The Old Republic Jedi were constantly at war and less strict about tapping into the darkside as long as it was in service of the light. Jedi Shadows did Jedi Council's dirty work with assassinations and covert ops.
If you remember how the dark side is meant to be allegorically to addiction and drug use this gets even more horrifying, the jedi council is literally forcing people to tap use an addictive ability that corrupts the wielder for their own gain
8:32 For those who don't know, this particular body builder from this clip promised his wife that he would win the weight lifting championship just before she died. That clip was the final lift that won him the competition, hence his very emotional reaction.
The Force was truly strong with him. Only then could he carry the weight of the world on his shoulders while his heart breaks more by the day before his wife soon becomes one with the Force.
When you drew that parallel to using the darkside to the first time you drink alcohol, for some reason I just imagined a dude going "Oh, no, no I only use the darkside socially".
Well, the problem with the Jedi, is that good practices like "have control over your emotions so they don't rule you" became "have NO connections cuz DARK SIDE." And by trying to suppress all (even valid normal emotions) you get it coming out in weird ways. Like with Anakin.
7:34 I would argue that Kanan Jarrus's self-sacrifice was a reaction like this. Love gave him the power to slow the explosion of a massive fuel tank that would have absolutely overpowered him on any normal day. And this power surge also restored his sight.
I think people often forget that Windu used the Dark Side, canonically, really very often. Yet - he was neither a dark Jedi, nor did he ever approach accepting the teachings of the Sith.
Windu’s glaring flaw was his fear of a student falling to the darkside….. so instead of helping Anakin Skywalker deal with his emotions, he belittled him at every turn and treated him like an outsider, a necessary evil that he barely tolerated. Virtually any other Jedi knight who had achieved what Anakin Skywalker had achieved, any other Jedi General with Anakin’s record would have been promoted to master….. but not Anakin. Windu set his mind against him from day one and never relented.
@@simplyhoodie if we hadn’t been such an obvious angry vengeful prick when it came to Anakin, Anakin might have actually felt comfortable with asking the master of the order for advice rather than the grandmaster, who only talks in fucking riddles. If Anakin had asked Mace for advice on his dreams of losing Padme ….. for all of his character flaws, Mace is human and might have actually given Anakin better advice than “ let go of all you fear to lose, flush the goldfish and get another one”. The 900-year-old green frog was the absolute worst person He could’ve gone to for advice on loss because Yoda is so old and he has seen so many friends come and go that he is immune to attachment because he literally sees everyone around him like a pet that’s going to die on him and so he doesn’t get attached to anything anymore.
@@Matt-yg8ub Yeah. Mace wasn't a very good Jedi and it was his distrust and obvious bias that led to the destruction of not just the Jedi Order, but also the fall of the Republic and rise of the Empire. I don't put the actions of Anakin Skywalker/Darth Vader on Windu's shoulders, but he definitely only made things worse for the young Jedi.
@@simplyhoodie Anakin’s actions were his own…. But his desperation to save Padme was driven by the Order refusing to grant him access to the knowledge he needed to save her … and his actions in Palpatine’s office were driven by Windu quite literally committing treason by attempting to kill the chancellor. When Anakin came to him in the hangar and told him Palpatine was a Sith… Windu should have opened up more and expressed that the counsel had believed this for some time. But most importantly he should have questioned WHY Palpatine told him
I agree, fear anger desire. These things have their places in the moment. But if you don't expose yourself, you're not gonna learn how to keep them from consuming you.
Thats why the sith were able to win against (appears to) the jedi in the end. Instead of love with alot jedi not all were driven as Allen said rage, and fear.
Kanan leveraged the force in conjunction with how much he cared about his crew/family, to an amazing extent. His arc is one of the best in Star Wars (Disney) storytelling in my opinion. I think he exemplified just how powerful the light side can be when certain emotions are properly understood and channeled.
@@bryanpate9531it's a term for Jedi who were trained after order 66 and the purge happened. Luke, Sabine, Ezra, and Grogu are all considered Bokken Jedi
The Jedi were never properly trained to resist the dark side thanks to their greatest enemy going into a self imposed exile. Without that they grew complacent and it was one of many factors that led to their downfall. The fact that a Sith Lord was the Chancellor of the Republic and they never sensed it until too late shows how broken the Jedi order had become.
One of my favorite moments in any Star Wars was the duel between Ahsoka and the Inquisitor in Tales of the Jedi. You see her anger at the Inquisitor and she looks to be about to snap but she takes a breath, un-clenches her hand and clams down and lets her rage subside and then she absolutely clowns the Inquisitor. that to me is how a Jedi should duel, just be calm and let the irrational and angry Sith tire themselves out from being fueled by pure hate.
It shows once again the changes in the Jedi Order. In the Nihil story line, we see Jedi that fall into the dark side but are left with a chance to try to return to the light side. By the Republic era, it appears that Jedi only see force users that are touching the dark side as monsters and any force user not trained by the as a hostile enemy
The true Jedi should look beyond absolutes and embrace both sides of TAO. The Yin and the Yang. Plus, well, Lightsabers themselves came from the Darkside, being stolen by the legendary Je'Daii from the Rakata Hounds of the Force, who were breed to know only about the Darkside of The Force, so every Jedi carries a piece of Darkside with them by basis. Said that, every Jedi also deals with the Darkside on its own and interesting way, so time to watch your video Alan. A very interesting topic to explore in depth through the characters of the saga!
I know this is going to probably garner disagreement. But what I always seen from the Force is this: A little bit of darkness doesn't corrupt you completely. We all have a little bit of darkness inside us. What a true Jedi does is learn to control that darkness. It can still get the better of them in times and does. However, one must make a constant effort to not be ruled by their emotions. Many great Jedi have dabbled in the Dark Side multiple times. The difference between them and Sith is that they can control their emotions and know better than to give themselves to them. In essence, you have to keep your emotions under control instead of digging yourself deeper and deeper. That said, Luke's New Jedi Order had existed to a certain degree for years as a functioning training academy. But it wasn't until months and even longer after the invasion by the Yuuzhan Vong that he finally agreed with some of his more aggressive and militant students that the new Republic needed a better first line of defense and the Jedi were always going to be that line. But because it was politically expedient to blame the Jedi rather than the Invaders for the hostilities, as well as a way to keep Luke in check, the government prevented Luke from fully forming this. It was a terrible situation in which trillions died when they didn't have to because the head of state was worried about everything but what he needed to be worried about. Somewhere chaotic like the Star Wars galaxy, militarism should always be lurking in the case of peace talks fail. The Dark Side is not stronger but the Jedi should always train their students to be ready for combat. When war is lurking, don't wait until the enemy kills people. You have to act first. No matter what Yoda says about Jedi with "knowledge and defense" that's just how life is as Luke later learned. I'm not saying torture their students or force a child to wield a lightsaber and lose sight of who they are as peacekeepers but warriors are necessary 100% of the time.
I might not be remembering it right, but I heard it put as, "A sword is meant to hurt and kill, and that is how it shall always be, but its duty is to be unsheathed for as briefly as possible. A sword fulfills its true purpose when it is not being used."
You can't tap into anything with one toe in the water. Mace Windu used the dark side as a tool, but all his students were corrupted. The razor thin line for him was extremely difficult to walk and even super gifted Jedi fell trying to do the same thing. Mace wasn't using higher dark side power anyway, his own style of fighting was using the dark side energy of whoever he was fighting as fuel for himself. Jedi might be able to temporarily get some power from using the dark side, but the higher mysteries required you to really commit. You can't use the force to drain the life from people without actually committing to those aggressive feelings. If you're using the force selfishly, you're going to cripple your ability to use it selflessly. Obi Wan can't just use both his abilities and force lightning. It doesn't work like that. Darth Zannah uses Form III which is a super defensive form and a "light side" form. But without the selflessness, she can't actually use it to its full potential. Someone like Obi Wan could fight defensively for hours or days at a time against extremely skilled enemies. Zannah could maybe last a few minutes in a fight against top tier enemies. That's because Obi Wan was completely selfless and let the Force use him, but a dark side user is never going to accept being controlled by the Force.
“Know thy self” Self knowledge and self discipline and knowing how to control your emotions, is what separates the Masters from everyone else, regardless of your Force alinement. Sith draw power and strength from their emotions,.. to give themselves the edge in the heat of moment. Sith master knows how to pace themselves during combat, and how to keep a low profile, otherwise they wouldn’t have lasted as long as the Sith have.
That's called temptation. The Jedi are right about once you start it's almost impossible to stop. The Jedi dabbling in the dark side is why the Force allowed them to die out. A True Jedi rejects their darkness, as darkness cannot be controlled. That is the power of the Dark Side. It gives the illusion of control, when you are the one really being controlled. The Jedi BELIEVE they can control their emotions, but in truth they reject their emotions in an attempt to be rational. In doing so they've handicapped themselves by rejecting the strength of the side they claim to serve. Sith lean into the negative side of their emotions. Mace Windu used a dark side form, Juyo, rebranded as Vapaad, and we see it corrupt its users each time, even Windu. Yes even Windu. He was doing the exact same thing against Palpatine that Anakin did against Dooku. It can't be Anakin was falling to the dark side in his fight, and Windu wasn't falling to the dark side in his fight. It's about actions. to be in the light, both actions and intentions must both align with the light. If either is out of line, your not a hero, but you're more easily redeemable, but if both are out of line, that's going to be a long road back. One should know how to protect themselves, no question, but taking lives is not something to be taken lightly. Yoda is 100% correct about knowledge and defense. The Prequel Jedi failed because they were too eager in combat. Barriss Offee, Pong Krell, Mace Windu, Anakin Skywalker, etc. All of them went to the dark side because the Jedi lost the way of Knowledge and defense. Had the Order slowed down and sought to understand what was going on, there would be no Clone Wars, no Order 66, and no Darth Vader. Luke in ROTJ in his duel with Vader WAS acting like a prequel Jedi after Vader threatened Leia.
I’d rather be a warrior in a garden than a gardener in a war. In other words better safe than sorry. To keep peace one must be prepared for war or even win one or a few (: but I do feel like what you spoke of might be closer to a grade Jedi. I think the Jedi are slightly more strict emotions, attachment, and passion not just controlling them but more of almost always letting them pass. When you say control them, I’m not sure if you mean, use them in a safe manner or keep them at bay completely. I think the ladder is what a Jedi goes for and I think you were talking about the former more like a gray.
Jedi don't use the darkside because using the darkside isn't like accessing a set of powers, it's about your state of mind. So there are jedi who are very aggressive and use their emotions, like Mace Windu. Plo Koon can use a kind of force lightning. But you can't use true force lightning if you're not in the right state of mind. You can't do half measures. "A Jedi sufficiently strong in the Force can be trained to produce a facsimile, but not true Sith lightning, which, unabated, has the power not only to incapacitate or kill, but to physically transform the victim. Force lightning requires strength of a sort only a Sith can command because we accept consequence and reject compassion. To do so requires a thirst for power that is not easily satisfied. The Force tries to resist the callings of ravenous spirits; therefore it must be broken and made a beast of burden. It must be made to answer one's will. But the Force cannot be treated deferentially. In order to summon and use lightning properly, you will someday have to be on the receiving end of its power, as a means of taking the energy inside yourself" - Plagueis
Yeah but Disney has decided that Jedi and Sith are just the same, neither good nor evil, just different. So I appreciate the deep thought and your love for the (mostly) carefully crafted lore of Star Wars but... Disney knows better so just get in line. Jedi MASTERS can be over emotional dudes who just wanna be a dad now 🤣🤡
@@bspitler0 James Luceno wrote "Darth Plagueis" (the source of the OP's quote) in January 2012. Disney did not buy the Star Wars IP, nor have any say over any of it, until October 2012. So what you're bashing right now isn't from Disney, it's from Lucas. Just thought you might like to know :)
@@olencone4005 You couldn't read the Plagueis novel with reading comprehension this poor 🤡. I was mocking Disneys idiotic decisions by comparing it to how well thought out and awesome the Plagueis novel was. Just thought you'd want to know! 🤣
I'd argue back that Plagueis is speaking more of the metaphysical side of force lighting as it was known to be unnaturally painfully both physically and spiritually. How ever from a purely technical standpoint a Jedi could power their lightning to effectively turn this enemy to ash by simply increasing the physical heat in the lightning like natural lighting which we know some Jedi could summon from the sky.
I remember George going over how the difference between the ligh side of the force stems from being selfless joy and dark side of the force stemming from selfish pleasure. I feel like while it might be more realistic that the jedi would use the darkside I feel like it makes sense that the jedi are so dogmatic about not using the dark side.
In OT-era notes and companion books, the Dark Side is more like a cancerous corruption. Light Side is the original right state of things, Dark Side is an evil perversion. In Empire, Yoda also states the Dark Side is not more powerful, just faster and easier, but at a terrible price. The idea of a need for balance is a later concept that emerged from Prequel EU authors.
I feel like the way the commonly held and ultimately self-defeating belief that emotions and feelings can be characterized as “good” or “bad”. Clinical psychology has to include in psychotherapy with almost every person that it is not the emotion or feeling itself that could be considered good or bad, but how one expresses that emotion or feeling. Also that if one connects with their emotions and feelings in order to be more effective isn’t what makes one “fall to the Dark side”. In real psychology, it would be allowing one self to enjoy or simply justify the bad things one does with one’s emotions over time.
If you havent seen it yet... Lockstin & Noggin channel have a great video with theories, evidence, how Lucas thought etc... After watching it i have no doubt Darth Jar Jar was going to be a real thing. But instead of enjoying the ride Lucas was taking us on...selfish people made him change direction. I would have much rather had Darth Jar instead of any of this stuff from dizney wars.
The dark side gets addictive and actually makes people fall and become Siths, when they realise it can be used for control, power and to bend the rules of nature. This where the addiction lies: when connecting the Force with the ego, not just the feelings of fear, anger, desire, pain. You can be angry because an injustice is happening. You can be fearful that your kid or your soulmate is in danger. These feelings have a reason. Instead of talking about the reason the Jedi put everything into one bucket. Someone's motive is the decisive factor about falling to the dark side, and probably there is not even a dark side. It's just the Force in general and there is no dark or light side. Anakin had already a massive ego since he was a boy. He wanted revenge and he used the Force when killing the Tuscans. He wanted to save Padme, but to do so he wanted to disrespect fate and nature by stopping death. Then he took the power as his consolation prize, angry with himself and became Darth Vader. Osha was angry for years of grief and lies so again she used the Force for revenge. During Luke's slip he also wanted revenge. Count Douku had convinced himself that by following the dark side he would save the Republic but in reality he wanted to rule it himself. Egotistical reasons and Force and there you have what they call the dark side. It's actually a hubris. Sol actually falls into this category but for a different reason and not exactly. He was angry and sad by witnessing the youngsters being slaughtered by Qimir. He was confused and angry by the messy situation he half caused and half was put into but he never actually killed for revenge. His egotistical motive was that he wanted someone to take care of. This is natural but at the same time he convinced himself that Osha was in danger from the witches, while she wasn't. As for the falling into the dark side for love, there is a difference between "I love someone and I want to protect them with my own life even" and "I love someone and I want to protect them in order to keep them for me, or after they are taken, I want revenge because now I am alone now and I want to feel that I had control over it." The first case is more rare. Kanan Jarrus loved his girlfriend and his family, he wanted to protect them and actually the Force allowed him to see the love of his life one last time. That proves that the Jedi's belief against feelings and attachments was wrong. The second cases are more common, though. Love can be egotistical and that's when you risk all the above. Diversifying between the scenarios can be cultivated, though.
Just go back and read "Legends" books and forget the Disney canon. Luke Skywalker is the grandmaster of the Jedi order, obviously. He has a son, Ben, who's a bit younger than Han and Leia's kids. Luke revises the Jedi Code to embrace love, but the fear of loss is still something you need to leave behind, which is why he married and had a child. You would know all this if you read the books, and that Luke removed that massive weakness from the Code 😊. Oh, also, Jedi in combat enter Battle Meditation. That's always made clear in the books, and how it actually works. That's the answer to the video. I bet he wished he could just cover the Legends versions, it would make so much more sense. Great video, contains lots of information pulled from Legends heh. Love it. Je
This is what made Windu special. Literally. Alan is trying to apply it to all Jedi. Because Disney is trying this "the Jedi aren't the good guys' bullshit. It's not that I can't understand heroes have issues. It's not that superficial. It's that being annoyingly good IS what makes the Jedi special. It's their thing. Even when fighting and killing, to do so out of love and compassion to protect others. It's like making Superman evil, but not in a spin off, but changing to lore so they always were.
@@bspitler0 Djinn Altis rogue sect is a really good example as well. They allow marriage and romantic relationships and split from the order but still serve the republic and probably use some aspect of the burning passion of the dark side. Control is key.
@@wingsoffreedom3589 You nailed it though, most Jedi would be pretentiously too good. Too boring. All you have to do is pick literally any other time in Star Wars lore, and you can have Jedi going rogue, you can have Sith go in wild, but it's during the thousand years of peace. And instead of making it one rogue Jedi, The whole Jedi order just looks stupid now. Big difference between bad actors and entirely compromised organizations that rely on being good to access their force powers.
@@bspitler0 I like that the prequel order was fundamentally broken as that's a good story to tell however they are definitely the lamest version of the jedi. Also I do have a problem with the notion of being good would need to be necessary to access power the force is too vague and also contrived to be a purely moral force. I would love to have seen a version of the prequels where some Jedi joined the seperatist because they believed in the cause and were still firmly lightside. If that's not possible than we'd have to concede the force is political and reactionary that it inherently resists change from the status quo and all of the abused outer rim and mid rim worlds that want justice and autonomy from a government that abandoned them deserve to continue to suffer because that's the will of the force. The implication being that the sith are indeed coreect that jedi are slaves to the force and that it's will does not deserve to be respected and that it should inatead be used for the practical goals of the force user.
there is also the fact that one side is pretty much holding back because they won’t do heinous acts to win whereas the other one will commit horrible, horrible crimes just to win.
The Jedi’s total dogmatic rejection of the dark side really looks to me to have grown from Yoda. Even after he had narrowly escaped the destruction of the entire order that he had led, he was still preaching complete abstinence to Luke, and weirdly, with Luke it worked. He fell a little over to the dark side in combat, caught himself, and decided that he would rather die than make the transition to Sith. I must conclude, therefore, that for Luke, who was pretty new to force use at that time, this was the correct teaching strategy. The same approach, however, failed spectacularly with Anakin, and I think that Allen has analyzed this to the point that I really can’t add anything. What I want to get at here is that Yoda, whose name was once synonymous with wisdom, is the source of this strict approach to the force, from the prequels until his death in Return of the Jedi. What happened in his life to cause him, even after being alive for so long, to see force use, and living the Jedi life, in such stark black-and-white terms? What does Yoda think balance in the force is? Is Yoda, and his authority over the Jedi, the actual cause of imbalance in the force during his lifetime? I really want to see this part of Yoda’s life now, the part that permanently removed his perception, acknowledgement, or validation from all shades of grey, at least in regard to force use, possibly in regard to other aspects of life as well. Could we say that this period in Yoda’s life was his “radicalization”? Or it it just a characteristic of his species (a much more boring explanation)?
So good video, you make some good points. I think one big misconception about the original philosophy of Star Wars and the force (And this misconception was eventually made canon because of the introduction of force gods so what I have to say is virtually meaningless) there was never originally suppose to be a "Light Side" of the force there was the "The Force" and then "The Dark Side" which was meant to refer to the force being out of balance or twisted toward selfish ends. Jedi tapping into their emotions to win fights for selfless reasons or because they're in a desperate situation isn't inherently dark or forbidden, there's no such thing as negative emotions, there's just the understanding that these things if leaned on too heavily will pull them out of balance to where they stop serving the will of the force (or the force of others if you will). The original trilogy pushes the force more as a form of Zen philosophy, but in the expanded materials (particularly with the introduction of mortis gods) it gets co-opted into something more approaching Christian dogma with a universal good and evil. My personal interpretation of the prequels is that the Jedi were weakened in the force and blinded to the darkside because they became out of balance by trying to serve a dogmatic 'good' instead of understanding and embracing the force as a whole. Legends canon also seemed to support this view in that Luke and Co all gained strength from their love for one another, embracing the whole force and finding balance in the form of living with and acknowledging their emotions rather than being slaves to them. Don't forget the first lesson Obi Wan teaches Luke is to reach out with his feelings and let the force flow through him to guide his actions, that's a complete 180 from the Obi of the prequels, and a justifiable character beat retroactively by the inclusion of Qui Gon's focus on the 'living force'.
I remember when I first learned the Jedi Code had changed, I saw something suggesting some Sith or other had _sabotaged_ the Jedi Code itself, and I totally buy that. What do I mean? Once upon a time, it didn't go, "there is no emotion, there is peace," it went, "emotion, yet peace." That is a huge world of difference between denial and control when you stop and think about it.
I really hate when fans bicker about “Power Levels” in SW. None of that matters to me. The emotions during the fight fluctuates depending on whose fighting and what they’re feeling during the fight. Seeing Jacki scream during her fight with Qimir, definitely felt like she was tapping into the DS, and since she’s never done that before it felt like Qimir knew exactly what to do when it happened.
I have always felt Luke acted out of love for his sister Leia in his last fight vs his father. Only by actually killing his father would he actually turn to the dark side. But looking at his mechanical hand and then his fathers helped Luke decide NOT to kill the father he had never known, but loved. Love in Star Wars and the Jedi is a good discussion!
After Luke cuts off Vader's hand and sees the mechanical parts, he looks at his own mechanical hand and realizes that if he uses rage and anger and kills Vader, he will fall to the dark side like Anakin did.
Emotions are a quick power boost. It can be useful but mastering when you engage it and how long you use it is key. If you can get your opponent to drain themselves of their boost first and/or inefficiently you can follow up with your own precision boost to take advantage of their weakness.
I don't remember where, but I read a surprisingly interesting view of the Dark Side of the Force that was quite similar to this: the Dark Side is like adrenaline, tapping into it during a close brush with death is just...natural. The problem is that it *feels good.* And if you aren't careful, you'll start to seek it out, and slowly over time or, for some people, quite rapidly, you start to spiral downwards.
As a non-force user. I practice " The Way " Hehe. Legal conceal carry should only be carried by someone willing to give their life to defend the weak, or helpless. Just MHO
Yeah I feel like the culture around firearms in our country is getting a bit ridiculous especially with all these TikTok people. These things are not toys.
No they just obfuscate what the dark side is because they are afraid of it. Yes emotions can lead to the dark side of the force. But they can also lead you to the force. It’s how you ise your emotions.
I agree with you, there is more to the force... and life then the light side and the dark side. I do try to keep myself on the light side but sometimes it can be difficult to see in the moment. Kyle Katarn said that no force power is inherently good or evil, it's how you use them.
The power of love/friendship is so universally seen as "the good guy power up" that I imagine tapping into positive emotions would be more of a light side thing and probably even more powerful than dark side emotions But the Jedi were just so dogmatic against emotion out of fear of negative emotions that they fail to harness the full power of the light side powers available to them and incorrectly label them as dark side powers
One of my favourite minor characters is a Sith Lord called Kopecz. He lived during the New Sith Wars and started life as a Jedi but as the Sith grew he defected because he believed that the Sith offered the best chance to build a more stable galaxy. It wasn’t for selfish reasons (I mean what’s selfish about wanting a stable, war-free galaxy?) which is something I can 100% get behind and would likely be what would convince me to join the Sith. Also the Sith in some ways seem more practical. In the “Book of Sith” Darth Bane writes about combat and under lightsaber combat he eschews the six forms taught by Jedi in favour of two styles: fast style and strong style. He notes Fast style is categorised by its focus on speed, acrobatics, precision and footwork. Defensively Fast style is Soresu, the third lightsaber form but it is paired with one or two other Forms into a singular style for its more aggressive sequences. It is my opinion that the “aggressive” sequences of Fast style is Makashi and Ataru. This comes from Darth Bane’s own experience as he fought another apprentice who used Soresu and Makashi against him in a duel at the Sith academy; later he fights his former instructor who uses a two-lightsaber variant of Ataru against him. Somehow Bane refines all three forms and those two experiences into a singular style. Strong style is based upon his own use of Djem So, stating that to use it requires a combination of the user’s own body weight in conjunction with one’s anger to produce truly powerful strikes. He mentions Shien as another aspect of Strong style but it’s an aspect that should rarely be used. Dun Moch, the breaking of an opponent’s spirit, is a tool favoured by Sith because it breaks a Jedi’s concentration and composure. An effective way to ensure victory so long as it doesn’t backfire. And then there’s Juyo. Bane describes that emotions such as fear are necessary not just hate and anger in mastering this style. In short, Darth Bane refined a martial system that to me is the most practical. Fighting defensively like a Jedi leads to prolonged fighting and the more likely outcome of you dying because in most situations, the aggressor will emerge victorious in a fight. And I assure that’s true, as a teenager I would fight defensively in karate sparring sessions and get my arse kicked. The only Jedi forms I would say are practical are Forms IV, V and VII, because they are three of the most aggressive of the seven Forms. And would you believe it, each of them are related to the three styles established by Bane for his Rule of Two Sith: Form IV (Fast style), Form V (Strong style) and Form VII (Juyo). What does this have to do with anything? It shows that while the light side may be balance and the ideal state, one cannot deny that sometimes the dark side is just practical. Think of the Force like food. The dark side is having a takeaway which is fine once now and then but not everyday. But if you deny yourself that once in a while “treat” you are more likely to be tempted the more you resist until finally, you find yourself eating takeaways almost every night after work. Why? Because it’s easier than cooking. And that’s what the dark side is: it’s an easier option to take but is detrimental to your health and your finances overtime. I know. I was strict with my eating for a good few weeks, I lost over a stone in weight but I denied myself certain foods. I had one bad day and the “dark side” was there. Within a couple of weeks I put on about half of that weight I previously lost. And yeah I know it’s all about having the right mindset but often times that’s easier said than done. For a Jedi to maintain their own balance must be a truly difficult thing to constantly strive for. Dooku and Anakin were both Jedi who tapped into the dark side as Jedi on occasion. Dooku Force choked that Senator in Tales of the Jedi and even used Force Lightning as a Jedi in the audiobook Dooku: Jedi Lost. There was a Sith Lord who tried to merge Jedi and Sith philosophies and would later be regarded as a heretic. He was killed by his apprentice but not before destroying centuries worth of accumulated dark side knowledge. So would a blending of Jedi and Sith teachings be what the Sith would consider to be “balance”? As opposed to the balance laid out by George Lucas and the Jedi: that being the absolute non-existence of the dark side. To me, the absence of the dark side is unnatural. As humans we all have an inner darkness and to deny that is probably really dangerous. If we’re not aware of our own darkness, how are we supposed to deal with it when an event happens that causes it to manifest itself? In legends one of the trials a Jedi must undertake is the Trial of the Spirit (colloquially referred to as “facing the mirror” by Oppo Rancisis). This is a spiritual trial where a Jedi Padawan must look deep inside themselves and will likely not like what they find, because it may reveal an aspect of themselves that truly horrifies them. On Nelvaan, Anakin experiences a vision of himself becoming Darth Vader. Earlier on he had a vision on Mortis shown to him by the Son but that vision was erased from his mind by the Father. Yoda faced his own inner darkness and finally understood that the best way to defeat it was to accept it as part of oneself but not to give that aspect of yourself power. Tl;dr the dark side is more appealing to those of us who lack patience and want the easy way through life. The light side is more fulfilling in the long term but requires a lot more hard work and personal growth on behalf of the individual.
Anakin brought balance to the Force by killing off the Jedi, and then balanced it again by tossing Palpatine down a reactor shaft. When the Jedi dominated, the Force was out of balance and had been for a thousand generations. What a balancing act! Be careful what you wish for. Restoring the balance of the Force isn't what you thought.
I think using the dark side in self defense is OK, risky but less risky than you dying. Just have to be reserved when using it, don't use it to get info from a street vendor but yeah use it to defeat a sith who's besting you
I would definitely say this is true post Kreia as Meetra Surik became the new founder of the Jedi much similar to how Luke and later Rey did. But I don't know if it's cut and dry before Meetra Surik.
Well one can say Vader was holding back to a point against Luke. Luke even say's "Your thought's betray you Father, I can feel the good in you, the conflict."
I imagine that of the many Jedi, those that did have a tendency to tap into the dark side, and did so too often, would often be sidelined away from away missions where they might encounter that temptation more often and would be put on something like working the library or teaching or some other political matters that won't put them in those life or death scenarios that might tempt them
well..... if i remember the story right, Malgus' assasult on the Jedi Temple was performed with the very best warriors available to him. he brought the equivalent of seasoned Jedi Masters. Master Zallow cutting through them like wheat is nothing to scoff at either. A Jedi Battlemaster in those days was a fearsome opponent.
Interesting topic - It made me think about your law enforcement analogy from a couple of weeks ago, how some otherwise good and law-abiding officers have occasionally dipped into the dark side whether for self-preservation or to "protect" another, from what they deem as a possible threat - self defense or not, it stains the soul...
Your statement that love is a useful emotion that shouldn't be repressed is actually what Luke did in the old canon. He came to understand that love had brought his father back to the light, and his own partial fall to the dark side was undone by the love of his sister and his friends. This is why he wasn't afraid of forming connections and even got married. To a woman who tried to kill him no less! It's why new canon Luke is a slap in the face to the entire Star Wars timeline up to that point. Luke had finally brought balance to the Force. He had sort of brought back the ancient Je'Daii order, the precursor to the Jedi, that believed in balance between the light and dark. The order that the ancient Celestials put together. Their ideal wielders of the Force. The true form of its worship and use. And it was cast aside by a company that can't come up with its own ideas. Instead, picking at the carcass of the expanded universe they themselves murdered. I don't think Luke defeating Vader on the second Death Star was a Mary Sue moment at all. I think the scales were evened out. Vader's love for his son was holding him back.
Kenobi 'losing it' after seeing his master fall or the pain of him having to fight his 'brother', then seeming to fight better as it goes longer, are a couple more examples of 'dark side taint' affecting a Jedi during battle. If you aren't invested in the outcome, you run the risk of failing to achieve it...
It's long been my head cannon that Vader was given orders to frustrate Luke in order to get him to turn to and use the dark side. Then, seeing what he had done to his own son, a reminder of his love for Padme (and what he had done to her), and the torture Palpatine was putting him through, Vader turned on the emperor.
By making you completely ignore emotions once a jedi finally gives in to any emotion they just go "screw it might as well go dark side". If the jedi taught you to use righteous anger and love they would have a better outlet for their emotions rather than bottling them up until they explode.
For many, it is the sound, of the lightsaber. Once you experience what one of those can do, it's almost like a visceral reaction to sound of a deadly animal. Watch a duel without sound. Then close your eyes and just listen. Sound can be at least as much a distraction...
I think a lot of the time it may actually be *fandom* that too often considers any emotion or ferocity in a fight to be 'dark side,' mind you. I certainly didn't see Jecki in that fight as 'using the dark side' just for hitting hard when, err, really the situation called for that. In the real world I think there's a real difference between say striking because anger and striking while *feeling* anger, ...the latter can be fuel of sorts, the former is often an equation for regrettable. Similarly there may be a difference between 'ferocity' and 'losing your cool' or just 'losing it.' It's almost like I'm talking about Vaapad without the direct interplay about someone else's Dark Side necessarily. (If I recall, Bruce Lee had similar words, I kind of internalized a lot of that though) It's also like the difference between 'Driving Angry' or 'Anger Driving' and 'driving while feeling some anger,' ...the latter of which kind of goes through feeling it and paying attention and letting it pass through rather than bottling up/stoking/acting out by it, see? I would hope a healthier Jedi approach still recognizes a Jedi's feelings, just is about being in discipline/control of using them. There's using power and there's getting attached to it in bad ways. In the end, they're all swinging plasma bars of dismemberment if it comes down to 'for keeps,' so the discipline and meditationalness should of course involve not expecting a lot of time-outs to restore equanimity.
My thought is that the stronger the connection to the force leads to a stronger connection to other beings. That stronger connection to others can also let people experience stronger feelings for others, good and bad. This is why I think jedi have to be on guard with their emotions so they don't do something everyone will regret.
"A Jedi will always lose to a Sith of similar strength and experience." Adds even more to how impressive that Sidious spent the entire fight runnimg away from Yoda and ended in a stalemate only when Yoda receieved a force vision telling him it was not for him to win here
As my Twilek always says, "There is no light or dark, good or evil. There is the force and those who Choose to wield it for heling others or personal gain." He's a gray jedi who isnt afraid to walk the middle line.
I feel the Force itself is neither good nor evil and could be channeled most effective by those who aren't wholey dedicated to either ideology, those who are neither "blinded" by the light nor "lost" to the dark. The key is to know yourself truly, acknowledge that you possess both elements of these aspects of the Force, and embrace this knowledge with enough presence of mind to not allow yourself to be swayed completly one way or the other and remain balanced. There is but one way this is achieved: You have to be completely honest with yourself without entertaining any false justifications for your actions. Lying to yourself will always result in your downfall, Force user or not, but to an especially high degree if you are a powerful conduit for the energy (light and/or dark) that comprises the Force.
the interesting and cool thing about Obi Wan is that he mostly defeats anyone. Even if he falls a couple of times, loses his weapon or the fight, he comes back and wins it.
In Matthew Stover's novelization of Revenge of the Sith, it was stated that "war itself was the tool of the Dark". Emotions like anger and fear likely began as evolved responses for self-preservation in life and death situations. It stands to reason that for any naturally evolved sentient being, the Dark Side is going to be the easier pathway to tapping into the force in lethal combat situations. The Light Side is much more suited for non-combat applications, in general. The pre-Clone Wars era Jedi had existed in a peaceful galaxy for so long that they sort of forgot this, and let their fear of the Dark Side ossify their attitudes towards that. That said, I think that at the very highest levels, a Light Side master will defeat a Dark Side master of equal power and training, because emotions cloud judgment. If the Light Sider can withstand the initial rage-fueled barrage, the Dark Sider is much more likely to be the one who makes the fatal misjudgment first. Most times we see a Light Sider beat a Dark Sider in the canon it is because the Dark Sider defeats himself with emotion driven tactical mistakes.
I'd argue there IS one moment in Disney Star Wars where a Jedi uses love (sort of) to defeat a Dark Side user in combat, and that's in the Kenobi series finale. After Obi Want gets buried under a metric ton of rocks, it's his desire to protect Leia and Luke that gives him the strength to literally push himself out of the pit and go all Super Saiyan on Vader...but it's also love that stops him from finishing Vader off, even after Vader seems to confirm that "Anakin is gone." Though I don't think Obi Wan really truly ever believed Anakin was "truly dead" deep down, otherwise I feel like he would have struck Vader down right there. Similarly with Luke, it may have been anger that granted him the strength to defeat Vader in combat, it was love that saved them both by choosing to toss away his lightsaber. So really, the light side is all about pacifism, which is a totally fine thing, but it's almost completely incompatible with life-or-death combat. The only way to NOT tap into the Dark Side in a fight...is to throw the fight. Just like Obi Wan did in A New Hope and Luke did in Return of the Jedi.
The funny thing is … I think the Daughter (of the Mortis Gods), who is generally considered the personification of the Light Side, is closer to positive emotionality (mostly love) than to the Jedi's non-emotional approach. Yet we're generally missing Force users of this kind.
Vader wasn't trying to kill Luke, he was trying to turn him to the Dark Side, so he was deliberately fighting weak so as to avoid injuring him. Rey was just a crappily written character.
8:37 i can confirm, when you are using emotion you kinda get physically stronger almost, its wild, of course no force but this is still true in the real world to a point.
The Old Republic Jedi were constantly at war and less strict about tapping into the darkside as long as it was in service of the light. Jedi Shadows did Jedi Council's dirty work with assassinations and covert ops.
If you remember how the dark side is meant to be allegorically to addiction and drug use this gets even more horrifying, the jedi council is literally forcing people to tap use an addictive ability that corrupts the wielder for their own gain
Many Jedi Shadows also had families. They weren't afraid of their emotions because they could control them. They were well balanced Grey Jedi
8:32 For those who don't know, this particular body builder from this clip promised his wife that he would win the weight lifting championship just before she died. That clip was the final lift that won him the competition, hence his very emotional reaction.
The Force was truly strong with him. Only then could he carry the weight of the world on his shoulders while his heart breaks more by the day before his wife soon becomes one with the Force.
When you drew that parallel to using the darkside to the first time you drink alcohol, for some reason I just imagined a dude going "Oh, no, no I only use the darkside socially".
Most underrated comment
I just use the Dark Side to "Take the edge off".
@@kohikan5180 they use it to edge
GUYS GUYS, ALLEN'S BACK AND HE'S ON KASHYYYK TODAY
Is it Kashyyk or Khofar?
@OswaldPHaygood wait yeh you might be right. I assumed because of how the trees look that it was Kashyyyk but yeh Khofar might be a good shout
@@AmelityshTV Well, someone has to tell what's that attack of the droids on the wookies was about?
@@AmelityshTV I think it's Kashyyk. Mainly since we've barely seen Khofar
@@AmelityshTVdon't feel bad, even some Wookies can't tell the difference 😂
Well, the problem with the Jedi, is that good practices like "have control over your emotions so they don't rule you" became "have NO connections cuz DARK SIDE."
And by trying to suppress all (even valid normal emotions) you get it coming out in weird ways. Like with Anakin.
Jolee Bindo wins yet again
7:34
I would argue that Kanan Jarrus's self-sacrifice was a reaction like this. Love gave him the power to slow the explosion of a massive fuel tank that would have absolutely overpowered him on any normal day. And this power surge also restored his sight.
Not only that but to have been able to hold the explosion off while force pushing Hera onto the gunship.
yea i don't know if most guys would've been able to hold off that kind of explosion for so long while around Hera
@@GenerationTech Is that supposed to be some kind of innuendo?
@@CurrentlyDuck1I think Alan is implying that Space Mom is a space MILF.
@@GenerationTech🫵🤨📸
I think people often forget that Windu used the Dark Side, canonically, really very often. Yet - he was neither a dark Jedi, nor did he ever approach accepting the teachings of the Sith.
He's really the guy who should've taught Anakin Skywalker. Control his demons and you'll never get Darth Vader.
Windu’s glaring flaw was his fear of a student falling to the darkside….. so instead of helping Anakin Skywalker deal with his emotions, he belittled him at every turn and treated him like an outsider, a necessary evil that he barely tolerated. Virtually any other Jedi knight who had achieved what Anakin Skywalker had achieved, any other Jedi General with Anakin’s record would have been promoted to master….. but not Anakin. Windu set his mind against him from day one and never relented.
@@simplyhoodie if we hadn’t been such an obvious angry vengeful prick when it came to Anakin, Anakin might have actually felt comfortable with asking the master of the order for advice rather than the grandmaster, who only talks in fucking riddles.
If Anakin had asked Mace for advice on his dreams of losing Padme ….. for all of his character flaws, Mace is human and might have actually given Anakin better advice than “ let go of all you fear to lose, flush the goldfish and get another one”.
The 900-year-old green frog was the absolute worst person He could’ve gone to for advice on loss because Yoda is so old and he has seen so many friends come and go that he is immune to attachment because he literally sees everyone around him like a pet that’s going to die on him and so he doesn’t get attached to anything anymore.
@@Matt-yg8ub Yeah. Mace wasn't a very good Jedi and it was his distrust and obvious bias that led to the destruction of not just the Jedi Order, but also the fall of the Republic and rise of the Empire. I don't put the actions of Anakin Skywalker/Darth Vader on Windu's shoulders, but he definitely only made things worse for the young Jedi.
@@simplyhoodie Anakin’s actions were his own…. But his desperation to save Padme was driven by the Order refusing to grant him access to the knowledge he needed to save her … and his actions in Palpatine’s office were driven by Windu quite literally committing treason by attempting to kill the chancellor.
When Anakin came to him in the hangar and told him Palpatine was a Sith… Windu should have opened up more and expressed that the counsel had believed this for some time. But most importantly he should have questioned WHY Palpatine told him
I agree, fear anger desire. These things have their places in the moment. But if you don't expose yourself, you're not gonna learn how to keep them from consuming you.
and that's why Yoda told Rey to redo everything
Thats why the sith were able to win against (appears to) the jedi in the end. Instead of love with alot jedi not all were driven as Allen said rage, and fear.
I feel like the majority of problems in Star Wars would've never happened if the Jedi had an on site therapist
That would have been worse. They would have been whacky *and* narcissistic, then!
@@MeanBeanComedy huh?
@@MeanBeanComedy A Jedi is not a Don.
Kanan leveraged the force in conjunction with how much he cared about his crew/family, to an amazing extent. His arc is one of the best in Star Wars (Disney) storytelling in my opinion. I think he exemplified just how powerful the light side can be when certain emotions are properly understood and channeled.
Indeed. The same is true of Ahsoka when she is shown to care about people, her power sky rockets without any danger of her falling.
That's why the Je'dai were so powerful,imho. Using the best of both sides of the force.
You should do a video about the different ways of teaching a Jedi. Especially given to how Ezra Bridger was labeled as a Bokken
we'll talk about how anakin could've had an easier time as jedi soon in a video
What's a Bokken?
Essentially trained in the wild. Its an old samurai term i believe @bryanpate9531
@@GenerationTech I think Ezra also kinda tapped into the dark side before Kanan had to save him
@@bryanpate9531it's a term for Jedi who were trained after order 66 and the purge happened. Luke, Sabine, Ezra, and Grogu are all considered Bokken Jedi
I think Dark Helmet from Spaceballs put it the BEST when he told Lonestar "Evil will always triumph because Good is DUMB".
Pure gold this message: " PlayStation vs. Xbox , doesn't matter PC win " I'm smiling from ear to ear 😂 , very good video...
The Jedi were never properly trained to resist the dark side thanks to their greatest enemy going into a self imposed exile.
Without that they grew complacent and it was one of many factors that led to their downfall. The fact that a Sith Lord was the Chancellor of the Republic and they never sensed it until too late shows how broken the Jedi order had become.
Yoda could do it
The Sith are by definition a self-selecting group for the most powerful via all their infighting, weeding out (killing) the less powerful constantly.
"Say the thing! Say the thing!"
"My name is Allen, and I wanna remind you that my allegiance is to the Republic, to democracy."
"Yaaaaayyyyy!!!"
Right? I was so thrown off the other day when he said something different!
The Jedi do not train anyone on how to healthily handle emotions. Repression is bad, yeah?
One of my favorite moments in any Star Wars was the duel between Ahsoka and the Inquisitor in Tales of the Jedi. You see her anger at the Inquisitor and she looks to be about to snap but she takes a breath, un-clenches her hand and clams down and lets her rage subside and then she absolutely clowns the Inquisitor. that to me is how a Jedi should duel, just be calm and let the irrational and angry Sith tire themselves out from being fueled by pure hate.
Or strike first strike hard and no mercy like windu
It shows once again the changes in the Jedi Order. In the Nihil story line, we see Jedi that fall into the dark side but are left with a chance to try to return to the light side. By the Republic era, it appears that Jedi only see force users that are touching the dark side as monsters and any force user not trained by the as a hostile enemy
The true Jedi should look beyond absolutes and embrace both sides of TAO. The Yin and the Yang. Plus, well, Lightsabers themselves came from the Darkside, being stolen by the legendary Je'Daii from the Rakata Hounds of the Force, who were breed to know only about the Darkside of The Force, so every Jedi carries a piece of Darkside with them by basis. Said that, every Jedi also deals with the Darkside on its own and interesting way, so time to watch your video Alan. A very interesting topic to explore in depth through the characters of the saga!
I like the site choice of Dagobah for your presentation. Well done, sir!
I know this is going to probably garner disagreement. But what I always seen from the Force is this: A little bit of darkness doesn't corrupt you completely. We all have a little bit of darkness inside us. What a true Jedi does is learn to control that darkness. It can still get the better of them in times and does. However, one must make a constant effort to not be ruled by their emotions. Many great Jedi have dabbled in the Dark Side multiple times. The difference between them and Sith is that they can control their emotions and know better than to give themselves to them. In essence, you have to keep your emotions under control instead of digging yourself deeper and deeper.
That said, Luke's New Jedi Order had existed to a certain degree for years as a functioning training academy. But it wasn't until months and even longer after the invasion by the Yuuzhan Vong that he finally agreed with some of his more aggressive and militant students that the new Republic needed a better first line of defense and the Jedi were always going to be that line. But because it was politically expedient to blame the Jedi rather than the Invaders for the hostilities, as well as a way to keep Luke in check, the government prevented Luke from fully forming this. It was a terrible situation in which trillions died when they didn't have to because the head of state was worried about everything but what he needed to be worried about. Somewhere chaotic like the Star Wars galaxy, militarism should always be lurking in the case of peace talks fail. The Dark Side is not stronger but the Jedi should always train their students to be ready for combat. When war is lurking, don't wait until the enemy kills people. You have to act first. No matter what Yoda says about Jedi with "knowledge and defense" that's just how life is as Luke later learned. I'm not saying torture their students or force a child to wield a lightsaber and lose sight of who they are as peacekeepers but warriors are necessary 100% of the time.
I might not be remembering it right, but I heard it put as, "A sword is meant to hurt and kill, and that is how it shall always be, but its duty is to be unsheathed for as briefly as possible. A sword fulfills its true purpose when it is not being used."
You can't tap into anything with one toe in the water. Mace Windu used the dark side as a tool, but all his students were corrupted. The razor thin line for him was extremely difficult to walk and even super gifted Jedi fell trying to do the same thing.
Mace wasn't using higher dark side power anyway, his own style of fighting was using the dark side energy of whoever he was fighting as fuel for himself.
Jedi might be able to temporarily get some power from using the dark side, but the higher mysteries required you to really commit. You can't use the force to drain the life from people without actually committing to those aggressive feelings. If you're using the force selfishly, you're going to cripple your ability to use it selflessly. Obi Wan can't just use both his abilities and force lightning. It doesn't work like that.
Darth Zannah uses Form III which is a super defensive form and a "light side" form. But without the selflessness, she can't actually use it to its full potential. Someone like Obi Wan could fight defensively for hours or days at a time against extremely skilled enemies. Zannah could maybe last a few minutes in a fight against top tier enemies. That's because Obi Wan was completely selfless and let the Force use him, but a dark side user is never going to accept being controlled by the Force.
“Know thy self”
Self knowledge and self discipline and knowing how to control your emotions, is what separates the Masters from everyone else, regardless of your Force alinement.
Sith draw power and strength from their emotions,.. to give themselves the edge in the heat of moment. Sith master knows how to pace themselves during combat, and how to keep a low profile, otherwise they wouldn’t have lasted as long as the Sith have.
That's called temptation. The Jedi are right about once you start it's almost impossible to stop. The Jedi dabbling in the dark side is why the Force allowed them to die out. A True Jedi rejects their darkness, as darkness cannot be controlled. That is the power of the Dark Side. It gives the illusion of control, when you are the one really being controlled. The Jedi BELIEVE they can control their emotions, but in truth they reject their emotions in an attempt to be rational. In doing so they've handicapped themselves by rejecting the strength of the side they claim to serve. Sith lean into the negative side of their emotions. Mace Windu used a dark side form, Juyo, rebranded as Vapaad, and we see it corrupt its users each time, even Windu. Yes even Windu. He was doing the exact same thing against Palpatine that Anakin did against Dooku. It can't be Anakin was falling to the dark side in his fight, and Windu wasn't falling to the dark side in his fight. It's about actions. to be in the light, both actions and intentions must both align with the light. If either is out of line, your not a hero, but you're more easily redeemable, but if both are out of line, that's going to be a long road back.
One should know how to protect themselves, no question, but taking lives is not something to be taken lightly. Yoda is 100% correct about knowledge and defense. The Prequel Jedi failed because they were too eager in combat. Barriss Offee, Pong Krell, Mace Windu, Anakin Skywalker, etc. All of them went to the dark side because the Jedi lost the way of Knowledge and defense. Had the Order slowed down and sought to understand what was going on, there would be no Clone Wars, no Order 66, and no Darth Vader. Luke in ROTJ in his duel with Vader WAS acting like a prequel Jedi after Vader threatened Leia.
I’d rather be a warrior in a garden than a gardener in a war. In other words better safe than sorry. To keep peace one must be prepared for war or even win one or a few (: but I do feel like what you spoke of might be closer to a grade Jedi. I think the Jedi are slightly more strict emotions, attachment, and passion not just controlling them but more of almost always letting them pass. When you say control them, I’m not sure if you mean, use them in a safe manner or keep them at bay completely. I think the ladder is what a Jedi goes for and I think you were talking about the former more like a gray.
Jedi don't use the darkside because using the darkside isn't like accessing a set of powers, it's about your state of mind. So there are jedi who are very aggressive and use their emotions, like Mace Windu. Plo Koon can use a kind of force lightning. But you can't use true force lightning if you're not in the right state of mind. You can't do half measures.
"A Jedi sufficiently strong in the Force can be trained to produce a facsimile, but not true Sith lightning, which, unabated, has the power not only to incapacitate or kill, but to physically transform the victim. Force lightning requires strength of a sort only a Sith can command because we accept consequence and reject compassion. To do so requires a thirst for power that is not easily satisfied. The Force tries to resist the callings of ravenous spirits; therefore it must be broken and made a beast of burden. It must be made to answer one's will. But the Force cannot be treated deferentially. In order to summon and use lightning properly, you will someday have to be on the receiving end of its power, as a means of taking the energy inside yourself"
- Plagueis
Yeah but Disney has decided that Jedi and Sith are just the same, neither good nor evil, just different.
So I appreciate the deep thought and your love for the (mostly) carefully crafted lore of Star Wars but... Disney knows better so just get in line.
Jedi MASTERS can be over emotional dudes who just wanna be a dad now 🤣🤡
@@bspitler0 James Luceno wrote "Darth Plagueis" (the source of the OP's quote) in January 2012. Disney did not buy the Star Wars IP, nor have any say over any of it, until October 2012. So what you're bashing right now isn't from Disney, it's from Lucas. Just thought you might like to know :)
@@olencone4005 You couldn't read the Plagueis novel with reading comprehension this poor 🤡.
I was mocking Disneys idiotic decisions by comparing it to how well thought out and awesome the Plagueis novel was.
Just thought you'd want to know! 🤣
I'd argue back that Plagueis is speaking more of the metaphysical side of force lighting as it was known to be unnaturally painfully both physically and spiritually. How ever from a purely technical standpoint a Jedi could power their lightning to effectively turn this enemy to ash by simply increasing the physical heat in the lightning like natural lighting which we know some Jedi could summon from the sky.
Describing a fight between force users as a mental exercise is perfect. 🔥 well written and thought about. 🤘
I remember George going over how the difference between the ligh side of the force stems from being selfless joy and dark side of the force stemming from selfish pleasure. I feel like while it might be more realistic that the jedi would use the darkside I feel like it makes sense that the jedi are so dogmatic about not using the dark side.
In OT-era notes and companion books, the Dark Side is more like a cancerous corruption. Light Side is the original right state of things, Dark Side is an evil perversion. In Empire, Yoda also states the Dark Side is not more powerful, just faster and easier, but at a terrible price. The idea of a need for balance is a later concept that emerged from Prequel EU authors.
I feel like the way the commonly held and ultimately self-defeating belief that emotions and feelings can be characterized as “good” or “bad”. Clinical psychology has to include in psychotherapy with almost every person that it is not the emotion or feeling itself that could be considered good or bad, but how one expresses that emotion or feeling. Also that if one connects with their emotions and feelings in order to be more effective isn’t what makes one “fall to the Dark side”. In real psychology, it would be allowing one self to enjoy or simply justify the bad things one does with one’s emotions over time.
yes, as Darth jar jar himself yousa can say that them jedi are delusional.
If you havent seen it yet...
Lockstin & Noggin channel have a great video with theories, evidence, how Lucas thought etc...
After watching it i have no doubt Darth Jar Jar was going to be a real thing.
But instead of enjoying the ride Lucas was taking us on...selfish people made him change direction.
I would have much rather had Darth Jar instead of any of this stuff from dizney wars.
YES yousa like that
Your videos are always insightful and introspective on all things Star Wars. Thank you Allen. You rock dude
The dark side gets addictive and actually makes people fall and become Siths, when they realise it can be used for control, power and to bend the rules of nature. This where the addiction lies: when connecting the Force with the ego, not just the feelings of fear, anger, desire, pain. You can be angry because an injustice is happening. You can be fearful that your kid or your soulmate is in danger. These feelings have a reason. Instead of talking about the reason the Jedi put everything into one bucket.
Someone's motive is the decisive factor about falling to the dark side, and probably there is not even a dark side. It's just the Force in general and there is no dark or light side. Anakin had already a massive ego since he was a boy. He wanted revenge and he used the Force when killing the Tuscans. He wanted to save Padme, but to do so he wanted to disrespect fate and nature by stopping death. Then he took the power as his consolation prize, angry with himself and became Darth Vader. Osha was angry for years of grief and lies so again she used the Force for revenge. During Luke's slip he also wanted revenge. Count Douku had convinced himself that by following the dark side he would save the Republic but in reality he wanted to rule it himself. Egotistical reasons and Force and there you have what they call the dark side. It's actually a hubris.
Sol actually falls into this category but for a different reason and not exactly. He was angry and sad by witnessing the youngsters being slaughtered by Qimir. He was confused and angry by the messy situation he half caused and half was put into but he never actually killed for revenge. His egotistical motive was that he wanted someone to take care of. This is natural but at the same time he convinced himself that Osha was in danger from the witches, while she wasn't.
As for the falling into the dark side for love, there is a difference between "I love someone and I want to protect them with my own life even" and "I love someone and I want to protect them in order to keep them for me, or after they are taken, I want revenge because now I am alone now and I want to feel that I had control over it." The first case is more rare. Kanan Jarrus loved his girlfriend and his family, he wanted to protect them and actually the Force allowed him to see the love of his life one last time. That proves that the Jedi's belief against feelings and attachments was wrong. The second cases are more common, though. Love can be egotistical and that's when you risk all the above. Diversifying between the scenarios can be cultivated, though.
This is why I subbed to this channel
Just go back and read "Legends" books and forget the Disney canon. Luke Skywalker is the grandmaster of the Jedi order, obviously. He has a son, Ben, who's a bit younger than Han and Leia's kids. Luke revises the Jedi Code to embrace love, but the fear of loss is still something you need to leave behind, which is why he married and had a child. You would know all this if you read the books, and that Luke removed that massive weakness from the Code 😊.
Oh, also, Jedi in combat enter Battle Meditation. That's always made clear in the books, and how it actually works. That's the answer to the video. I bet he wished he could just cover the Legends versions, it would make so much more sense.
Great video, contains lots of information pulled from Legends heh. Love it.
Je
You mean Battle Focus.
windu : i hear somebody talking about me
This is what made Windu special. Literally. Alan is trying to apply it to all Jedi. Because Disney is trying this "the Jedi aren't the good guys' bullshit.
It's not that I can't understand heroes have issues. It's not that superficial. It's that being annoyingly good IS what makes the Jedi special. It's their thing. Even when fighting and killing, to do so out of love and compassion to protect others.
It's like making Superman evil, but not in a spin off, but changing to lore so they always were.
@@bspitler0 Djinn Altis rogue sect is a really good example as well. They allow marriage and romantic relationships and split from the order but still serve the republic and probably use some aspect of the burning passion of the dark side. Control is key.
Yea but most of the interesting Jedi aren't annoyingly good which is what made so many so pretentious and naive
@@wingsoffreedom3589 You nailed it though, most Jedi would be pretentiously too good. Too boring.
All you have to do is pick literally any other time in Star Wars lore, and you can have Jedi going rogue, you can have Sith go in wild, but it's during the thousand years of peace. And instead of making it one rogue Jedi, The whole Jedi order just looks stupid now. Big difference between bad actors and entirely compromised organizations that rely on being good to access their force powers.
@@bspitler0 I like that the prequel order was fundamentally broken as that's a good story to tell however they are definitely the lamest version of the jedi. Also I do have a problem with the notion of being good would need to be necessary to access power the force is too vague and also contrived to be a purely moral force. I would love to have seen a version of the prequels where some Jedi joined the seperatist because they believed in the cause and were still firmly lightside. If that's not possible than we'd have to concede the force is political and reactionary that it inherently resists change from the status quo and all of the abused outer rim and mid rim worlds that want justice and autonomy from a government that abandoned them deserve to continue to suffer because that's the will of the force. The implication being that the sith are indeed coreect that jedi are slaves to the force and that it's will does not deserve to be respected and that it should inatead be used for the practical goals of the force user.
there is also the fact that one side is pretty much holding back because they won’t do heinous acts to win whereas the other one will commit horrible, horrible crimes just to win.
The Jedi’s total dogmatic rejection of the dark side really looks to me to have grown from Yoda. Even after he had narrowly escaped the destruction of the entire order that he had led, he was still preaching complete abstinence to Luke, and weirdly, with Luke it worked. He fell a little over to the dark side in combat, caught himself, and decided that he would rather die than make the transition to Sith. I must conclude, therefore, that for Luke, who was pretty new to force use at that time, this was the correct teaching strategy.
The same approach, however, failed spectacularly with Anakin, and I think that Allen has analyzed this to the point that I really can’t add anything.
What I want to get at here is that Yoda, whose name was once synonymous with wisdom, is the source of this strict approach to the force, from the prequels until his death in Return of the Jedi. What happened in his life to cause him, even after being alive for so long, to see force use, and living the Jedi life, in such stark black-and-white terms? What does Yoda think balance in the force is? Is Yoda, and his authority over the Jedi, the actual cause of imbalance in the force during his lifetime? I really want to see this part of Yoda’s life now, the part that permanently removed his perception, acknowledgement, or validation from all shades of grey, at least in regard to force use, possibly in regard to other aspects of life as well. Could we say that this period in Yoda’s life was his “radicalization”? Or it it just a characteristic of his species (a much more boring explanation)?
So good video, you make some good points. I think one big misconception about the original philosophy of Star Wars and the force (And this misconception was eventually made canon because of the introduction of force gods so what I have to say is virtually meaningless) there was never originally suppose to be a "Light Side" of the force there was the "The Force" and then "The Dark Side" which was meant to refer to the force being out of balance or twisted toward selfish ends. Jedi tapping into their emotions to win fights for selfless reasons or because they're in a desperate situation isn't inherently dark or forbidden, there's no such thing as negative emotions, there's just the understanding that these things if leaned on too heavily will pull them out of balance to where they stop serving the will of the force (or the force of others if you will). The original trilogy pushes the force more as a form of Zen philosophy, but in the expanded materials (particularly with the introduction of mortis gods) it gets co-opted into something more approaching Christian dogma with a universal good and evil. My personal interpretation of the prequels is that the Jedi were weakened in the force and blinded to the darkside because they became out of balance by trying to serve a dogmatic 'good' instead of understanding and embracing the force as a whole. Legends canon also seemed to support this view in that Luke and Co all gained strength from their love for one another, embracing the whole force and finding balance in the form of living with and acknowledging their emotions rather than being slaves to them. Don't forget the first lesson Obi Wan teaches Luke is to reach out with his feelings and let the force flow through him to guide his actions, that's a complete 180 from the Obi of the prequels, and a justifiable character beat retroactively by the inclusion of Qui Gon's focus on the 'living force'.
I feel like there should be 2 separate words for slightly tapping in to the dark side and using it in the moment
I remember when I first learned the Jedi Code had changed, I saw something suggesting some Sith or other had _sabotaged_ the Jedi Code itself, and I totally buy that. What do I mean? Once upon a time, it didn't go, "there is no emotion, there is peace," it went, "emotion, yet peace." That is a huge world of difference between denial and control when you stop and think about it.
I really hate when fans bicker about “Power Levels” in SW. None of that matters to me. The emotions during the fight fluctuates depending on whose fighting and what they’re feeling during the fight.
Seeing Jacki scream during her fight with Qimir, definitely felt like she was tapping into the DS, and since she’s never done that before it felt like Qimir knew exactly what to do when it happened.
Power levels will always exist though
Man do I love some Darth malgus always nice to see him mentioned.
12:07 It had a lot to do with *B A D W R I T I N G.*
Totally agree with this take on the Force. Excellent, Alan!
I enjoy all of Generation Tech videos
Dude, you rock. Love the program you have here. Keep on!!
I have always felt Luke acted out of love for his sister Leia in his last fight vs his father. Only by actually killing his father would he actually turn to the dark side. But looking at his mechanical hand and then his fathers helped Luke decide NOT to kill the father he had never known, but loved. Love in Star Wars and the Jedi is a good discussion!
After Luke cuts off Vader's hand and sees the mechanical parts, he looks at his own mechanical hand and realizes that if he uses rage and anger and kills Vader, he will fall to the dark side like Anakin did.
Emotions are a quick power boost. It can be useful but mastering when you engage it and how long you use it is key. If you can get your opponent to drain themselves of their boost first and/or inefficiently you can follow up with your own precision boost to take advantage of their weakness.
I don't remember where, but I read a surprisingly interesting view of the Dark Side of the Force that was quite similar to this: the Dark Side is like adrenaline, tapping into it during a close brush with death is just...natural. The problem is that it *feels good.* And if you aren't careful, you'll start to seek it out, and slowly over time or, for some people, quite rapidly, you start to spiral downwards.
Love and Apathy are opposites of the same coin.
As a non-force user. I practice " The Way " Hehe. Legal conceal carry should only be carried by someone willing to give their life to defend the weak, or helpless. Just MHO
Yeah I feel like the culture around firearms in our country is getting a bit ridiculous especially with all these TikTok people. These things are not toys.
@@GenerationTechI don't get why baby yoda is in the closing scene of the Acolyte......makes no sense.
No they just obfuscate what the dark side is because they are afraid of it. Yes emotions can lead to the dark side of the force. But they can also lead you to the force. It’s how you ise your emotions.
I agree with you, there is more to the force... and life then the light side and the dark side. I do try to keep myself on the light side but sometimes it can be difficult to see in the moment. Kyle Katarn said that no force power is inherently good or evil, it's how you use them.
The power of love/friendship is so universally seen as "the good guy power up" that I imagine tapping into positive emotions would be more of a light side thing and probably even more powerful than dark side emotions
But the Jedi were just so dogmatic against emotion out of fear of negative emotions that they fail to harness the full power of the light side powers available to them and incorrectly label them as dark side powers
One of my favourite minor characters is a Sith Lord called Kopecz. He lived during the New Sith Wars and started life as a Jedi but as the Sith grew he defected because he believed that the Sith offered the best chance to build a more stable galaxy. It wasn’t for selfish reasons (I mean what’s selfish about wanting a stable, war-free galaxy?) which is something I can 100% get behind and would likely be what would convince me to join the Sith.
Also the Sith in some ways seem more practical. In the “Book of Sith” Darth Bane writes about combat and under lightsaber combat he eschews the six forms taught by Jedi in favour of two styles: fast style and strong style. He notes Fast style is categorised by its focus on speed, acrobatics, precision and footwork. Defensively Fast style is Soresu, the third lightsaber form but it is paired with one or two other Forms into a singular style for its more aggressive sequences. It is my opinion that the “aggressive” sequences of Fast style is Makashi and Ataru. This comes from Darth Bane’s own experience as he fought another apprentice who used Soresu and Makashi against him in a duel at the Sith academy; later he fights his former instructor who uses a two-lightsaber variant of Ataru against him. Somehow Bane refines all three forms and those two experiences into a singular style.
Strong style is based upon his own use of Djem So, stating that to use it requires a combination of the user’s own body weight in conjunction with one’s anger to produce truly powerful strikes. He mentions Shien as another aspect of Strong style but it’s an aspect that should rarely be used.
Dun Moch, the breaking of an opponent’s spirit, is a tool favoured by Sith because it breaks a Jedi’s concentration and composure. An effective way to ensure victory so long as it doesn’t backfire.
And then there’s Juyo. Bane describes that emotions such as fear are necessary not just hate and anger in mastering this style.
In short, Darth Bane refined a martial system that to me is the most practical. Fighting defensively like a Jedi leads to prolonged fighting and the more likely outcome of you dying because in most situations, the aggressor will emerge victorious in a fight. And I assure that’s true, as a teenager I would fight defensively in karate sparring sessions and get my arse kicked. The only Jedi forms I would say are practical are Forms IV, V and VII, because they are three of the most aggressive of the seven Forms. And would you believe it, each of them are related to the three styles established by Bane for his Rule of Two Sith: Form IV (Fast style), Form V (Strong style) and Form VII (Juyo).
What does this have to do with anything? It shows that while the light side may be balance and the ideal state, one cannot deny that sometimes the dark side is just practical.
Think of the Force like food. The dark side is having a takeaway which is fine once now and then but not everyday. But if you deny yourself that once in a while “treat” you are more likely to be tempted the more you resist until finally, you find yourself eating takeaways almost every night after work. Why? Because it’s easier than cooking. And that’s what the dark side is: it’s an easier option to take but is detrimental to your health and your finances overtime.
I know. I was strict with my eating for a good few weeks, I lost over a stone in weight but I denied myself certain foods. I had one bad day and the “dark side” was there. Within a couple of weeks I put on about half of that weight I previously lost. And yeah I know it’s all about having the right mindset but often times that’s easier said than done. For a Jedi to maintain their own balance must be a truly difficult thing to constantly strive for. Dooku and Anakin were both Jedi who tapped into the dark side as Jedi on occasion. Dooku Force choked that Senator in Tales of the Jedi and even used Force Lightning as a Jedi in the audiobook Dooku: Jedi Lost.
There was a Sith Lord who tried to merge Jedi and Sith philosophies and would later be regarded as a heretic. He was killed by his apprentice but not before destroying centuries worth of accumulated dark side knowledge. So would a blending of Jedi and Sith teachings be what the Sith would consider to be “balance”? As opposed to the balance laid out by George Lucas and the Jedi: that being the absolute non-existence of the dark side. To me, the absence of the dark side is unnatural. As humans we all have an inner darkness and to deny that is probably really dangerous. If we’re not aware of our own darkness, how are we supposed to deal with it when an event happens that causes it to manifest itself?
In legends one of the trials a Jedi must undertake is the Trial of the Spirit (colloquially referred to as “facing the mirror” by Oppo Rancisis). This is a spiritual trial where a Jedi Padawan must look deep inside themselves and will likely not like what they find, because it may reveal an aspect of themselves that truly horrifies them.
On Nelvaan, Anakin experiences a vision of himself becoming Darth Vader. Earlier on he had a vision on Mortis shown to him by the Son but that vision was erased from his mind by the Father.
Yoda faced his own inner darkness and finally understood that the best way to defeat it was to accept it as part of oneself but not to give that aspect of yourself power.
Tl;dr the dark side is more appealing to those of us who lack patience and want the easy way through life. The light side is more fulfilling in the long term but requires a lot more hard work and personal growth on behalf of the individual.
Probably the only time can think of a Jedi letting real love fuel their connection with the Force is Kanan’s final act
Anakin brought balance to the Force by killing off the Jedi, and then balanced it again by tossing Palpatine down a reactor shaft. When the Jedi dominated, the Force was out of balance and had been for a thousand generations. What a balancing act!
Be careful what you wish for. Restoring the balance of the Force isn't what you thought.
Qimir was the glue that held “the acolyte” together. He’s the one thing I am going to miss if we don’t get a season 2 of that show.
Old Republic had some trailers ... miss that game.
I think using the dark side in self defense is OK, risky but less risky than you dying. Just have to be reserved when using it, don't use it to get info from a street vendor but yeah use it to defeat a sith who's besting you
Nice plug, reference to Trainspotting! My atf! Who needs the Force when you have Heroin - Ewan McGregor crossing two different movies & movie scripts
As a lifelong Star Wars and Mike Tyson fan I appreciate your analogy and I'm glad to have Mike back on the light side of the force.
Alan is chilling on Kofar, watch out for those bugs bro
I would definitely say this is true post Kreia as Meetra Surik became the new founder of the Jedi much similar to how Luke and later Rey did.
But I don't know if it's cut and dry before Meetra Surik.
Yor's comment on the fight reminded me of that line in Demolition Man:" We are Jedi Knights. We aren't trained for this kind of violence ".
He took a shuttle to kashyyyk!
Well one can say Vader was holding back to a point against Luke. Luke even say's "Your thought's betray you Father, I can feel the good in you, the conflict."
I imagine that of the many Jedi, those that did have a tendency to tap into the dark side, and did so too often, would often be sidelined away from away missions where they might encounter that temptation more often and would be put on something like working the library or teaching or some other political matters that won't put them in those life or death scenarios that might tempt them
well..... if i remember the story right, Malgus' assasult on the Jedi Temple was performed with the very best warriors available to him. he brought the equivalent of seasoned Jedi Masters. Master Zallow cutting through them like wheat is nothing to scoff at either. A Jedi Battlemaster in those days was a fearsome opponent.
Revan is the only jedi who realised the truth but the order shunned and blackmail him to not show the way
Interesting topic - It made me think about your law enforcement analogy from a couple of weeks ago, how some otherwise good and law-abiding officers have occasionally dipped into the dark side whether for self-preservation or to "protect" another, from what they deem as a possible threat - self defense or not, it stains the soul...
Your statement that love is a useful emotion that shouldn't be repressed is actually what Luke did in the old canon. He came to understand that love had brought his father back to the light, and his own partial fall to the dark side was undone by the love of his sister and his friends. This is why he wasn't afraid of forming connections and even got married. To a woman who tried to kill him no less!
It's why new canon Luke is a slap in the face to the entire Star Wars timeline up to that point. Luke had finally brought balance to the Force. He had sort of brought back the ancient Je'Daii order, the precursor to the Jedi, that believed in balance between the light and dark. The order that the ancient Celestials put together. Their ideal wielders of the Force. The true form of its worship and use. And it was cast aside by a company that can't come up with its own ideas. Instead, picking at the carcass of the expanded universe they themselves murdered.
I don't think Luke defeating Vader on the second Death Star was a Mary Sue moment at all. I think the scales were evened out. Vader's love for his son was holding him back.
Kenobi 'losing it' after seeing his master fall or the pain of him having to fight his 'brother', then seeming to fight better as it goes longer, are a couple more examples of 'dark side taint' affecting a Jedi during battle. If you aren't invested in the outcome, you run the risk of failing to achieve it...
Always a good day when the only sensible Star Wars Poster makes a video about the sides of the force.
ALAN YOU SHOULD HAVE BEEN WRITING FOR ALL STAR WARS MOVIES & TV SHOWS - YOU'RE RIGHT
It's long been my head cannon that Vader was given orders to frustrate Luke in order to get him to turn to and use the dark side. Then, seeing what he had done to his own son, a reminder of his love for Padme (and what he had done to her), and the torture Palpatine was putting him through, Vader turned on the emperor.
tactical soup!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Come to the dark side, we have soup!
Fear in this stuff includes fear for others. Thus love.
An old Mandalorian Poverb: There are no sides, there is only soup.
By making you completely ignore emotions once a jedi finally gives in to any emotion they just go "screw it might as well go dark side". If the jedi taught you to use righteous anger and love they would have a better outlet for their emotions rather than bottling them up until they explode.
For many, it is the sound, of the lightsaber. Once you experience what one of those can do, it's almost like a visceral reaction to sound of a deadly animal. Watch a duel without sound. Then close your eyes and just listen. Sound can be at least as much a distraction...
I think a lot of the time it may actually be *fandom* that too often considers any emotion or ferocity in a fight to be 'dark side,' mind you. I certainly didn't see Jecki in that fight as 'using the dark side' just for hitting hard when, err, really the situation called for that. In the real world I think there's a real difference between say striking because anger and striking while *feeling* anger, ...the latter can be fuel of sorts, the former is often an equation for regrettable. Similarly there may be a difference between 'ferocity' and 'losing your cool' or just 'losing it.' It's almost like I'm talking about Vaapad without the direct interplay about someone else's Dark Side necessarily. (If I recall, Bruce Lee had similar words, I kind of internalized a lot of that though)
It's also like the difference between 'Driving Angry' or 'Anger Driving' and 'driving while feeling some anger,' ...the latter of which kind of goes through feeling it and paying attention and letting it pass through rather than bottling up/stoking/acting out by it, see?
I would hope a healthier Jedi approach still recognizes a Jedi's feelings, just is about being in discipline/control of using them. There's using power and there's getting attached to it in bad ways. In the end, they're all swinging plasma bars of dismemberment if it comes down to 'for keeps,' so the discipline and meditationalness should of course involve not expecting a lot of time-outs to restore equanimity.
My thought is that the stronger the connection to the force leads to a stronger connection to other beings. That stronger connection to others can also let people experience stronger feelings for others, good and bad. This is why I think jedi have to be on guard with their emotions so they don't do something everyone will regret.
“If one is to understand the great mystery, one must study all its aspects. Not just the dogmatic narrow view of the Jedi”
"A Jedi will always lose to a Sith of similar strength and experience."
Adds even more to how impressive that Sidious spent the entire fight runnimg away from Yoda and ended in a stalemate only when Yoda receieved a force vision telling him it was not for him to win here
As my Twilek always says, "There is no light or dark, good or evil. There is the force and those who Choose to wield it for heling others or personal gain." He's a gray jedi who isnt afraid to walk the middle line.
I feel the Force itself is neither good nor evil and could be channeled most effective by those who aren't wholey dedicated to either ideology, those who are neither "blinded" by the light nor "lost" to the dark. The key is to know yourself truly, acknowledge that you possess both elements of these aspects of the Force, and embrace this knowledge with enough presence of mind to not allow yourself to be swayed completly one way or the other and remain balanced. There is but one way this is achieved: You have to be completely honest with yourself without entertaining any false justifications for your actions. Lying to yourself will always result in your downfall, Force user or not, but to an especially high degree if you are a powerful conduit for the energy (light and/or dark) that comprises the Force.
I feel like you had a combo of 80s soft rock and Ren Fair music in the background. And...I liked it 😂
the interesting and cool thing about Obi Wan is that he mostly defeats anyone. Even if he falls a couple of times, loses his weapon or the fight, he comes back and wins it.
The combination of the 2, and control of both, would probably spell the ultimate state of a force user.
In lieu of writing a novel of my own, or a video script in the comments , I'll just agree with Allen. Great video as per usual!
Would love to see this evened out a bit while new stories of powerful light side jedi.
In Matthew Stover's novelization of Revenge of the Sith, it was stated that "war itself was the tool of the Dark". Emotions like anger and fear likely began as evolved responses for self-preservation in life and death situations. It stands to reason that for any naturally evolved sentient being, the Dark Side is going to be the easier pathway to tapping into the force in lethal combat situations.
The Light Side is much more suited for non-combat applications, in general.
The pre-Clone Wars era Jedi had existed in a peaceful galaxy for so long that they sort of forgot this, and let their fear of the Dark Side ossify their attitudes towards that.
That said, I think that at the very highest levels, a Light Side master will defeat a Dark Side master of equal power and training, because emotions cloud judgment. If the Light Sider can withstand the initial rage-fueled barrage, the Dark Sider is much more likely to be the one who makes the fatal misjudgment first. Most times we see a Light Sider beat a Dark Sider in the canon it is because the Dark Sider defeats himself with emotion driven tactical mistakes.
I'd argue there IS one moment in Disney Star Wars where a Jedi uses love (sort of) to defeat a Dark Side user in combat, and that's in the Kenobi series finale. After Obi Want gets buried under a metric ton of rocks, it's his desire to protect Leia and Luke that gives him the strength to literally push himself out of the pit and go all Super Saiyan on Vader...but it's also love that stops him from finishing Vader off, even after Vader seems to confirm that "Anakin is gone." Though I don't think Obi Wan really truly ever believed Anakin was "truly dead" deep down, otherwise I feel like he would have struck Vader down right there.
Similarly with Luke, it may have been anger that granted him the strength to defeat Vader in combat, it was love that saved them both by choosing to toss away his lightsaber. So really, the light side is all about pacifism, which is a totally fine thing, but it's almost completely incompatible with life-or-death combat. The only way to NOT tap into the Dark Side in a fight...is to throw the fight. Just like Obi Wan did in A New Hope and Luke did in Return of the Jedi.
There is no dark side or light side… there is only the Unified Force
Joy is form one and that comes from love of everything. When you find the force you are in fact tapping into the force from both the light and dark.
where did you get this Hangover Mike Tyson in the air tonight edit from I could only find the original scene or did you edit it yourself?
The Jedi would have probably benefitted from 3rd party therapy.
The funny thing is … I think the Daughter (of the Mortis Gods), who is generally considered the personification of the Light Side, is closer to positive emotionality (mostly love) than to the Jedi's non-emotional approach. Yet we're generally missing Force users of this kind.
There’s a fan film called “Rescue Mission” with Revan in it and there’s a brilliant line in there about tapping into the dark side 😕😅
Vader wasn't trying to kill Luke, he was trying to turn him to the Dark Side, so he was deliberately fighting weak so as to avoid injuring him. Rey was just a crappily written character.
8:37 i can confirm, when you are using emotion you kinda get physically stronger almost, its wild, of course no force but this is still true in the real world to a point.