Mjölnir;36156077 said:
You highlight well why both you and the poster you quote either misunderstand what people are saying, or deliberately try to misrepresent it.
You show that Luke had plenty of character development in the first three movies without ever losing the core base of his character. The trait you could see in everything from the whiny farmhand to the Jedi Knight. The point people are making that this time they didn't manage to preserve that while writing his character development.
You also misrepresent who Luke was in ESB. What's the classic heroic thing? To be obedient to your teacher and stay away when your friends are suffering, possibly dying, or to take a big risk to try to save them? Being heroic is very often foolish and risky.
I don't "think" I misunderstand and I'm "certainly" not deliberately misrepresenting anything.
First off, I don't think Luke "ever" lost the core base of his character. Sometimes when you think you are doing the right thing and things go SO wrong, it makes you re-evaluate what you are doing. Due to, what appear to me to be, a multitude of reasons, Luke decided that his course of action and, probably, his ability to train Jedi was compromised and what he was doing created more harm than good. That is, sometimes you feel that if you act, you simply make things worse. I would say his core was preserved, but people "misunderstood" that. I think it hurt him to not try to help, but he held back because he felt his actions created more harm than good. People don't have to agree with me on this. We can just agree to disagree.
As far as me misrepresenting Luke in ESB, I did no such thing. I said he was (at times) a dumb ass that didn't listen to his teacher. I never mentioned leaving his training specifically (which I'm about half and half on). Students, by definition, aren't generally super advanced. Luke wanted to be a Jedi, but acted like a dumb ass when he first met Yoda. Remember "I don't believe it" and "That is why you fail" WRT lifting Luke's ship? Typical student dumb ass. Remember "Your light saber. You will not need it" when going down into the Dagobah cave? Dumb ass.
Not entirely unexpected from a student, but some dumb ass stuff. Who is misrepresenting anything? Certainly not me.
Fast forward to present day Star Wars. What was Luke supposed to do? Not listen to his teacher again? No. That would have been hard to do because he didn't have one. Another, more difficult challenge awaited him and he passed the test in the end.
The funny thing is that people already KNEW Luke had vanished; it was the FIRST thing you read in TFA and we had a pretty good idea of why. Why weren't people complaining about it then? IMO, what happened is that people were ready to accept that Luke had become a recluse (though maybe it just never occurred to them because it wasn't a major theme in the storyline of TFA), but they weren't willing to see what that meant.
I could go on, but I think people get the gist of what I'm saying.