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Um, this should be obvious - it doesn't matter if it was before or after Lord Haart Send a noteboard - 27/11/2010 11:03:36 PM
Pre-epiphany, there were 2 paths for Rand.

1. Non-existence if he became evil
2. What we have now if he became good

Clearly the vision refers to the 2nd path. The obvious (bleedingly obvious, imo) implication is that Rand's epiphany has NO BEARING on the vision, other than ensuring that it will happen (as opposed to non-existence).

The message is chilling - even post-epiphany Rand is not enough to secure a good future for the world, at least not for the Aiel. As things currently stand, he is doomed to betray some of his closest allies. Aviendha has a chance to fix this, but we aren't sure how she might be able to do so, given that Rand is already going to bargain as hard as possible for peace with the Seanchan.
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The White Tower's future (spoilers) - 09/11/2010 08:51:06 AM 2234 Views
It won't happen. Aviendha's vision is inconsistent with existing prophecies. *NM* - 09/11/2010 09:18:42 AM 1332 Views
Could you elaborate? Or generally sum up the prophecies you refer to? *NM* - 09/11/2010 09:25:29 AM 480 Views
We are not completely sure what the glass pillars do. - 09/11/2010 09:45:20 AM 1025 Views
Remember Egwene's accepted test - 09/11/2010 10:41:08 AM 1162 Views
The Rhuidean Prophecy, mainly. - 09/11/2010 09:56:43 AM 1220 Views
That's a single interpretation of many possibilities. - 27/11/2010 11:06:29 PM 701 Views
I feel - 09/11/2010 09:27:58 AM 899 Views
I agree. - 09/11/2010 03:34:13 PM 783 Views
It all depends on when Aviendha goes through the columns. - 09/11/2010 06:46:49 PM 999 Views
Um, this should be obvious - it doesn't matter if it was before or after - 27/11/2010 11:03:36 PM 768 Views

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