I can't believe I overlooked this thread. Some great stuff here.
I just realized something.
The Dragon Breaks I am familiar with (which are only two: the ending of Daggerfall and the Battle of Red Mountain) occur not merely when an ascension occurs, but when multiple factions fight over the Stone (and its tower?), whether that be the Mantella, or the Heart, or perhaps any other iteration of the Stone. For the Mantella, you had a number of factions who used it to split geographical power between them (Daggerfall, Wayrest, Sentinel, Orsinium, and wasn't there one more? I forgot.). For the Heart, you had a number of factions that used it to split divine power between them (The Tribunal and Dagoth Ur). You had the original owner of the stone present to reclaim it, whether it be The Underking Arctus (and ultimately, Wulfharth) reclaiming the Mantella, or The Underking Wulfharth (and ultimately, Lorkhan Himself), trying to reclaim his Heart. You have someone using it to become a god (Dagoth Ur and the Tribunal with regard to The Heart, The King of Worms and, possibly, Tiber Septim, with regard to The Mantella).
I find myself imagining a "quantum universes" vision of how time normally flows, with the Stones existing, to greater and lesser degrees, simultaneously in all possible universes. When you mess with the stones, the timelines get all overlapped, and all exist at the same time.
Perhaps The Convention was a battle (or debate?) over the Zero Stone, with The Dawn Era being the result. And is there any questionable timeline with regard to the period preceding the fall of the White Tower (and therefore, that red gem thingy whose names escape me) during the slave revolt? I know Marukhs bunch did something at some point, but I can't recall when.
I find myself imagining an Eye of Argonia, serving as a VERY tertiary stone (perhaps a hist experiment to gain understanding of the Elhnofey way of doing things), but, in the story, primarily serving as a simple "archaeological treasure" a few individual treasure hunters fight over... ultimately to results none of them predicted.
Hmm... I may actually have a fanfic brewing here.
Very nice. For some time now I've been working off the presumption that Towers (along with everything else they are), serve as anchors and convergence-points for various timelines. Assuming your main line of reasoning is more or less (leaning toward more) correct, one obvious next step is to think about how Kalpas fit in. By that I mean to ask: what is the "natural" timeline of Mundus without these dragon-breaks, or
is there are natural timeline?
Personally, I think all this suggests that at any given moment the people of Tamriel are in the middle of a multi-temporal mythical conflict that children wage on their ancestors. It's like a big game of "he started it/no she started it" only backwards.
Talyn: Oh crap!!! I?m scared of the sermons... Don?t quite get them... I?m reading everything else but not the sermons yet. I dont think I?m ready for them, at least not right now.
First gotta go and read Siddharta and Kafka?s stories again.. I need to open my mind even further
I assume you mean Hesse's Siddhartha? Interesting book, we read it in a philosophy of literature class. Our professor asked this question: so, after you've attained what Siddhartha has attained at the end of the book,
what do you?
Haven't read Kafka (though I probably should). Currently working on Don Quixote (and Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding, a book on Hellenistic Philosophy, etc).
Anyways, regarding the sermons. I'd honestly suggest that the first time you read them you don't make any overt attempt at interpretation. Just read them like you'd read any story. If something leaves you bewildered, be bewildered. If something makes you laugh, then laugh. Read it as a story first, and only intentionally look for meaning after that. That would be my suggestion, at least.