Luso Saiyan wrote:
Merit doesn't determine wether something is created or is successful. Merit comes as a result of that.
I don't mean to be rude, but I still have no idea what this means. Could you explain this a little differently?
Luso Saiyan wrote:
What I actually said: "if the series is successful it's because of him, what he created and the choices he made (that's what made us buy it)."
I understand what you mean by this, but I disagree. And I think I've explained myself adequately in previous posts.
Luso Saiyan wrote:
Success is determined by many things, hence why I keep saying "a component of". Having a publisher interested in distributing your work is a component of success. Having people interested in your work is another component. Having people buy your work is the result of your success. The merit and responsibility for all this goes to Toriyama, because he was the one who created the work in the first place. The work is what made people be interested in it, thus it's what made him successful. He's the one who created the work, therefore he is the one responsible for his own success.
Again, I think I've already addressed this in previous posts in response to you and other users.
rereboy wrote:You are the only one who's acting like I'm personally attacking you.
How? I merely said that I thought it was unreasonable to assume that I also held that position.
rereboy wrote:
You didn't dismiss it, implied that it was valid, so I contested the viewpoint.
Show me what in my original post implied it was valid. I specifically said that was my understanding of the argument
other people were making. That's not in any way implying that the argument is valid.
rereboy wrote:
You need an example to understand such a straightforward concept?
It's not a straightforward concept to me. I've never heard anyone use the expression "noteworthy luck". Not once. How am I supposed to know what it means?
rereboy wrote:
The author of twilight has had noteworthy luck because honestly she's not that talented, not does she deserve such a great deal of success, but just because she was exceptionally lucky, she managed to achieved a degree of success clearly not linked just to her talent.
On the other hand, the author of game of thrones and a song of ice and fire published his first book in the 90s and it took a decade or more to have a degree of success coherent to what he deserved and his talent. His success can be linked purely to his talent and how good his work is, not to a degree of luck, meaning that he had no noteworthy luck, everything was born out of talent and the fact he deserves it.
Whether or not an author deserves his success is subjective, and not the subject of this discussion. If you think that some people are more deserving of their success than others based on the quality of their work, that's fine, but that's your opinion. The fact of the matter is Twilight and Game of Thrones are both hugely successful. There's something about them that a large amount of people enjoy. What I'm specifically talking are about the reasons behind a person's success. And I can't claim to know exactly why; neither can the authors IMO. But it has to be some combination of talent and luck. There are some works of art that had only meagre success when they were released, but have been viewed positively in retrospect. Same goes for the reverse. It's easy to say in hindsight that Game of Thrones was always going to be a hit, but that's not always the case.
ABED wrote:But if you viewed it as a transaction you wouldn't claim "I made him successful."
I never claimed that. I said that everyone who has bought anything DB-related is responsible, in a small way. That's why it's unreasonable to expect an author to pander to your individual tastes.
ABED wrote:
Not my point. I said just because you're poor doesn't mean you are doomed to stay poor. There are a number of reasons people never make something of themselves, some in their control, some not. That still doesn't mean people can't be self made. Your arguments make it seem like successful people like Toriyama have some unlimited or undefined obligation.
I never claimed that no one who has ever been poor has become rich. Lots of people have, and no doubt they were very talented and competent. But luck is involved as well. That's not to deny talent and hard work. It's just that some people never get the opportunity to make something of their talents. Again, I've never even implied that Toriyama owes us anything or is obligated to do anything. All I said was that he should be grateful to his fans and consider himself lucky that he had the opportunity to work on and improve his talents and that he ending up creating something that was well received by the public. I'm not singling out Toriyama. This applies to everyone who's ever been successful.