Was Yoda long-lived because he was strong in the force?

Was Yoda long-lived because he was strong in the force, or because his race was by nature long-lived?

I assumed from The Force, but I realize I have no real reason to think that over the long-lived race theory.

Isn’t it kind of a mystery in the Star Wars community exactly what his race is?

Yes, and from what I hear, George plans on keeping it a mystery.

Long lived he was. Why we know not.

Like Obiwan, he lived long enough to see that young Skywalker fulfill his destiny. :eek:

Yeah, because didn’t the Oracle tell him he would live long enough to see the One?

Oh wait… :smiley:

Very suspicious that is.

I sthere not some suggestion from his own words, that he owes his longer life to the Force? to whit:

Luke: Master Yoda, you can’t die!

Yoda: Strong am I with the Force…but not that strong.

So it can extend life, but not indefinitely?

Or did Luke really say “you can’t dye”, which would explain why all Yoda’s clothes were basically swamp-coloured :smiley:

Yoda lived nine hundred years
Yoda lived nine hundred years
But who calls that livin’
When no gal will give in
To no man that’s nine hundred years

If you keep asking these questions, eventually Lucas will make three movies about this, and entirely ruin Yoda for you, forever.

No kidding. Lucas’ secret vision of Yoda’s origin probably involves him being a robot or the 5th linear descendant of Jane Fonda’s clone. F’ing George Lucas.

Slight hijack -

In Knights of the Old Republic for Xbox, there’s a Jedi on Dantooine that’s the same race as Yoda. I think his name is Vrook.

Anyway, Vrook has no speech impediment. For some reason, I always thought that Yoda’s “inside-out” way of speaking was somehow linked to his race. Apparently not.

I realize that the game has no real connection to the movie except for the name. However, IIRC, all of the post-Star Wars books had some stipulations to adhere to.

I presume the game had the same guidelines.

You know, Obi-Wan wasn’t that old when he died. In Episode 1 he looked like he was about 20 years old. Episode 2 takes place ten years later, so Obi-Wan would be around 30. Episode 3 will take place about two or three years after Episode 2, so Obi-Wan will be in his early thirties. Episode 4 takes place 20 years after Episode 3. So Obi-Wan was in his fifties when he died.

Kinda makes you wonder about that “Surely he must be dead by now” statement. Altho’ it’s easy enough to dismiss that comment. Governor Tarkin probably never met Obi-Wan, and is probably assuming that he was much older.

Yeah, there is a database of information and slew of rules that the books have to stick by. It’s basically there to ensure continuity and keep the Star Wars feel consistent (IE, no swearing in the books). I don’t know if the same holds true with the games, although I can’t imagine why not.

As to the OP, I’m not really certain if it was The Courtship of Princess Leia or not, but I seem to recall a passage where Luke (I think) noticed it was odd for Yoda to have lived so long because he thought smaller creatures tended to have shorter lives. The impression I got from that was that Yoda’s species was long-lived.

Ultimately, I’d say it was a mixture. Yoda was probably destined for a relatively long life by virtue of his species, but being strong in the Force* extended it even more.

*That’s another one of the rules - “the Force” is always capitalized.

You’d think a guy so long-lived and wise would have the time and intellect to master the syntax of English grammar.

Indeed, think that you would.

Mmm, gave him mucho mojo, he thought. All on him, the ladies were.

Personally, I figure that the grammar thing is a deliberate affectation. He’s shown a few times that he can use normal English (excuse me, Basic) syntax, he just usually doesn’t. The “fear leads to anger” bit had perfectly normal word order.

But wise it makes him seem, and to his mystique it adds.

You are all missing the obvious connection here. Yoda has lived longer because he has saved up his life force, through skipping tedious rules of grammar, syntax, and prepositions. Just think of all the energy that’s saved him over his lifetime.

Emulate him, we should.

NOT.