I don't blame you. I'm having a hard time finding the language I need to express myself. You are right about the dictionary usage of the words. But I don't think I'm quite conveying how problematic that they are in their bias. You complain for example that my observation on the bias of self words is false, because the word "selfless" has a positive connotation. But if their is a bias that self is bad and that being in self is bad, then we would expect the word for not self and noting being in ones self to imply good. Whereas the words that mean being in ones self and the quality of self are negative. I believe that there is a subtle "lawful good" bias to the English language in this respect that is making this concept hard to discuss because the language inclines us to overlap law and good as being inseparable.
And to be fully clear with where I'm going, I believe that this bias toward rejection of self being good, creates a problem where people reject Good as being their good, because it seems to require the rejection of self. And I believe this rejection of self is not an essential aspect of Good and misses Good's take on the self. Obviously, I think this bias applies to how D&D has typically been discussed for example both the positive bias Paladin as strictly LG because LG is "most good", and in rejection of Good as being good in things like Gygax's description of Pholtus the first LG god as being effectively a cruel deity or the general stereotype of Paladin jerks, or later the tendancy for 2e and later generation writers to focus on Selfishness as the quintessential aspect of Evil. And I also think this bias infects our real world views.
Interesting, and I wish you luck in figuring out what you mean, but I'm quite happy with the dictionary definition and have no problems applying it.
As for you concern about the negative connotation of self, I don't think that exists except in the way you're attempting to frame it. Individual freedoms and personal rights are deemed correct and proper goods in modern Western morality (upon which both the D&D alignment and our discussion rests it's foundations upon), and both of those are uniquely tied to the self.
Yes. I'm casting around for a way to talk about self that is distinctive from the connotation of good and evil.
Okay... but you realize that the definition of good and evil that I've been discussing the post few posts is rooted in selfish and selfless motives, yes? I think you're looking for a definition of self-determination that isn't good or evil, and I don't think you really have to find some definition of self-determination that is separated from self to avoid conditions of good and evil. WHAT you self-determine can be good or evil, but the act of using your own views to define yourself isn't the same a selfish or selfless. Those views can be characterized as such, but the act of finding them within yourself isn't. It's just personal.
I understand what it is. I'm wanting to see your examples of Chaotic that are relativists at least in some degree, as to me expressly refusing to use something outside the individual to judge something is the essential nature of the Chaotic moral world view.
That's perhaps an interesting side jaunt, but please forgive me in saying that I'm not super interested in wandering down that hallway right now.
I don't agree with the definition, nor am I convinced that literal selflessness ought to have the connotation it has. I don't necessarily see sacrificing the self as the central aspect of good. Good neither denies that the self has worth or that the not self has worth. It approves of the self placing itself in the service of others, but doesn't approve of this if the basis of that appraisal is simple self-abasement.
Ah, see, but sacrificing the self for others is what's good. Good requires giving, evil requires taking. One can give of oneself or take for oneself. The actual value of the self isn't what's judged for good or evil, it's just what you choose to do with that self.
To simply what I think is going on here, Evil sees no worth in anything.
I disagree. Although... I have to admit the idea of nihilist demons depressing the PCs with long rants on the futility of it all did get a chuckle out of me.
Lawful rejects that anything has inherent worth or qualities, but instead sees that everything could have worth through its potential proper relationship to everything else and is working toward what it sees as the perfect state of those relationships.
Eh, I have to disagree, again. If you're talking about ideas, concepts, or ideals, then yes. If you're talking about the material world, then mostly no. Of course, a lawful society could collectively choose to devalue something like gold, but, in general, they are not going to do that. Gold is valuable because it's rare and pretty. Those are things the lawful society doesn't assign.
Chaos believes the opposite, that the relationships between each thing and every other thing are meaningless, governed by chance, and transitory, but the that each bit of everything is unique, has its own qualities, and therefore worth something.
I can see a specific chaotic person thinking that exact thing, but I don't think it's a good blanket definition of chaos.
Good says, you are both half-way right, both the thing itself and its relationships are things of potential worth.
No, can agree, as you just defined good as dependent on the same thing as chaos and law. Good doesn't sit in between chaos and law, it exists separate from them.
The four combined philosophies take parts of each position and combine them; chaotic evil for example asserts that each thing only has any worth to itself and so the only thing of meaningful value is your own self. Lawful good says, that yes, it's a great idea to have everything have inherent worth, but the inherent worth of anything being less than the worth of the whole, that can only be brought about when each component of the whole recognizes that. And so forth.
Again, your definitions of the axis are not independent, so this isn't coherent. You can reach the same conclusions at different points of the grid because the values are so similar in many areas.
I would say that this is the essential nature of LE, and lacking this view point, neither the society nor its members are actually LE.
I would not. I would say that such a society is clearly Lawful Evil, but not that such a society is the only paragon of lawful evil.
And notably, collectively horrifying. This society doesn't want people to value others more than themselves so that everyone collectively will be affirmed and happy. It's goal isn't merely order, but a state of permanent fear and suffering. In short, this is the world view that sees what you or I would consider a dystopia as the desired end state. This reoccurs in all sorts of fiction from 1984 to A Wrinkle in Time, but I think that you can find examples of that dystopia held up as the ideal and advanced as a goal in the real world, both historically and in modern times.
I don't think you can accurately describe the dystopias of those books as the same as your LE society above. I think that the majority of dystopias are lawful in nautre, as the perfect society of a utopia is generally lawful, and the goal of the dystopian society is to highlight how the utopia failed, but I don't think it's required. Dust has a lovely dystopia, that's difficult to classify because the society is very structured and has harsh controls for breaking it's structure, but the overall intent isn't necessarily evil. Not going any further on that train of thought for spoilers, because Dust is something everyone should read.
I disagree. I would see this of a case of a CG who just failed a 'wisdom check' and acted in a way that violated their own principles, and that in so acting they were inherently putting themselves in a place of moral crisis where either they'd eventually have to repent of the action or change their alignment.
A right-minded chaotic person would overthrow the evil ruler, but then not assume power - even if it meant a greater risk the previous regime could come back. In their mind, it would be a greater moral failing to risk becoming the very thing that they hate, than to allow society to fall into folly yet again and then have to try to save their fellows from themselves all over again. Only by providing an example of a victor who didn't assume authority, would there be any hope of breaking out of the cycle of tyranny and violence. To the extent that they would concede some system needs to be put in place, they'd try to establish a non-lawful social structure that didn't have them inherently in the top spot. A good example of this in fantasy literature is the resolution of the conflict in the novel 'King Rat' by China Mieville.
If the society would crumble and fall without his intervention, or he believed that by taking power he could help the most people, then he would be obligated to take the power. Turning his back on the people because he didn't feel like he should take the power isn't good, it's at best neutral. He may make that choice, and I wouldn't call it horribad, but if he chose to sacrifice himself to assume power and help people, and take actions to increase individual freedoms while he was at it, then, yes, I see a CG person taking the power.
I don't think there has to be only one. Just as I don't think there's a perfect Lawful paragon, or a Good one, or an Evil one. There's enough room in my definitions for there to be multiple such things and still be coherently useful. Which, to me, is the point -- useful categorization without useless restrictions.
Well, Choatic Evil certainly isn't, but then we no longer have an ultimately and pure expression of chaos.
Why would CE be that, anyway? But, see above.
We can't be sure that he does this for selfish reasons unless we know his own internal reasoning. If he legitimately feels he's the best for the job and no one else can do it as well (and in particular, if this isn't an assessment based on personal vanity alone), then it's perhaps not the case he's being selfish. Since I would prefer to have each of the paragons of each alignment embody the ideals of that alignment, an since this is the LE paragon, I propose that his actual reasons aren't selfish, however cruel and horrible his goals may be, they aren't being done merely to advance his personal power relative to others, but the absolute power of Hell.
GAH! He's my guy. I made him up. I say that those are his motivations. We're not discussing a randomly sampled character and analyzing him to see how we can categorize him, we're discussing my example guy, and guy that's LE through and through. He loves the law, because it makes sense to him. He loves it because he can take things from other people without risk, because the law is great like that. He loves living in his safe house, with the watch patrolling the streets, and the knowledge that society is looking out for him while he robs it blind using it's own rules. He likes being a respectable gentlemen, invited to the correct parties with the correct people, and he likes that people owe him things because of his position and ability in the system. He likes be lawful, and he likes using the law for his own selfish ends. This is all 100% true because he's
my guy and I say so.
Maybe, but D&D divides demons from devils and says they are fundamentally different things. As I noted, I think this is frequently disregarded and we are left with no discernible difference in motive or goals between the two factions. Dante's Inferno describes a hell were treachery is expected. But if the Nine Hell's aren't exactly Dante's Inferno, then I suggest that it's not actually a place where treachery is expected - because treachery embodies a chaotic concept, not a lawful one. the Nine Hells are a place where struggle, cruelty and slavery is expected, but not actually strife.
Yes. A devil will act within the rules of the system. It will establish that his claim to the position is legitimate. It will gather the necessary support to make it's move (paperwork, coalitions, etc.). It will make it's attempt within the rules -- be that a formal challenge or maneuvering the opponent into a position of weakness and using the system to oust them. If it doesn't, then the system will not tolerate him long. Devils play the game.
Demons can be just as cunning, but there are no rules to their game. Ambush, backstabbing, direct confrontation, arranging an accident, all of these are 100% valid methods because the demon doesn't rule through vested authority and position, but through power and threat of force. It doesn't matter how a demon takes out a rival and assumes power because he'll only maintain that power as long as he can personally enforce it.
Well yes, but in play I prefer to actually be coherent on alignment.
As do I, which is why most of my cosmology is a bit different from the sources. Hell, in my current game, it looks nothing like the wheel, because it's a game based on creation and dissolution as the core conflict, not good, evil, chaos, and law. Those exist, because so much of D&D is premised on those concepts and it's too much to extract them, but they're secondary to the thrust of the campaign and there is no great wheel. There's the Shadow, the Wilds, the Elemental Planes, the Astral, the Ethereal (both only because it's too much work to take them out) and the Heavens. Demon, Devil, and Angel all reside in the Heavens. It's not a quiet place.
I think you did. You described a LE barrister acting out of pure self-interest with no apparent loyalty to anything but himself. Without any mention of belief in something higher than his own self-interest, I would default to thinking the barrister is CE and find his LE alignment surprising and indeed contradictory.
No, I described a barrister that followed the law to a tee, used it, loved it, lived it. Who used the banks because they are safe. Who relied on the watch to clean out the riff-raff from his street. I described a man that always turned to the law, in every case, to achieve his goals. Those goals were all selfish, but the manner in which he achieved them were all lawful (heh, in both senses of the word).
I disagree. You've given him not one single lawful trait.
Obviously, we violently disagree here.
You've given no examples that he believes in the worth of the law and places his faith in it. You are describing someone using the law for his own selfish purposes. This is not an example of believing in or having faith in the law, and good reason to believe that the law is not worth having faith in. After all, we can clearly see that the law is being misused, and that the outcome is injustice. Quite likely the barrister you describe also knows the law is unjust and sees that the system is effectively stupid, and that only a fool would place his faith in the law given how a selfish person like himself misuses the system. None of the things you describe give me any indication of anything but a CE man who sees himself as smarter than all those poor fools and reveals in his own sadistic pleasures. You've given me plenty of proof of his evil, but none of his lawfulness.
See above. Yes, I did not say 'this barrister believes X', instead I showed him using the law and engaging in society properly at every turn. Nothing the man did was chaotic. He used banks. He had appropriate friendships with his social peers. He played organized sports. He trusted the watch. He was part of the entire legal system (and obviously a member in good standing as he is able to practice). EVERYTHING he did is lawful. While I didn't explicitly say what he believed, it's trivial from context to note that his every action was bent towards being a part of a society and not being individualistic.