Anyways, Servant Corps, if you ever decide to come back and post in this thread, I'd like you to respond to the challenges to your assertions people have offered up- assuming you were looking for an actual discussion of the issue.
I was more interested in how to limit omnipotence and the responses to the question...which I found more useful than my own ideas and beliefs.
But if you insist...even if a story is well-crafted, logical, interesting, entertaining, etc., you know that there was a reason why the author decided that X, Y, and Z happened. As one advocate said:
When I read a novel, I know that everything is happening for some reason that the author had because they're trying to make a point.
The problem comes when
you disagree with the reason the author had for making the story as he did. If the author had no control over his story, he can throw his hands and claim ignorance, he has an alibi. But if the author is omnipotent, then everything can be questioned and thrown into disrepute by an angry mob who hate why you written what you did, and want you to make "changes" to said story...
The entire reason I made this topic was due to an argument on another forum over a video game story in one of the "Drake" games. In that story, Drake's girlfriend was hit by a grenade and thus could not help Drake in a boss battle. Everybody knew that the person who wrote the plot intended for Drake's girlfriend to be hit by a grenade...they only disagreed on
why[1] and how to "fix" this plot so that it is not offensive and removes that random grenade. One person argued for revising the story so that Drake's girlfriend ran out of ammo and decided to run away to get more ammo, or that Drake's girlfriend found a new enemy and ran away from Drake to fight the new enemy while Drake fights the final boss.
(None of the people debating it were fans of Drake
or Drake's girlfriend; they wanted to discuss positive and negative portrayals of women in video games and find ways to ensure positive portayals and prevent negatives ones. It was generally agreed in the thread that the grenade being thrown at Drake's girlfriend is a negative portrayal, the debate was centered over
why it was negative.)
So much literary criticism and debate over a simple grenade can do much to make this episode look very ridiculous and pointless--even if the grenade scene was well-written, the fact that we knew the author had that grenade thrown at Drake's girlfriend and that it caused this long argument over the fate of fictional characters...really makes me loathe this scene.
And it won't be limited to just grenades. Anything written by the author can be potentially attacked and dismantled by a horde of critics who dislike what the author has written and demand for massive changes in the plot to "fix" his story; the ensuring debate between pro-change folks and anti-change folks will ruin everything that makes the story enjoyable and readable in the first place. I'm all in favor of good writing, but I feel that keeping the idea of author omnipotence leaves your work vulnerable to being dogpiled and torn apart by critics. Making writers less omnipotent might protect you from these allegations; I hope.
[1]The debate generally centered around "Did the author wanted to develop Drake some more because Drake is the main character or did the author wanted to cast Drake's girlfriend in the traditional role of a woman needing to be rescued?" Honestly, debating over what the author meant by a story is appealing to me, so I don't find this argument bad
per se, but I did find the ensuring argument of how to 'fix' the story...sorta disturbing.