Killer Cyborg wrote:
What we know is that ley lines are stronger at certain times than at others.
That doesn't mean that sunlight is magical.
Noo, we know that ley lines...... are stonger dependent on where the sun is in the sky and *particularly* dependent on whether the moon is blocking the sun or not..... It certainly goes to a definite link and 'magical aspect' of sunlight... essentially, "Mystically speaking" the sun has to have a little something.... If it didn't...... then it wouldn't be such a focus for *mages*.
Killer Cyborg wrote:False dichotomy, based on the assumption that something has to be magical in order to interact with magic.
Sunlight and Moonlight are different as far as magic is concerned, but that doesn't necessarily make them magic.
Well sunlight and moonlight are the same in every *non-magic* way except for intensity (which you don't say is important)...... which means the difference has to be a magic one. It's a great test for whether there is a magic component, find two things that are identicle in every non-magic way, and see if they have different mystic effects. If I showed you two swords, identicle in every non-magical way (Same metal, same wieght, same sharpness, etc) and one of them damaged vampires and one of them didn't... the assumption would be that at least one of the swords is magic. The same for beams of light.
Killer Cyborg wrote:
Although I have given you a shred of logic.
"Stars" are not the same as "Suns" as far as vampires are concerned.
This is obvious, since vamps aren't hurt by starlight.
Very good, and I note... that is where canon stops. No further evidence is given in any of the books exactly what is the reason for that. Intensity? Magical attunement? Light spectrum (are vamps immune to red stars?). Simply no information is given. There is simply no information given with which one can determine what the difference is, despite the fact that vampires can get shot into space. That's OK, if you're one to think that gaming rules are not exhaustive and sometimes you have to shoot from the hip.
Killer Cyborg wrote:So there's clearly a difference between stars and suns.
Let's check Dictionary.com:
sun /sʌn/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[suhn] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation, noun, verb, sunned, sun·ning.
–noun
1. (often initial capital letter) the star that is the central body of the solar system, around which the planets revolve and from which they receive light and heat
Firstly, Why post definitions and not read them carefully? that definition, as posted, only discusses our sun. *THE* star, *THE* solar system, Capital letter (For proper nouns) it's very explicit, there's only one. By that definition, there is only one star in the Megaverse that hurts vampires.
Secondly, do you have anything in canon to back you up? Canon differs from dictionary.com in many ways.
Thirdly. the *loosest* reading.... any star with planets around it can be 'a sun'. So then, Vampires should theoretically be vulnerable to only stars... which have planets orbiting them?
Vampire: I was kicked out of an airlock spinning outside Ceti Cygnus!
Friend: How did you survive?
Vampire: It was *easy*. Ceti Syngus has no planets! It's not a 'sun', not by any definition! It's only a 'star', I was immune!
Killer Cyborg wrote:A little logic will tell you that this is likely the difference.
Vampires are vulnerable to whichever star is the central body of the solar system they are currently in.
A little logic tells you that vampires are immune to stars which have no planets around them (and thus 'no solar system')?.
All logic tells you is that there is something unique about The Sun. However, a quick list of some of the things that, from our perspective, make the Sun unique, and there's simply no way, from canon or from dictionary.com, to determine exactly *what* it is.
The Sun.. Uniquely close
The Sun... Unique in that's it's 'the star of our homeland'
The Sun... Unique in it's spectral fingerprint (no stars' light has *exactly* the same emission of light as our sun does).
The Sun... Our Sun has been worshipped so much that is is arguably a holy artifact! Take THAT Alpha Centauri! We know Vampires are vulnerable to holy things.... maybe *that's* the reason (Holy water works... maybe sunlight is holy light!). The Moon hasn't been worshipped as much, so perhaps it's not reached the 'critical spiritual mass'.
The Sun,... The only star which has a movie made about it by Donny Boyle. Silly? well, that's as likely as anything else.
Is it The Sun and our atmosphere interacting to produce *just* the right kind of light? Do you need an ozone layer? Are vampires invulnerable to The Sun on Mars? Canon doesn't say what it is, and it only discusses vampires on Earth.
I'm leaning towards the 'holy light' theory, myself. At first I thought I was being facetious, and then once the sheer *level* of sun worship that has occurred over the history of Mankind.... that think has gotta be pimped out spiritually like nobody's business!
But "A little logic' tells me... there just isn't information to solve the problem. The second thing the logic tells me, is that given three chances, the biggest rules-lawyer on the board hasn't given one applicable rule on it.