The Great Chain of Being
"You know, now, something of the invisible rules on which the world rests."[1]
The Great Chain of Being is the cosmic order of living things as enforced by the Judgements. It works in tandem with its less-discussed counterpart, the Sequence.
ASCEND NOW TO YOUR PLACE IN THE SUN[edit | edit source]
"The 'Judgements' you had read of - those are what we call stars. They order the Universe with their Sequence. They ensure sanity, consistency, mortality, with the Great Chain of Being."[1]
The Judgements, which we know as the stars, decide upon the laws of the universe through deliberation, debate and compromise.[2] The Great Chain and the Sequence are the ultimate manifestation of these laws: the Judgements' plan for creation.
The Great Chain of Being, also called the Great Chain of Existence,[3] is the hierarchy of all living things.[4] All beings are made with features that give them a place and a purpose in the hierarchy.[5] Not much is known about the Sequence by comparison, but it "orders the universe"[6] and it must emerge from consistent and universal rules.[7]
Defiance of the Chain (and presumably also the Sequence)[8] is strictly forbidden on a cosmic level,[9][10] but the Judgements are not infallible. The Sequence is not complete, and its creators, now and then, have encountered something unexpected.[11][12] While ascending the Great Chain is impossible under starlight, in darker places like the Neath where cosmic law is more malleable, it becomes possible through the treacheries of the Red Science.[9][13][14]
The Order of the Chain[edit | edit source]
"Fraternisation between the links on the Chain is fraught. To ascend it is often treasonous; to descend, taboo."[15]
It should come as no surprise that those in a high enough place of power to determine the pecking order in their domain would stand at the top of any hierarchy. Naturally, this applies to the Judgements.[16] Curators, Grand Devils, Devils, Heart-Catchers, Flukes, Messengers, and December — not necessarily in that order — are all lower on the Chain than Judgements.[16] Humans sit close to the bottom.[16][17]
Taking the Universe At Its Word[edit | edit source]
Different schools of thought have interpreted the reality of the Great Chain and the Sequence in numerous ways.
- The New Sequence is a group of servants of the Dawn Machine, who work to shatter the old order and create a new harmony in the Neath comparable to that of the heavens and the Surface.[18][19]
- The Prehistoricists, an ideological faction of the Tracklayer's Union, believe that the purpose of humanity in the Chain is to innovate and revolutionize;[20] to facilitate this, however, many humans must perform unpleasant and undesirable tasks like hard labor. Therefore, there are gaps in the Chain, which should be filled by creating new beings suited for these tasks.[21][22]
- Supporters of the Liberation of Night see the Chain as a tool of oppression that was never intended to help humanity.[23] In fact, the Liberationists believe that the order of the universe is fundamentally unjust, with some asserting that physical form itself is a prison.[24][25] They aim to end the tyrannical order of the Judgements.[26]
Historical, Cultural, and Scientific Inspirations[edit | edit source]
The Great Chain of Being was likely primarily inspired by the Christian concept of the same name in which every being is ranked. God stands at the top, followed by angels, humans, animals (stratified according to their role in nature), plants, and minerals.[27] According to historian Arthur O. Lovejoy, who wrote an influential 1936 book on the Great Chain of Being, there are three principles behind it: the principles of Plenitude (the Chain is the expression of God's power), of Continuity (there are no gaps in the chain), and of Gradation (all beings are ordered from the highest to the lowest).[28]
The Chain also connects to teleology, the concept of intrinsic purpose as defined in both biology and religion. William Paley, a philosopher who is referenced as the Watchmaker in Fallen London, argued that evidence of design in the natural world was proof of the existence of a divine creator.
Finally, it may also be inspired by a food chain, a concept in biology that organizes species in a hierarchy according to which other organisms in an ecosystem make up the bulk of their diet. This is supported by the motif of consumption prevalent throughout the Great Chain as depicted in Fallen London.[9]
According to Alexis Kennedy,[29] the Sequence references the Main Sequence, the classification by luminosity and color of the stars that mainly fuse hydrogen.[30]
References[edit | edit source]
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