Oremars Theorem

Aspiring Logicmasters, artificers, magewrights, and scholars are taught early in their education of an important theorem. A theorem that governs the energies of the world, and how they relate to each other. This theorem is called Oremar's Theorem, Oremar's Laws of Energy, or simply The Laws of Energy. It postulates that all forces within the world can be described by the interactions of 3 sources of power.

The first source is Aether, the Power External. Aether is a vast, yet finite, source of power thought to be integrated to Material Reality. Aether is the power that both Sorcerers and Logicmasters draw upon to cast their spells. Aether can be divided into the 4 primordial sources of fire, water, earth, and air. Aether is the homogenous combination of these 4 primordial sources, and is essentially pure energy.

The second source is the power of Abstract. It is the Power Internal, a source of power thought to be infinite. It is the power of consciousness, empathy, emotion, and abstract concepts such as infinity and eternity. It is a chaotic power that is believed to be the source of consciousness, and is present in all conscious beings. Corineth Orso's Principal of the Internal Parable, a well accepted scientific article, states that the further to one's internal center (center of consciousness, that is) one manages to achieve, the greater their power of Abstract becomes. Reaching True Center (the center point of consciousness) is believed to be unattainable, for True Center is infinite, and there will forever be another degree of Center to obtain. Unlike Aether, the way to harness and draw upon this power is not well defined. Terms such as "strength of will", "finding your center", and "perfecting the aspect" are commonly stated by those that try to teach this power. There appears to be no logical method to harness this power. The common sentiment is that the nature of this power, and how to harness it, is unique to each individual, and as such is inherently impossible to teach. To those religiously inclined, the power of Abstract is divine power. Dichotists who try to marry science and divinity believe that what grants the gods their power is their perfect embodiment of their domains, that the gods have perfected their aspect, and obtained True Center. Those who denounce the existence of gods would claim that the power Clerics and Paladins wield is not the result of divine blessing, but born of their single minded ignorant devotion, which in itself is a form of willpower, a sort of single minded focus that has granted them power through Abstract.

The third source is the power of Logic, the Power that Binds. The Logic is the power that guides all other sources, and dictates how they manifest. The Logic is what tells the flame to consume the leaf, it is what commands a wave should break upon the shoreline. The Logic creates the material world by containing the power of Aether into the land itself, and by giving the power of Abstract the means to manifest into orderly thought processes rather than pure emotional chaos. The Logic quantizes, packages, and delivers all other energies. Due to its role in relation to the other energies, it can only be presumed that the Logic is the most powerful of the three sources, for it cannot be broken or bent by any other source of power. It is the power that binds the others sources, and dictates their behavior in any given situation. Although the Logic cannot be broken, it can be manipulated towards a desired purpose by using the language of Logic, Eldritch. This language can call upon the Logic, accessing the pathways inherent within it, altering the composition of the energies of the world to the linguists liking. This is the power that makes a Logicmaster, linguists who speak the language of the universe.