistent on making a group of humans that were unassailable to prescience. You literally could not foresee what they would do and how they might change the future. This essentially makes the problem on observation go away since those people cannot be observed.

  • @coldworld5
    @coldworld5Ай бұрын

    I’m really glad that the movies are helping your videos blow up. Been watching you for years and it’s good you’re getting the recognition you deserve

  • @snakething87
    @snakething873 күн бұрын

    The ultimate human: a being immune to fate, immune to prophecy, immune to the machine.

  • @cdanhowell
    @cdanhowell7 ай бұрын

    I appreciate the accuracy that you present. So many times I hear people talking about the Choice that Paul had to make and completely get it wrong. Paul DID know what the Golden Path ultimately was (though he didn't ever use that term, obviously - he called it his Terrible Purpose) that Leto put into motion, but he was unwilling or unable to make that sacrifice - but Leto ultimately was willing. Great work, my friend!

  • @Tigerblade2002
    @Tigerblade20024 ай бұрын

    Sir...I think your research and what you do on your platform is brilliant! I wish that I could be one of those who could support your work properly, but I am on a budget. I will donate as best I can when I am able and you will be here for us to see your genius for some time in the future. Good luck!

  • @GholaMuadDib
    @GholaMuadDib7 ай бұрын

    This is what I love about the Dune saga. So much to get into. Everything that Sci-fi warns us about, has been done to 1000% in the Dune universe. It’s a horrific universe to exist in. Looking forward to checking out your long format videos.

  • @williamsteveling8321

    @williamsteveling8321

    7 ай бұрын

    Ours is currently more precarious, and nearly as horrific. We exist on one world, subject to many horrors even in our richer, more protected environs. One wrong move by a few people and billions die in a day. And this is an improvement from 30 years ago. Dune definitely hit most of the points in most sci-fi. Can't even begin to argue there

  • @MidwestManMountain
    @MidwestManMountain7 ай бұрын

    I want you to know that it’s because of your Dune videos that I went and read all six books in the Saga last year. I so appreciate your quality content, and I can’t wait to start reading some other series that you’ve covered once I’m done with my Tolkien fix that I’m on. You are a terrific content creator. Thank you.

  • @Intentt
    @Intentt7 ай бұрын

    I always thought leto could see further into the future and thus see a bigger treat to humanity than paul imagined.

  • @darkdoormat71

    @darkdoormat71

    7 ай бұрын

    Paul saw it too. He just couldn't sacrifice himself the way Leto could. He ran from the golden path. Leto embraced it and sacrificed his humanity to make it happen

  • @brianeddy41
    @brianeddy417 ай бұрын

    I really appreciate your videos. Not many places exist where I can relive and review my adolescent days whiling away at these books.

  • @grislyghost
    @grislyghost7 ай бұрын

    Just going to compliment you on your music choice. In a world of soft jazz, I genuinely look forward to your sci-fi sounds.

  • @Pradeep_889
    @Pradeep_88923 күн бұрын

    No matter how hard we try, death machines will inevitably emerge. We can only delay their arrival, not prevent it entirely. The idea of a death machine possessing foresight is deeply disturbing.

  • @ericawilley9800
    @ericawilley98007 ай бұрын

    You’re videos are too short, I absolutely love them. Thanks for making such great content Quinn!

  • @billl2903
    @billl29037 ай бұрын

    God emperor is still my favorite sci fi book ever; Leto II is so well written, I’ve never seen any other author get close to making such a nuanced and idealistically driven character. His death at the hands of those stupid, horny schlubs always makes me shed a tear.

  • @Ensign_Cthulhu

    @Ensign_Cthulhu

    7 ай бұрын

    His death at the hands of those stupid horny schlubs was HIS INTENTION. It's like these people who don't understand that Jesus MEANT for himself to be crucified. THAT WAS THE PLAN.

  • @corvus8638

    @corvus8638

    7 ай бұрын

    It’s crazy how much I disagree with this.

  • @billl2903

    @billl2903

    7 ай бұрын

    @@corvus8638 ha! Always interesting to meet people who have the opposite opinion about a thing…what makes you feel that way? I’d be curious to hear it

  • @JAzzWoods-ik4vv

    @JAzzWoods-ik4vv

    7 ай бұрын

    @@billl2903 Not OP, but I agree in the sense that the god emperor had to die. In quite a few ways, he did help humanity but by the end even he knew that his time had come, that he was reacting with emotion (which he himself attributed to Hwi, but by Moneo’s account we can tell that his tantrums have been happening for years), and more importantly he realizes that he really is no longer human. As he says, he find more and more human preocupation on his mind, but he also realizes that it’s because he now sees them as external and not him. I do think he saved humanity (although I’m still pissed FH didnt describe what he actually prevented/ Moneo and Siona saw in the visions)

  • @Scimarad

    @Scimarad

    2 ай бұрын

    I did read it again recently I was amused by the fact that Duncan seems to spend the whole book in a sulky tantrum:)

  • @Aaronsbookreviews
    @Aaronsbookreviews7 ай бұрын

    I always assumed it was the end of humanity. I always felt like the core plot of Dune was the evolution of humanity, and the opposite of evolution is Extinction.

  • @PhatJohnnyShicken
    @PhatJohnnyShicken7 ай бұрын

    Love your vids man been watching since you were ideas of ice and fire and those vids are always fire

  • @aishalotter9995
    @aishalotter99953 ай бұрын

    Quinn’s ideas are quite interesting 🤔, just re found your channel after some months absence, As they say absence makes the heart grow fonder !!! Intelligent insights into sci-fi well done m8 , all the videos that I’ve seen of your work are well thought out and excellently presented, keep up the great work Quinn !!! Thank you very much and have a good new year !

  • @abdulazizluqman1428
    @abdulazizluqman14287 ай бұрын

    its been a while, missed you

  • @neverlost26

    @neverlost26

    7 ай бұрын

    It's only been 12 days :0

  • @seanwelch71

    @seanwelch71

    7 ай бұрын

    Thanks

  • @markusbarten455
    @markusbarten4557 ай бұрын

    I think that it was not a singular threat but severall deadends for humanity. But what unified all this threats were the twin problems of stagnation or uncontrolled development. Basically he could save humanity by destroying every possible source of a possible bringer of the endtimes from within, but by doing so forcing humanity to stagnate what would mean they became suspectible of a outside threat.

  • @techticianlarsproductions6180
    @techticianlarsproductions61807 ай бұрын

    Hey Quinn, just wanted to say thank you for getting my love of more classic science fiction back. It's because of you that I've had several hours of content to listen and relisten to while working and I finally decided to pick up the first book of Remembrance of Earth's Past on Audible today after being so interested in those videos you've done. Also listening to the podcast this week which as been fun. I was curious as to what the new theme you have is, because it sounds killer and absolutely perfect for your channel.

  • @GrantErickson_IT
    @GrantErickson_IT7 ай бұрын

    great video as usual. I never would have had the patience to grasp this increasingly bizzar universe, and your soothing narration and expositions are always a treat. p.s. though i like the new intro composition, i do kinda miss the OG... thanks for sharing your passion

  • @evannerson3498
    @evannerson34987 ай бұрын

    There is something I have been struggling to reconcile with the Dune books so I suspect I am missing something. It is always stated that one of the main theme of the books is to be a warning against following charismatic leaders. And yet, if it weren't for these specific charismatic leaders, Paul and Leto II, humanity is doomed to extinction. Which seems to be implying that we need charismatic leaders? What am I missing?

  • @GeoffC19

    @GeoffC19

    7 ай бұрын

    I think it's more a warning of charismatic charlatans that want power for power's sake rather than actual charismatic leaders that actually have a plan to improve and help society, Paul and Leto II both had plans to improve society towards an end goal, even though they had to be the villians on the face of it all.

  • @BoxStudioExecutive

    @BoxStudioExecutive

    7 ай бұрын

    Paul and Leto can see the future so they actually know what to do to solve humanity’s greatest challenges and they refuse to be captive to the influence of other factions, unlike literally every other charismatic leader in history who are self-aggrandizing and beholden to the interests of others.

  • @evannerson3498

    @evannerson3498

    7 ай бұрын

    Okay, but that still doesn't resolve my issues. Are the books saying, don't follow charismatic leaders! Except for the few good ones, those you can follow and depend on them to save you! Or is it because humanity keeps falling for and following these types of leaders and their systems that the extremes measures of Leto II had to happen?

  • @xaveco3695

    @xaveco3695

    7 ай бұрын

    @@evannerson3498I think Leto was a good leader not because he “saved” mankind but because he made it so mankind can save itself. Both Paul and Leto caused great suffering to their subjects through their actions. Only by removing the need for a leader altogether they could justify all the suffering they caused to get to that point.

  • @xeroprotagonist

    @xeroprotagonist

    7 ай бұрын

    Maybe the implied argument here is 'don't follow charismatic leaders unless they can literally see the future, and even if they can, *watch out*' or 'committing atrocities for the sake of a charismatic leader could only ever be justified in this completely insane situation involving magical prescience and an existential threat to humanity that doesn't exist in real life.' It does seem to be a bit of a mixed message though, if you wanted to write something against fanatical cults of personality I'd think the very last thing you'd want to do would be to fully justify pretty much the worst one imaginable through narrative fiat.

  • @williamssimon4045
    @williamssimon40457 ай бұрын

    Hi I have followed and thoroughly enjoyed your content for a number of years and have finally been able to join patreon. I know it's the lowest , But I hope with time to increase. Thanks Quinn for your content and enthusiasm that keep me going.

  • @strategygalactic

    @strategygalactic

    6 ай бұрын

    Thank you. Quinn

  • @michaelmyrvang9028
    @michaelmyrvang90287 ай бұрын

    Love your videos Quinn, they have this ASMR feeling to them because of your presentation and voice.I often fall asleep to you talking about mind viruses, dimensional collapse, mutations and other generally horrible things. But your presentation just makes it a pleasant experience

  • @allenwinberg5119
    @allenwinberg51197 ай бұрын

    Saw the title. Saw it was from Quinn. Must watch! Love you man!

  • @deus1521
    @deus15217 ай бұрын

    Man you must create more videos. You make me a dune fan. Already i reading original book series. Unfortunate my hand first get to childrens of dune . Now i found first and secend books but now I'm in mid of 3 book. For as 40k fan i really like dune this is magnificent.

  • @damouze
    @damouze7 ай бұрын

    Loved the video. I read the original hexalogy in my early teens for the first time, way before the prequels came out. Despite that I always believed that Kralizec, the spectre of doom that loomed over mankind had everything to do with the very thing that the commandments of the Butlerian Jihad were all about: prohibiting humanity from ever developing thinking machines again. I expected them to either come from IX (which would fit your theory of the "kwisatz haderach" hunter-seeker device, or from beyond the borders of the empire, i.e. remnants of the thinking machine empire). Maybe that's also why I was not so peeved about the prequels and sequels written by Herbert's son and Kevin Anderson. I expected the Enemy to be the thinking machines. Although written in a very different style, I enjoyed reading them, and discovering more about the Dune universe, greatly. Pretty much the only thing I was peeved about (but that came along much later when I had worked my way through the two sequel books), was Ominus and Erasmus being the old married Face Dancer couple. That simply made no sense to me. I do not know if Frank Herbert ever intended for it to be so, but there are entries in his larger body of work that deal with similar issues, albeit less extensively. Similar plot elements and similar motifs are presents which to me suggest that they share a universe with the Dune Saga. At the same time, Frank Herbert was notorious for reusing various terms and concepts for a multitude of his books, so what do I know ;-).

  • @DannyPoet
    @DannyPoet5 ай бұрын

    Always great content.. love Dune as a topic. & the later books which I guess ur gona cover here.

  • @lexieburnafteruroll
    @lexieburnafteruroll7 ай бұрын

    Glad to see you back 🥳 did yall see that live yesterday comparing dune and game of thrones?

  • @Unit-3475
    @Unit-34757 ай бұрын

    I had another thought - is the destruction of humanity in this scenario really just physical death...? What if this monstrous scenario does not involve physical extinction, but a complete and utter loss of human essence. A complete distortion of the species - even more inhumane than the Tleilaxu and the Honored Matres combined?

  • @ramonpizarro

    @ramonpizarro

    7 ай бұрын

    So basically what the Qu did to humans in the book, All Tomorrows

  • @Karamazov9

    @Karamazov9

    7 ай бұрын

    Humans don’t have an essence that precedes our existence

  • @Unit-3475

    @Unit-3475

    7 ай бұрын

    @@ramonpizarro An excellent example, only in this case it was done by people.

  • @d3w3yd3c1m4l
    @d3w3yd3c1m4l7 ай бұрын

    Leto II is the most fascinating character, the despot saviour, the God Ruler who served all of humanity. A sacrifice of his blood line, so that his twin sister would not have to, and to watch generations of her descendants live and die knowing that he will not die but will devolve into some pearl of genetic remnant-consciousness within the worm cycle, so that the rest of the species can continue. That's some major sacrifice.

  • @tracyharms3548
    @tracyharms35485 ай бұрын

    Finally! This is the central topic which must be brought into focus in order to see the main plot & theme of the series. Thank you!

  • @dedmete
    @dedmete6 ай бұрын

    Love hearing your ideas on dune, dude. I assume the topic you're talking about is the new trailer? :3 Hopefully. would love to see it. Cheers man!!

  • @dreamcastknight
    @dreamcastknight7 ай бұрын

    I wonder if frank Herbert's last book was going to tackle the belief in God's and faith. I'm not sure, but Daniel and Marty seemed like a caution against trusting in a greater power. We will sadly never know, but it's a fun idea.

  • @christophergreen6595

    @christophergreen6595

    Ай бұрын

    He gets into the manufacturing of gods in another novel, too.

  • @ArlindoBuriti

    @ArlindoBuriti

    Ай бұрын

    to me they are just idiots afraid with facists... that is why Daniel and Marty are not even real. only herbert's work needs to be counted.

  • @forrestlin9590
    @forrestlin95907 ай бұрын

    The hype must flow

  • @foldspacenavigator6011
    @foldspacenavigator60117 ай бұрын

    Bravo sir. Your understanding, insight and interpretation of so much complexity within the Dune Saga is what I would consider scholarly and, which could be done at university levels. You certainly have enriched my experience with it and helped to I make me an even greater fan of this classic story. Thank you so much.

  • @aperson22222
    @aperson222227 ай бұрын

    Very good to see you talking about Dune again! You do a better job than anyone I’ve ever come across at laying out the richness of the lore.

  • @DonaldHeim
    @DonaldHeim7 ай бұрын

    Great Video. I'd love for a compare and contrast of the Atreides Golden Path vs the Seldon Plan from Foundation, and how the two concepts are similar and how they're different. I'm surprised more people don't talk about this.

  • @AdamBlack

    @AdamBlack

    7 ай бұрын

    Because they are nothing alike. Seldon wants to restore Civilization quicker from an inevitable collapse. The Golden Path is pure despotism , destruction of Civilzation, then utter dissolation in all directions. The only thing the two series have in common is at the beggining. Trantor and Kaitain are similar. its the Bene Gesserit that have longranging plans like Seldon. They have tendrils in everyones pie, and like Seldon rule in secret. The Mule has unexpected powers which disrupts the plan . ( this is more similar to Paul or Leto ) .

  • @lorefox201

    @lorefox201

    2 ай бұрын

    the seldon path is just the golden path but completely unironically.

  • @michelgasquet1
    @michelgasquet17 ай бұрын

    Hello, have you heard about our Lord and saviour, the God Emperor of Mankind? (A grimmer, darker possible future.)

  • @seanbrazell7095

    @seanbrazell7095

    7 ай бұрын

    In The name of Him on Terra, Bless you, my son. 😉🙏

  • @Nemo12417
    @Nemo12417Ай бұрын

    I feel like the whole idea of "the God Emperor's brutality was necessary" undercuts the theme of Dune, that you should be extremely wary of charismatic leaders, since painting extreme actions as necessary for the greater good is the hallmark of a dictator.

  • @Saintious
    @Saintious5 ай бұрын

    Leto's actions have the intentions of a parent, not a villain.

  • @mkey570
    @mkey5707 ай бұрын

    Another excellent Dune video, thank you! Despite his transformation Leto II was the most human of all at that time. He had so many millions of lives, some going all the way back to early Earth to draw from. He's always been my favorite character due to his complexity.

  • @shelbydegraff1292
    @shelbydegraff12927 ай бұрын

    You don't understand how excited I see that you've posted another video! I literally clear my schedule for at least 20 minutes to just listen to your sci-fi lore explanations!

  • @franug
    @franug7 ай бұрын

    as someone who lives in a country were a brutal dictatorship happened (Chile), in which the coup d'etat was justified by the military because of the "possibility" of the deposed government to either impose real socialism or to start a civil war, the whole story of Leto's Golden Path is so uncomfortable. I get that for some he saved humanity, but the "darkest possible future" was just that, a possibility, something that didn't come to pass (just as the dictatorship of the proletariat never happened here, and never would have, for that matter), but that still justified untold horrors. It was a "possible" future, not THE future. It's easy to see Leto as a hero but maybe he wasn't, he was just a terrible despot that told himself that his work was justified. Maybe Herbert was asking if means are sometimes justified, when those means are killing, torturing, displacing, etc.?

  • @AdamBlack

    @AdamBlack

    7 ай бұрын

    Hes not a Hero.

  • @carminedesanto6746
    @carminedesanto67467 ай бұрын

    I gave a friend your video on the complete Dune saga ..and he’s shocked at how ef’ng dark it gets 😳

  • @shelleyscloud3651
    @shelleyscloud36517 ай бұрын

    I follow many channels and this is probably the most consistently high quality content. Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts, passion and putting so much work into making these vids 🙏🍻

  • @TheHartonGroup
    @TheHartonGroup7 ай бұрын

    I always assumed Paul and later Leto was trying to protect humanity from the threat of (or perhaps another) Omnius and Erasmus, possibly Cymecs.

  • @TheGavrael

    @TheGavrael

    7 ай бұрын

    Unless I'm misremembering, I was pretty sure the threat was stagnation. Spice dependance/production restricted human exploration and, eventually, maybe in 10,000 or 100,000 years humans would either devolve or become extinct. The Omnius/Erasmus angle was a fabrication by Brian and Kevin.

  • @ruideng5722
    @ruideng57227 ай бұрын

    I constantly think about the god emperor and Nietzsche’s classic ‘stare into the abyss and the abyss stares back’. The two circle each other perfectly so

  • @lindaa-mu3bo
    @lindaa-mu3bo7 ай бұрын

    I liked and subscribed because I enjoy your content and you have a wonderful voice for narration.

  • @Jack-gy1ju
    @Jack-gy1ju6 ай бұрын

    Leto the Second is the Machiavellian Hero we all deserve. What a legendary character in fiction.

  • @seanhewitt603

    @seanhewitt603

    6 ай бұрын

    Heath ledgers joker would be the machiavellian hero...

  • @Trihahalos
    @Trihahalos7 ай бұрын

    This is just one interpretation. However... that's how I see it. Paul is no hero. But... He is the man who frees the Fremen! The man who beat the Harkonen! True, but he was almost acting on instinctive self-preservation. He did what he did to survive and it just worked! He never showed any willingness to put himself aside during this struggle. It was just that his personal interest aligned with the interests of the Fremen. Becoming a messianic figure was also necessary for him to survive and secure his position. This guy never did ANYTHING that did suit him 100%. And then came the hard part. Doing the sacrifice. But Paul was like "No, no, no thank you very much. Let someone else do it". He had the choice to save the Fremen and everyone else and he said "Eh...No... I would rather be at peace and have a good legacy. I am already a hero. Get someone else". I mean, it is normal even for heros to lose their courage or have second thoughts, even Jesus had that. But the difference is that they do the right thing in the end. On the other hand, imagine if Jesus said "Ok... Forget this dying on the cross thing. Nope. I did my part", well, in the context of Dune we do not have to imagine anything. Paul did just that. Paul was the ultimate "bad" individualist. Someone who had great power thrusted upon him and instead of doing the right thing, he kicked the can further down the road. Leto the second was a tyrant. Most would say a benevolent one. Some would say an inexcusable one. Some would say that it doesn't matter because he was still a tyrant. I got my opinion but that's not what we are talking about here. Leto the second was the ultimate "good" individualist. But... How can he be an individualist if he sacrificed himself, his legacy and even his individuality for the others? He absolutely can. Because HE did it. HE felt that only HIM could do it that it was HIS duty. He took it upon him to save humanity because that was his way. And if that meant being a tyrant and oppressing everyone, he would do it because nothing and noone was as important as his mission. He did everything because he believed in his ultimate personal responsibility. And why is he "good". Well, that's easy. He made the sacrifice so that humanity lives. And he took all the burden for humanity to survive.

  • @sebastijancamagajevac9942

    @sebastijancamagajevac9942

    7 ай бұрын

    Like your interpretation 👍

  • @AdamBlack

    @AdamBlack

    7 ай бұрын

    You would make a great religious fanatic. You are what is warned about in Heretics of dune.

  • @Trihahalos

    @Trihahalos

    2 ай бұрын

    I am not even that religious but besides that, this is just the interpretation I have about Paul and Leto the second. If you ask me, the best ruler was Leto the first. There were two things that led me to that interpretation. 1.) The "Paul good, Leto the 2nd bad" interpretation just disregards the nuance of Dune. Paul did good things. Sure. He also got close to dooming the galaxy and he was really selfish and impulsive at times. Leto the 2nd was an absolute tyrant and he held humanity back. True. He also protected humanity and provided stability compared to the eras before and after him and he was the first to make sacrifices if they were needed. Dune is not black and white (ok Harkonnen are mostly black...) 2.) I could never bring myself to view Leto the second as a criticism towards utilitarianism. I totally see Frank Herbert going this way (people got political opinions after all). But it just did not fit with the complexities of Dune and I do think that Herbert could easily depict Leto the second as completely evil but he chose not to do that. But that brings us to the issue that if someone considered Leto the second as a good guy, and many people did that, it would effectively backfire because the criticism would end up being viewed as praise. Therefore, I chose to interpret Leto the second as the ultimate individualist. At the end it is just another from of selfishness but a more benevolent one. At the end it is a discussion between maintaining the status quo and steering the pot. Would I like to have a guy as Leto the second as a ruler? Nope, no sir, no. I would also hate dying in a huge war like the jihad or being attacked by omnipotent aliens. But that's Dune...

  • @Hellvard
    @Hellvard6 ай бұрын

    I love this channel and I wish Quinn would post videos more often :(

  • @dantemercer7575
    @dantemercer75757 ай бұрын

    More Dune content pleeassee Quinns Ideas is my favourite Dune related conversion/ videos!!

  • @ericrobertson9993
    @ericrobertson99937 ай бұрын

    Sadly, Paul chose to chew off his own foot instead of enduring the long suffering required to save the pack.

  • @boxicool
    @boxicool7 ай бұрын

    I love so much Dune my favourite book series. It is so mystical, we have economic, politics, intrugues, "magic" technolofy.. ooohhh

  • @DewitticusBrett
    @DewitticusBrett7 ай бұрын

    Awwyeeahhh!!! New Quinns!!! Love it my brew!!! New Dune content from you is like Christmas lol

  • @monochiralmonkey
    @monochiralmonkey7 ай бұрын

    Just a quick comment on editing, I LOVE your videos, but the intro could be pulled back a bit volume-wise. Your voice is perfect, but that intro shocks me sometimes :) Love the music though :) keep it up!

  • @br00talbr00skeez
    @br00talbr00skeez7 ай бұрын

    Thanks Quinn! Please make a ultimate Dune extended saga series!

  • @MeUngaBungaButYouAreWorst

    @MeUngaBungaButYouAreWorst

    7 ай бұрын

    No nude in the dune !

  • @komvolt
    @komvolt7 ай бұрын

    What I find interesting and its not something ive seen talked about much is how almost all of our evidence for such fates come from Leto himself. If we consider he is an unreliable narrator then suddenly his apparently nobility and selflessness comes into question. Would there REALLY have been no people left if leto hadnt become the God emperor? We actually can't know for sure because this info only comes from leto, who could easily be lying to justify his own tyranny.

  • @patreekotime4578

    @patreekotime4578

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes, many people have that fan theory, but this video proves it wrong since Paul saw it as well, but wasnt acting on it or exploiting it for more power. What is more interesting IMO is the idea that is woven throughout the books that the presceint generate their own results... That their own fears and imaginations generate the possible futures and by acting on those possible futures, they cement them. That maybe Krailesec wasn't real at all... just a campfire story to frieghten kids... but by acting as if it was real, Leto lashed humanity to that future.

  • @Yarblocosifilitico

    @Yarblocosifilitico

    7 ай бұрын

    Nah. Paul saw the Kralizec, too, and, if I'm not wrong, the Bene Gesserit did too (or at least a hint of it). Let's also keep in mind that Leto's transformation is basically a very prolonged torture. He would have to reeeeaaaally love the idea of being a tyrant in order to put himself through that just to become one. And there's no indication in the books that he is enjoying his tyranny. More like enduring it.

  • @Yarblocosifilitico

    @Yarblocosifilitico

    7 ай бұрын

    @@patreekotime4578 I don't think the idea of prescience shaping the future applies to that extent. In fact, it's said (or implied) that Kralizec is the one and only inmutable thing in the future. Which checks out with both Paul and Leto seeing the same thing (and I think the Bene Gesserit saw it too, perhaps less clearly than them, but still devoting their entire existence to prevent or minimize it).

  • @patreekotime4578

    @patreekotime4578

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@YarblocosifiliticoIf it is the one thing everyone fears because of its persistence in every myth or religion, then everyone would see it. It is quite possibly just a primordial human fear. Or does it loom large even in primordial myth exactly because soothsayers have always seen it?

  • @Yarblocosifilitico

    @Yarblocosifilitico

    7 ай бұрын

    @@patreekotime4578 Who said everyone?? Paul, Leto, and the Bene Gesserit (to some extent, it would seem) have access to the future. Like, they can literally see it. It's one of the premises of this fictional saga. Kralizec seems to be a specific event, not just fear of extintion. At least that was my interpretation; I guess there's room for others.

  • @0num4
    @0num42 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing, Quinn! I'm currently re-reading the Wheel of Time. Afterward, I think another reading of the Dune saga is in order.

  • @dactorjones2430
    @dactorjones24302 ай бұрын

    It’s a choice we all make, to live or to survive. Paul chose life and Leto chose survival. Who’s to say who’s right

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge20857 ай бұрын

    Love these deep dives into Dune.

  • @MeUngaBungaButYouAreWorst

    @MeUngaBungaButYouAreWorst

    7 ай бұрын

    I love also a good deep dive into nude!

  • @123four...
    @123four...7 ай бұрын

    Glad to see another Dune video!

  • @nrm224
    @nrm2247 ай бұрын

    Great work! As a Dune fan for over 30 years, I remember well how hard it was for me to accept that Paul was ultimately too weak to do what needed to be done.

  • @TheGavrael
    @TheGavrael7 ай бұрын

    I mean, we were subjected to Hunters and Sandworms of Dune, so I think WE live in the darkest future.

  • @Mustachioed_Mollusk
    @Mustachioed_Mollusk7 ай бұрын

    If reading like this were mandatory in school I’d be interested in seeing how that affects the decades to come.

  • @jamessloven2204

    @jamessloven2204

    7 ай бұрын

    If it were mandatory in school, I predict that students will not appreciate it, and probably dislike it. PSA for everyone here: Reread the Great Gatsby after you turn 30. It hits differently.

  • @Yarblocosifilitico

    @Yarblocosifilitico

    7 ай бұрын

    As the above comment says, that's a bad idea. I mean, Dune is not for children, period. Maybe in college, but even then most people would not enjoy it, and so they would learn very little from it. It's perfectly ok to have masterpieces that most people dismiss. That's just how society works (we're all unique individuals, and that's a good thing).

  • @EvanSol919
    @EvanSol9197 ай бұрын

    Shame that Frank Herbert died before completing his series.

  • @Real_Iron_Smith
    @Real_Iron_Smith6 ай бұрын

    I love the new intro music! Also, new Dune content is always welcomed!

  • @phat3173

    @phat3173

    6 ай бұрын

    me too, i seriously want to know the name of it

  • @germany456
    @germany456Ай бұрын

    I LOVE THESE SERIES A LOT, I find it crazy how in the movies when Paul gets his first kill he doesn’t cry but in the book he does and his mom humiliates him knowing a life is a precious thing

  • @GamerplayerWT
    @GamerplayerWT7 ай бұрын

    It’s not just “Paul’s actions,” as you say here, but also (and I cannot stress this enough) because of his refusal to act. Which forces it upon his second son, Leto II (the God Emperor).

  • @Diego-Designs
    @Diego-Designs7 ай бұрын

    I honestly feel that, as good as the latest Dune movie was, it could never reach the depths of the books. The movie is still for normies in my opinion, focusing mostly on the action sequences, and not on the deeper messages.

  • @Yarblocosifilitico

    @Yarblocosifilitico

    7 ай бұрын

    Still one of the best adaptations ever. How would you go about doing a non-normie Dune movie, exactly? How would you show prescience and its effect on Paul, so that we get the "deeper messages"? And which are those, exactly?

  • @Diego-Designs

    @Diego-Designs

    7 ай бұрын

    @Yarblocosifilitico I honestly don't know. And I was thinking about the fact that in a book you can get deeper. I do love the movie, and am eagerly waiting for part 2.

  • @Yarblocosifilitico

    @Yarblocosifilitico

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Diego-Designs that's my point. It's just different mediums. Villeneuve did an amazing job. I'm one of (I'm sure) many people who read the books due to the movie. I had heard of Dune, but tried the old movie and never finished it. But I knew it was a literary classic so when the movie was coming up, I begun looking into it (hence why I subbed to this great channel) The movie is still too deep for normies. People thought it slow, weird, vague, etc. Some others loved it. Dune is such an unique IP that it's always gonna be somewhat niche. Which, seeing how Star Wars fared, it's great news :P I'm right there with you, hyped for part 2. Take care, fellow Dune fan!

  • @Diego-Designs

    @Diego-Designs

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Yarblocosifilitico likewise, take care!

  • @corvus8638

    @corvus8638

    7 ай бұрын

    What do you expect from a film? Most of the book is internal dialogue

  • @brianshields8680
    @brianshields86807 ай бұрын

    Great video! I haven’t watched since the last three body video and the channel quality has increased a lot! I think the extinction that Leto talks about preventing in god empower has more to do with the political structure of the empire, and the way that Leto changed humanity’s perception of rulers and tyrants. He speaks a lot in god empower about (and I’m paraphrasing) him being a conduit of hatred so that when the god emperor dies, no one will be able to rule over all of humanity again

  • @IRamnosI
    @IRamnosI7 ай бұрын

    Keep them coming, Quinn! Love your work, as usual.

  • @williammortl3110
    @williammortl31107 ай бұрын

    Thank you for being one of the very few to get it. Paul is a failure, and a bit of a coward. He knew what lies ahead and knew he had to become a monster to save humanity, but was unable to do it. Leto II was the true hero. Everyone tries to analyze Dune using modern political sensibilities (and postmodern bullshittery like saying that Paul and Leto II were unreliable narrators) and that it’s about power corrupting, or that Leto was a villain by enforcing his will, and they miss the whole point - it’s about Letos sacrifice in becoming a monster and being remembered as a monster while simultaneously making that sacrifice to be the true hero in saving humanity.

  • @corvus8638

    @corvus8638

    7 ай бұрын

    I think Herbert just ran out of ideas

  • @keshiaknows
    @keshiaknows2 ай бұрын

    This is the second video about Dune that I've watched of yours. I haven't read the books and am on the fence on whether or not I want to commit to that. You do such a good job breaking things down without making it confusing. Thanks for the video.

  • @alfredaflatooni

    @alfredaflatooni

    2 ай бұрын

    The books are worth reading in my opinion, some of the books in the series are a slow burn to read but do explore some fascinating concepts.

  • @poposterous236
    @poposterous2367 ай бұрын

    Dune's cool and all but this whole, "the totalitarian fascist that removed people's freedoms and killed without mercy was right all along," angle seems like it goes AGAINST the original purpose of the books which were (according to Frank Herbert [according to the internet]) to warn people against charismatic and powerful leaders. But if space h1tler never existed, humanity would have gone extinct? If you view the series from that angle, it absolutely fails in the most embarrassing way. The series is still awesome, has mind blowing concepts, great prose, pretty cool characters and a very other-worldly feel. But... the series is kind of cringe when it suggests that the only thing that can save humanity is a brutal, heartless totalitarian dictator. If there's any truth to that in real life our species should just go extinct. That would not be a tragedy. Why bother even being around if we're all just going to be dicks to each other?

  • @chadthundercock3440

    @chadthundercock3440

    Ай бұрын

    Leto II was not a human anymore paul was a human charismatic human and he failed utterly and was to cowardly to walk the golden path

  • @joshfloyd7755
    @joshfloyd77557 ай бұрын

    I have to disagree, Paul is the fulcrum, Leto II is the lever. Paul knew about the golden path, he knew he couldnt take it, he knew Leto would .

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