Faith Heel Turn: Difference between revisions
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** The most perplexing (and [[Narm|unintentionally hilarious]]) example would have to be the one where a child grows up to become a [[Complete Monster]]...because he found out ''there was no Santa Claus''. If you can follow the logic in that...well, I'm not entirely sure I want to know how you managed it. |
** The most perplexing (and [[Narm|unintentionally hilarious]]) example would have to be the one where a child grows up to become a [[Complete Monster]]...because he found out ''there was no Santa Claus''. If you can follow the logic in that...well, I'm not entirely sure I want to know how you managed it. |
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** A lot of [http://fstdt.com/ FSTDT] quotes feature people who fear having a crisis of faith because they believe this will happen. |
** A lot of [http://fstdt.com/ FSTDT] quotes feature people who fear having a crisis of faith because they believe this will happen. |
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* One of the [[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]] ''Tales of the Vampires'' has a former priest vampire... who is fairly justified about his |
* One of the [[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]] ''Tales of the Vampires'' has a former priest vampire... who is fairly justified about his Faith Heel Turn, all things considered. Notably reversed in a [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]] for a certain [[Cloudcuckoolander]]. |
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* The book ''Supervillains and Philosophy'' has an essay speculating about Two-Face's philosophical journey. (Obviously, this is a completely non-canon [[Alternative Character Interpretation]].) According to this essay, [[Batman|Harvey Dent]] aka Two-Face was a believer in the strongly ordered universe of Calvinism when he was a young man. But when he went to college and learned about atheistic philosophies like Existentialism, he began to believe that his two-faced random destruction was more appropriate to the [[Nietzsche Wannabe|true nature of this chaotic world]]. |
* The book ''Supervillains and Philosophy'' has an essay speculating about Two-Face's philosophical journey. (Obviously, this is a completely non-canon [[Alternative Character Interpretation]].) According to this essay, [[Batman|Harvey Dent]] aka Two-Face was a believer in the strongly ordered universe of Calvinism when he was a young man. But when he went to college and learned about atheistic philosophies like Existentialism, he began to believe that his two-faced random destruction was more appropriate to the [[Nietzsche Wannabe|true nature of this chaotic world]]. |
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