Kaulen Fuhs said:
What I end up seeing is that the artist using Minas Tirith takes it further; characters, events and such are just taken from the source material. It creates less work for the artist, takes less effort.
Maybe they can, but that's also a threat with "original fiction" that is still usually relying on it's predecessors in one way or another.
Like how earlier you mentioned how most High Fantasy is clearly Tolkien-based. Maybe for you that already means that none of them are "truly original", but in common view, none of those are cosidered fanfictions, but often praised for the specific quirks of their worldbuilding while accepting their borrowed elements as genre conventions.
While it's true, that once you have explicitly admitted to basing your work on another, you might be more openly reference elements from it, that doesn't mean that you are mindlessly following the path of the original.
Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality takes place in Hogwarts, and has characters called Harry, Hermione, or Dumbledore. It's also a scientific/rationalist criticism and reaction to the original, reinventing poth personalities, magical abilities, worldbuilding, or backstory to make it more "rational", which also entirely changes the plot direction.
It's about as much of an effortless "copy" of the "original", as this post of mine is an effortless copy of yours: Yes, it includes a quote from you, and one could not exist without the other, but at the same time, also the complete opposite of it through it's message, and didn't actually take less time or thought to write than yours.
Kaulen Fuhs said:
Even the best fanfic artists can't avoid this, because if they did, it would cease to be fanfiction and would become an original work.
It's easy to avoid having to admit that fanfics can be original, if for any particularly original piece that I could cite that was written using elements existing IP, and that was published on fanfiction.net, you could say that those are "not true fanfiction" because they are too original for that.
In other words, of course you are right about all fanfictions having a mediocre artistic merit, if you first specifically define fanfics as works that can only have mediocre amounts of creativity.
Kaulen Fuhs said:
And that may just be an area we have to agree to disagree :|
Never seen the point of that.
I continue to believe that you are wrong, your opinion is based on logical fallacies, unhealthy ideas about "owning" information, and misrepresentations of how the artistic process works.
You go on continuing whatever the opposite is.