Saunt Lora

First Appearance and Context

Saunt Lora is referenced by avout during Apert while discussing schools of thought and the limits of novelty in ideas. In that discussion she is placed in the Sixteenth Century and cited for a famous proposition that shapes a faction known as the Lorites.

Roles/Actions and Affiliations

  • A Saunt whose name is attached to "Saunt Lora's Proposition," often called the "Last Idea," which holds that every idea the human mind could devise had already been formulated by her time.
  • Founder and namesake of the Lorites; Lorites are described as historians of thought who assist other avout by identifying predecessors and parallels, helping to prevent “reinventing the wheel.”
  • Her views provoke strong reactions: some detractors label her a warmed-over Mystagogue, while others acknowledge the practical value of Lorite scrutiny in preventing the rehashing of old work.

Relationships

  • After Lora's death, one of her own fids is said to have argued that her ideas had been anticipated by a Peregrin philosopher thousands of years earlier. This claim is presented as part of the ongoing debate around her legacy.

Descriptions/Characteristics

  • No physical description is provided. Her characterization in current accounts is philosophical: skeptical of claims to novelty and influential as a touchstone for evaluating "new" ideas.

Current Status/Location

  • Historical figure from the Sixteenth Century; deceased. Her influence persists through the Lorites and recurring references to Saunt Lora's Proposition.
Summary:

A venerated saunt of the mathic tradition, founder of the Lorites and credited with Saunt Lora's Proposition, set in the Sixteenth Century, asserting that every idea had already been conceived by that time; her influence remains widely debated.

Known as:
LoraSaunt Lora