Disentanglement: Difference between revisions
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A | A '''disentangled''' being lacks any and all [[Entanglement]]; such beings are usually dead, albeit [[extancy|extant]]. The opposite of this is known as an '''entangled''' being. | ||
As the overwhelming majority of extant beings possess some form of entanglement—if only in very minuscule quantities in most cases—for a being to become ''truly'' disentangled requires that there be something that is impeding or has disrupted their entanglement. Any event that can effect such a change generally results in the death of the being, and conversely, | As the overwhelming majority of extant beings possess some form of entanglement—if only in very minuscule quantities in most cases—for a being to become ''truly'' disentangled requires that there be something that is impeding or has disrupted their entanglement. Any event that can effect such a change generally results in the death of the being, and conversely, death—particularly a [[Hyper Ghost|second death]]—can result in disentanglement. | ||
Latest revision as of 07:16, 19 May 2026
A disentangled being lacks any and all Entanglement; such beings are usually dead, albeit extant. The opposite of this is known as an entangled being.
As the overwhelming majority of extant beings possess some form of entanglement—if only in very minuscule quantities in most cases—for a being to become truly disentangled requires that there be something that is impeding or has disrupted their entanglement. Any event that can effect such a change generally results in the death of the being, and conversely, death—particularly a second death—can result in disentanglement.