posted by mrdaveryan12 Comments » on Monday, April 14th, 2008 at 7:56 pm.
Follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
Leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Nice. From the first picture of various creatures and their SOL, it seems as though creatures don’t generate their own SOL, rather attain it from the Earth, eg., that string of SOL flowing down from the birds to the ground. Then SOL flows from body -> mind -> soul. Anything along those lines?
It’s interesting that dogs and cats generate their own SOL, but the birds and bees do not. Of course, we have seen anthropomorphisized dogs in the comic, so maybe it makes sense in that regard.
and a cat. dont forget the cat. or the talking pumpkin. or the…
you know what? im gonna just assume that SOL is generated by things that A.live on the ground or B. have a conciousness based on something higher than instinct.
or you just drew the first one and forgot the explanation, dave.
Well, I assume birds and land animals are the same in terms of SOL generation, seeing as we can’t tell whether dogs and cats have the SOL link to the earth.
Don’t take the image too literally. It’s basically meant to show that some animals have their own soul and some don’t. Not so much “cats have a soul, birds don’t”. It’s different with each individual, not a set rule that can be determined by species (that being said, some species are more likely to have a soul than others).
Question Is the head in the second sketch supposed to be Ralph’s? And if so does it mean something that his sol colour and shape?, are different than they are in his bio?
What’s the most common SOL color? Everyone we’ve seen so far has a unique one, ‘cept the Sauconys, but I’m betting it’s because they’re brothers. That would mean that SOL color runs in families, right? Or is it more to do with their powers?
It would probably be the same with generating your own SOL – it depends on the individual; but certain species/families are more likely to have similar colour/ability.
12 Comments
Nice. From the first picture of various creatures and their SOL, it seems as though creatures don’t generate their own SOL, rather attain it from the Earth, eg., that string of SOL flowing down from the birds to the ground. Then SOL flows from body -> mind -> soul. Anything along those lines?
It’s interesting that dogs and cats generate their own SOL, but the birds and bees do not. Of course, we have seen anthropomorphisized dogs in the comic, so maybe it makes sense in that regard.
and a cat. dont forget the cat. or the talking pumpkin. or the…
you know what? im gonna just assume that SOL is generated by things that A.live on the ground or B. have a conciousness based on something higher than instinct.
or you just drew the first one and forgot the explanation, dave.
Well, I assume birds and land animals are the same in terms of SOL generation, seeing as we can’t tell whether dogs and cats have the SOL link to the earth.
Birds aren’t much stupider than cats, are they?
Stupid is as stupid does, Panda.
Don’t take the image too literally. It’s basically meant to show that some animals have their own soul and some don’t. Not so much “cats have a soul, birds don’t”. It’s different with each individual, not a set rule that can be determined by species (that being said, some species are more likely to have a soul than others).
HAH! i knew it lacked an explanation.
which WAS option C.
Question Is the head in the second sketch supposed to be Ralph’s? And if so does it mean something that his sol colour and shape?, are different than they are in his bio?
No, not Ralph. Just a generic person.
What’s the most common SOL color? Everyone we’ve seen so far has a unique one, ‘cept the Sauconys, but I’m betting it’s because they’re brothers. That would mean that SOL color runs in families, right? Or is it more to do with their powers?
It would probably be the same with generating your own SOL – it depends on the individual; but certain species/families are more likely to have similar colour/ability.
Panda’s pretty much got it.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL