In reading Faust's thread concerting
Lavos, the FF, and Human Evolution I realized that there are some assumptions about the Frozen Flame and Lavos' relationship to it that have basically been accepted without question for several years but which may or may not be true. As such I have tried to question some of these assumption in order to dig to the actual truth, rather than the flawed suppositions that Chrono Theory may be working under. In formulating the hypotheses, I read over the forums many threads on the matter, looked over the game script, and searched through interview transcripts. I have tried to be as comprehensive as possible, but that is a difficult task with so much data to absorb and analyze.
Specifically, I would like to argue the following points:
1) The Frozen Flame may not have "broken off" Lavos upon its impact with Earth but rather it may of separated from the whole at a much latter date.
2) Lavos’ relationship to the Frozen Flame is much closer and more significant than just the relationship of the whole to a splinter.
3) The Frozen Flame was assuredly never part of the Mammon Machine.
Point 1 is important as it would clarify Lavos' role in the rise and fall of Zeal, human evolution, and possibly the existence of Mystics, Demi-Humans, and other slightly dubious branches of Human Evolution.
Point 2 is important as it changes our very view of what the Frozen Flame is, how Serge interacts with it, and indeed re-conceptualizes the FF's role in Chrono Cross and its relation to the Time Devourer.
Point 3 is important for those who argue for Schala being the Arbiter of the Mammon Machine (or a previous Arbiter of the Frozen Flame in general).
When did the Frozen Flame break off from Lavos?To start off with, it may be surprising for some to discover that there is only one line in the
entire Chrono Cross script that identifies the Frozen Flame's origin:
The Frozen Flame is a
splinter from the extra-
terrestrial being Lavos.
If I am placing the quote properly (I discovered this from the script, not from playing the game, so establishing proper context can be tricky), Belthasar tells us this after the battle on Terra Tower. Three things to note here: Belthasar does not specify
when the FF splintered from Lavos, he does not specify
where the FF splintered off from, and he does not specify
what the nature of that splinter is.
It is generally assumed the Frozen Flame splintered from Lavos either when it approached earth or when it landed. Yes from this a few simple questions arise: Why is this assumed? Where is the actual supporting evidence?
Consider this thread from Compendium Past:
http://www.chronocompendium.com/Forums/index.php/topic,1929.0.html. That thread asked when the FF splintered and other forum goers responded with statements that the date was the same as its crash to earth yet they failed, one and all, to provide proof to backup those statements.
So then, what is the evidence that supports the supposition that the FF broke off from Lavos upon impact? Deduction, mostly. Faust quoted this in his thread, but allow me to do the same for the sake of ease:
However, the unforeseen
coming of the mighty one from
the heavens suddenly smashed
their kingdom to pieces.
That one was known as '"Lavos!"'
The great crimson flame......
Wielding absolute power,
Lavos buried the dinosaurs -
the kings of the land -
in the space of a night.
However, the timid '"apes"'
who had lived hidden in
the forests...
...came into contact with
the crimsom flame
that fell from the sky,
and evolved into '"humans."'
Humans were evolved by the "Crimson Flame," which is taken to be the Frozen Flame. Zeality suggested in Faust's thread that this is just a bit of a poetic license, as coming in contact with the Frozen Flame is the same as coming into contact with Lavos and the descriptor “crimson flame” could apply to the FF. That is certainly a valid interpretation, but there is an equal possibility that “crimson flame” has nothing to do with the Frozen Flame. Lavos’ very name means “big fire” and he appeared as a red star. It is hardly a large leap to assume that “crimson flame” was meant only as a descriptor of Lavos. Consider Azala’s words regarding Lavos:
Red star...
Fall!!!!!
Stain the earth...RED!
Soon, stones of fire will rain down.
Flames shall scorch the land.
The very first time we are made aware how and when Lavos’ presence on earth originated, Lavos is identified by the Dragonian ancestor as red fire.
Other quotes that seem to imply some specific chronological placement of the Frozen Flame are as follows:
The DNA records are
poems and music...
Adenine and Thymine...
Guanine and Cytosine...
Rythym and Melody...
Perhaps the DNA of the ones
who make contact with the
Flame is recomposed by the
sound they generate within?
This seems to place a "Flame" at the point in time when DNA is recomposed. Given that it is implicated that human evolution was effected by extra-terrestreal powers, this could be taken as evidence that the “Flame” was what caused the changes humans underwent. However, to note, this does not need to be a statement limited to human evolution; rather, presumably the Flame’s abilities to “recompose” DNA continues. Therefore, all this statement indicates is that the Chronopolis scientists were aware that the Flame could “recompose DNA,” not that it did recompose proto-human DNA into that which resulted in Humanity.
Additionally, to note, this doesn’t even link the Frozen Flame to evolution; just to dramatic changes in DNA. Evolution happens over numerous generations, as far as we understand it, but the Flame is causing significant changes within a short period of time (it recomposes the DNA of the one who comes in contact with it, implying significant changes within the individual, not the species).
This is the essence of what
descended from the heavens
in the prehistoric age.
The living crimson stone...
the Frozen Flame!
On a glance this might seem to indicate that the FF originated in the prehistoric age, but one will note that the sentences are divided. The quote gives us two statements that relate to a single object (the Frozen Flame). It only establishes that the entity of which the FF is the essence of descended in the prehistoric age. To offer an analogy, one might say that the United States’ constitution is the essence of the Founding Fathers; however, that does not imply that the Constitution was born when they were born. Everyone agrees Lavos fell then, but the question is if the FF broke off at that point. The Flames's creation and the Fall of Lavos are not tied by this quote.
In the eyes of the Dragons,
we humans are the foes...
A brain that has developed abnormally
to 3 times the original size in the
span of 3 million years...
We humans have evolved at an
enormous rate because of our
contact with Lavos's flame...
In a sense, mankind is Lavos's offspring...
This nicely establishes a rough estimate for when Lavos' power effected human evolution (at the very least 3 mil years before the Kingdom of Zeal, though the 3 mil is a span of time, not a specific date, so another possibility is that humans evolved between 65,000,000 BC and 62,000,000 BC), and that human evolution was effected by Lavos's flame.
One might note that “Lavos’s flame” is not definitely a kenning for the Frozen Flame. Though the FF is certainly connected to Lavos, as it splintered off from him, is does not share such a strong connection to “Lavos’s Flame.” This is the only time that the possessive is applied to the word "flame,” and for that very reason is unusual and should catch our attention. The FF came from Lavos, but can we properly say it is in Lavos' possession, or that it is even rightfully Lavos'? In what way would the Frozen Flame be the only (or even best) interpretation of “Lavos’s Flame”?
One might also note that "flame" is not capitalized. While this is very shaky ground, considering it is relying on grammar (which may or may not have been properly translated), grammatically speaking, "Lavos's flame" cannot be referring to a specific object of that name. If it was, then the word "flame" would have been capitalized. While as mentioned, an argument from grammar is dubious, elsewhere this rule of grammar is applied appropriately:
Perhaps even FATE itself
dreamed of using the Flame
to some day reincarnate
itself into a new species.
It is quite sad, really...
It's like when you gaze
into the Flame, the Flame
gazes back into you.
We might fall back on Zeality's suggestion in Faust’s thread that this sort of language is poetic, yet the exact same explanation can be used to suggest that "Lavos' flame" is not the same as the Frozen Flame. Poetic license opens the door to interpretation. The dictionary definition of "flame" would allow it to be a general reference to Lavos' power (emphasis added):
flame
–noun
1. burning gas or vapor, as from wood or coal, that is undergoing combustion; a portion of ignited gas or vapor.
2. Often, flames. the state or condition of blazing combustion: to burst into flames.
3. any flamelike condition; glow; inflamed condition.
4. brilliant light; scintillating luster.
5. bright coloring; a streak or patch of color.
6. flame color.
7. intense ardor, zeal, or passion.
8. Informal. an object of one's passionate love; sweetheart: He's taking out his new flame tonight.
9. Computer Slang. an angry, critical, or disparaging electronic message, as an e-mail or newsgroup post.
–verb (used without object)
10. to burn with a flame or flames; burst into flames; blaze.
11. to glow like flame; shine brilliantly; flash.
12. to burn or burst forth with strong emotion; break into open anger, indignation, etc.
13. Computer Slang. to send an angry, critical, or disparaging electronic message.
One could take "Lavos's flame" to just be a synonym for the Frozen Flame, but it could also be a poetic phrase that is synonymous with Lavos's "power." Indeed, from this statement alone one could take “Lavos’s flame” to be a particular love interest (though such an interpretation wouldn’t fit with the rest of the game).
Additionally, Luccia’s makes a comment regarding the Frozen Flame that could only apply to Lavos the whole:
Ack!
Vot power...
Dis power is not somet'ing
man should possess.
yes...it is just as I t'ought.
Several civilizations have
already been destroyed
because of dis immense power...
As you said, my friend...
Science should only be used
for the betterhood of mankind,
no!?
We see unequivocally that the Frozen Flame was responsible for the fall of one civilization: that of the Dragonians in Home/Another World. This is hardly “several civilizations,” though we might be able to include the fall of Zeal in this (but that requires that we assume Zeal had the Frozen Flame, which usually gets interpreted as it being part of the Mammon Machine. That I argue later was certainly not the case). However, Lavos the whole unequivocally destroyed the civilizations of the Reptites, Zeal, and the modern world. If we can attribute the FF’s destruction to him, that would add a fourth (but such isn’t really necessary).
Since the Frozen Flame cannot have been responsible for the fall of “several” civilizations, we must assume that Luccia is referencing the power of the Flame as something separate and apart from the Flame. The Flame’s power is Lavos’ power; therefore “Lavos’s flame” could quite easily refer to Lavos’ power without including the Frozen Flame.
And that is it. The above quotes are all the evidence I was able to find concerning when the Frozen Flame might have broken off from Lavos. It does, admittedly, make sense to assume that the FF broke off from Lavos around when it landed on earth – the energy released from that large of an object traveling at that speed hitting a planet would be tremendous and it would allow for the Frozen Flame to be present for Human evolution – but that is not the only possibility that makes sense.
For human evolution, there are traces in Chrono Trigger that Lavos may have influenced the evolution of life on earth yet mention of the Frozen Flame is totally absent. From this we can safely conclude that the possibility of Lavos effecting human evolution can exist quite nicely without the need to imagine some powerful artifact that splinted off from Lavos ages ago facilitated the entire process.
One might ask, then, if the Frozen Flame didn't break off when Lavos descended to earth, when
DID it break off? I am fairly confident most people can think of some other time in Lavos' lifetime that extreme forces were applied to it.
Its impact with earth certainly must have applied a lot of force, but there was one other event that applied a lot of force as well; indeed, there is an event that applied so much force that it killed Lavos. Crono and Co may have been the ones to splinter off the Frozen Flame. Consider that they ripped off the "head" of Lavos' shell, they shattered its 2nd form, and they smashed the core and bits. Consider that the Frozen Flame isn't mentioned in Chrono Trigger but Lavos’ involvement with evolution was. Consider also that there is no evidence that firmly links the Frozen Flame to the Lavos Timeline (that is, we do not know if the Frozen Flame existed before the events of Chrono Trigger). Its existence is only certain in the Keystone Timeline 1 (after the events of Chrono Trigger). We could assume it existed in the Lavos Timeline and just happened to not be mention, but there is no evidence that requires such an assumption.
If we do not assume that the Frozen Flame existed in the Lavos Timeline, then we might conclude that the FF does not exist when Lavos lives but it does when Lavos is dead. This, however, takes lack of mention of the FF in CT as evidence of it not existing then. Yet, such would make perfect sense if Crono and Co were the ones to cause the Frozen Flame to splinter off of Lavos’s body (presumably during the Final Battle).
Such a conclusion is still an assumption, but the difference between that assumption and the assumption that the Flame broke off from Lavos upon its entry into the atmosphere or its impact with the earth is that the Crono & Co explanation is simpler; it doesn't suppose that the Frozen Flame broke off in CT (where we never see or hear of it), it doesn't suppose that the FF itself influenced human evolution (which requires it to have been found before the rise of Zeal but which is never mentioned there), and it doesn't suppose that rumors and legends of the FF already existed in 1000AD (Lavos Timeline) but that Crono and Co just didn’t happen to hear of any of them.
Lavos’ relation to the Frozen FlameAs I said, there were three things interesting about that first quote from Belthasar. He didn't say when the FF split off, and he didn't say where it split off from. Given the FF's spiky nature it seems natural to assume it was the shell but it could have also been a shard of the 2nd form's armory appearance or bones/shards from the core/bits. Or it might be from some other part of Lavos that we never experienced. Merely being a spiky piece doesn’t give us a definite location on the puzzle of Lavos’ body.
We ought to consider one curious element regarding the Frozen Flame; it twists and moves. This is seen on top of Terra Tower. Kid and the others comment on that being the FF's true form. Notably, it expands sort of like an armadillo or a armadillidiidae and it seems to have a weird design in the center, looking almost like an eye. We never saw any part of Lavos’ shell behave in that manner (or indeed, any part of Lavos at all), so it is nearly impossible to determine where this splinter actually came from. If we assume the FF broke off on impact, then it originating from the shell makes sense. But as we have no good reason to assume that is when the separation of whole and splinter occured, the FF might have also broken off from any part of Lavos; both external and internal.
I also commented that Belthasar doesn't really tell us much about the nature of the splinter. For most substances this wouldn't really matter; a splinter of wood is still a splinter of wood, same with bone. But if I might draw an analogy from Diablo and Diablo II, a splinter of a soulstone can be a very important thing, actually greater than the whole, depending on what that splinter contains. This isn't to say that the Frozen Flame is like soulstone, just to illustrate that one can imagine that a splinter of something might have a very important nature.
With such a possibility in mind, consider the following quote:
This is the essence of what
descended from the heavens
in the prehistoric age.
The living crimson stone...
the Frozen Flame!
Seems fairly obvious that the Frozen Flame is the essence of Lavos; that theme is fairly central to the FF's power, the TD, and so forth. However, this brings up an interesting concept. Crono and Co defeated Lavos, we are all agreed on that. That would seem, then, that somewhere in time and space the remnants of Lavos should still exist (Lavos' future, not his body, was what was sent to the DBT). If the Frozen Flame is just a standard splinter of Lavos' body, then presumably one should be able to go to his corpse and break off another chunk. Would that chunk then be the same as the Frozen Flame? Would it also be "the essence of what descended from the heavens"?
If the power of the Frozen Flame could be duplicated so easily, why didn't Fate expend its efforts on finding Lavos' corpse instead of wasting its resources on trying to unlock the splinter it had?
Given that Lavos' body is utterly ignored, I would conclude that the Frozen Flame is unique. It is a splinter of Lavos, yes, but it isn't just any splinter. It has power that the remains of Lavos's body just does not have, possibly resulting from it being separated from the whole before the whole was killed or perhaps from where on Lavos it was broken off from. Again, to draw an analogy, the human head could be considered a “splinter” of the human as a whole, yet if it could maintain a semblance of life then that splinter would have significantly different powers than a foot or arm that was broken off of the whole. The Frozen Flame, then, might not just be any splinter but
the splinter, the part of Lavos that defines the whole.
While the Frozen Flame isn't the whole of Lavos, it is Lavos in a particular sense. Returning to Zeality's comment in Faust's thread (link is way back at the top), coming in contact with the Frozen Flame is essentially the same as coming in contact with Lavos. Given that the Frozen Flame is the essence of Lavos, that "essen-tially" is quite accurate. If coming into contact with the rest of Lavos’ dead body doesn’t equate contact with Lavos, then the Frozen Flame’s connection is quite significant. One might almost say that, as it holds part of Lavos’ consciousness (as the Frozen Flame is capable of acting and reaction, it must have a semblance of a mind), it
is Lavos. Lavos is dead by the time Chrono Cross rolls around; its future is in the DBT becoming the Time Devourer, but meanwhile in the real world the Frozen Flame
is Lavos (specifically, a significant degree of Lavos’ “mind” and power). To borrow from Lovecraft, "That is not dead which can eternal lie, and with strange aeons even death may die."
Consider the following quote:
In an old poem of El Nido there is
a phrase that refers to the evil
sealed away by the 6 Dragons.
This phrase follows after it:
'"...the evil flame that sought to
engulf the world..."'
Again, I took these from the script so my context may be off, but I believe these were Steena's responses to when you ask her about the Frozen Flame. Though she doesn't know better, she seems to be connecting the Frozen Flame with "the evil flame that sought to engulf the world." The FF as an object didn't do that, but Lavos did. Therefore, Steena (and through her old lore) seems to be referring to the Frozen Flame and Lavos interchangeably. If I might make an analogy from Christian beliefs, Lavos is to the Frozen Flame as God is to Jesus. The Frozen Flame and Lavos are homoousios (the same essence) not homoiousios (similar essence).
Also consider what some of the myths are surrounding the Frozen Flame:
It was then that Lynx
approached General Viper.
He spoke of the legendary
treasure, the Frozen Flame,
which is able to heal all
illnesses and fulfill any dreams.
These abilities seem to match perfectly with the power that the Mammon Machine granted to Zeal:
The power of Lavos can make hopes
and dreams come true...
If the Mammon Machine is moved to
the Ocean Palace, we can extract even
more energy from Lavos.
The ultimate dream of eternal youth
and life, is now possible!
Of course, if the Frozen Flame represents Lavos' power, it makes sense that it would be able to do similar things.
Consider also:
Finally, I have the key.
The key to the gate of Fate!
The time has finally come for
the Frozen Flame to awaken!!!
In order to be awake, the Frozen Flame has to be able to be asleep, which itself implies some degree of life (or life-like behavior). Consider also that the Frozen Flame talks to Wazuki and Miguel in Chronopolis (as per an
Ultimania interview); it seems that the Flame has a degree of sentience. The question then is; who's mind is speaking? It might be the Time Devourer, but I have been unable to find any evidence that supports the claim that the Time Devourer was able to communicate through the Frozen Flame, or visa versa. It might be its own consciousness. As it came from Lavos, that consciousness would presumably be part of Lavos’ own consciousness (a splinter of it at least, if not the whole).
Consider also this quote:
This guy thinks that the
'"Frozen Flame"' is some
kind of jewel or something.
I'd say things aren't that easy.
It's probably a monster
of some sort.
Once you gaze at it,
BOOM! You're well-done, like
a steak on a barbecue.
Curiously, the Frozen Flame is both a jewel it seems and a monster (or at least the remains of a monster). In its current state, it is a jewel of power, but it is also a key element of the most destructive monster in the world.
All of this is just to say that Lavos and the Frozen Flame are almost the same thing. If it walks like a duck and quacks like and acts like a duck, then there is a good chance that it is a duck. Or, in this case, if is power is Lavos’ and its mind is Lavos’ and touching it is the same as touching Lavos, then there is a good chance that it is Lavos.
This helps us understand why the Frozen Flame is so significant to the story and why Serge was chosen as Arbiter; the FF was trying to draw itself to the Time Devourer, but that is the same as Lavos drawing itself to itself (sort of like the One Ring returning to Sauron). The Time Devourer could be incredibly powerful without the Frozen Flame, but it needed the Flame to be truly complete; to join its future and its past into one entity at the present. We see this theme reflected in the Sea of Eden/Dead Sea (emphasis added):
I hate to disappoint you,
but the Frozen Flame
is not here.
That fire lies hidden
in the Sea of Eden,
the place where past
and future collide...
This is also reflected in the time crash:
Chronopolis was hurled ten
thousand years back in time.
The future was sent to the past and we interact with it in the present only.
Was the Frozen Flame part of the Mammon Machine?Resulting from Radical Dreamers, it is sometimes thought that the Frozen Flame could have been part of the Mammon Machine. This idea seems to be rather central to what might be termed “Arbiter Theory.” To my understanding, the theory essentially claims that Serge is important because he is the arbiter of the Frozen Flame. The Time Devourer began to develop with the inclusion of Schala, who was an earlier arbiter of the Frozen Flame, and it needs Serge to complete its transformation.
One can find some discussion of Schala-as-an-arbiter in the following threads and articles:
http://www.chronocompendium.com/Forums/index.php/topic,5347.0.htmlhttp://www.chronocompendium.com/Term/Ocean_Palace_Incident_%28Flame_Theory%29.htmlhttp://www.chronocompendium.com/Forums/index.php/topic,3958.75.htmlhttp://www.chronocompendium.com/Forums/index.php/topic,1958.60.htmlMany people, from posters who disappeared after a few days to the likes of Greylensman, have commented on the Frozen Flame being part of the Mammon Machine (which is supposedly how Schala became an arbiter of the Flame), either for or against.
However, given Chrono Cross, it is actually quite easy to prove to a reasonable degree that the Frozen Flame was not part of the Mammon Machine (which then makes it impossible to guess when, if ever, Schala might have come into contact with the Flame).
Consider this quote:
The true beginning was during
the destruction of the ancient
Kingdom of Zeal!
As the palace collapsed around
her, Princess Schala was sucked
into a dimensional vortex along
with the Lavos Mammon Machine.
Schala and Lavos became unified
into one even more powerful
entity that would evolve into
the Devourer of Time.
If the Frozen Flame was part of the Mammon Machine, it was removed from the timeline along with Schala at the Ocean Palace incident (12,000 BC). Yet Chronopolis, existing in 2300/2400 AD, had the Frozen Flame, which means the Flame could not have been removed from the timeline in 12,000 BC. If it could not have been removed in 12,000 BC, then it could not have been part of the Mammon Machine which is specifically stated as having been removed.
To be fair, while I believe such is very strong evidence, it isn’t indisputable. There are a variety of reasons why the FF might have been in the Mammon Machine but still present in 2300 AD, but each of these are rather unlikely.
1. There might be more than one Frozen Flame.
2. The Mammon Machine was destroyed before it was sent to the DBT; therefore, the Frozen Flame might have fallen out and been left behind.
3. The quote states that Schala and the Mammon Machine were thrown into a dimensional vortex, but it then doesn’t mention the MM again, so it is possible that only Schala was sent to the DBT and the MM was shunted somewhere else where the Frozen Flame was then rediscovered.
However, as noted, all of these are unlikely explanations and require a good deal of additional assumptions.
What this means on a larger scale is that we have no reason to assume that the Frozen Flame was ever even in Zeal.
ConclusionWhile you may disagree with some parts (or all) of this analysis, I do hope that you will take away from it the possibility that the Frozen Flame did not break off from Lavos in 65000000 BC, the possibility that Lavos and the Frozen Flame are very nearly the exact same thing, and that Schala almost definitely did not come in contact with the frozen flame.