Ovinomancer
No flips for you!
Then let me be perfectly clear: I do not define lawful as 'follows the laws.' Instead, I define lawful as 'defines self based on social constructs.'I quite understand your anger at being misrepresented, as it is generally one of the few things that gets my blood boiling as well, but while I apologize, I certainly am not intentionally misrepresenting your position. Nor is it yet clear to me what exactly your position is if I have not restated it. Certainly I don't agree that it has been perfectly clear you haven't defined lawful "as follows the laws".
As far as confusion on this matter, I believe that when I say I do a thing, that's the thing I do. So, when I say that I define lawful as 'defines self based on social constructs' that's exactly what I am doing. I am not pretending something else, or lying to you, I am clearly and directly giving you my position. If, at some later time, I appear to contradict myself, you should ask directly 'why does it seem you are contradicting yourself' and not tell me that I believe or think something that I have clearly stated I do not.
I hope that I have made myself abundantly clear. I welcome questions, I do not welcome being told what I think.
I don't see the conflict here. He defines himself as a part of a social construct. He defines himself via his social status (a social construct). Further, he defines himself according to the law (a social construct). He exhibits these definitions by performing actions according to his social status (being friends with the banker, engaging in sports, acting to keep his privileged area from from undesirables) and by using the law (suing orphans out of their orphanage is not the extent of his actions, merely the one chosen to highlight his evil tendencies). He is successful at both, and happy at both, something a chaotic person would not be.We seem to be pretty close on this, in as much this seems to mean that the person would see the social construct as having primacy. But nothing about your barrister example seems to suggest he is not defining the social construct by himself. He sees the purpose of the law as being to enrich himself at the expense of others - particularly the weak and powerless. Is that what the social construct he defines himself by declares as its purpose? Is that placing the society higher than himself so that he's really defined by the society, or is he thinking the whole thing - society, the law, even the orphans - exists to make him personally happy, powerful, and comfortable?
He is evil because he uses those social constructs for his personal benefit, and acts to subjugate others using those social constructs so that they provide him with more lucre and do not become a challenge to his position.
[snip, stuff about good and evil, which I've stated and have nothing further to add along the lines traveled.]
You should ask me what I mean instead of telling me what I mean.I'm confused. What am I supposed to ask you? I am directly asking my questions. I'm even trying to clarify why I ask the questions. I understand you think the example is unimportant. I understood that right from the start.
No, I disagree. Being a member of a social construct does not mean that you are, in all ways, dedicated solely to that construct. Nothing the barrister does threatens the construct, or is opposed to it. That he can both belong to it and use it for his own benefit doesn't mean he can't be a member of it.I still see the following statement (and related ones) as a self-contradiction: "I was presenting an example of a LE barrister using the system for his own, personal benefit." If he's lawful, he defines himself by the system. I think we both agree with that. I'm saying, if that is true, then he ought to see that the system is supposed to use him for its benefit. If he thinks the system exists for his benefit and uses it that way, then he thinks he's more important than the system is. He defines the system by his personal needs. I don't see that as lawful; I gather that you do, but feel that eventually if we accept your LE barrister as lawful, it will lead to a contradiction where LE is an oxymoron.
You seem stuck on the concept that Lawful requires overwhelming dedication to the organization. While that fits, and zealots can be lawful, it's not necessary to be a zealot if you are lawful.
The whole conversation is based on modern, Western morality. This has all been nonsense if it isn't. Resorting to a relativism that a system can't recognize itself as evil doesn't remove the fact that we're actually using a baseline understanding that is outside that system to judge it.So I immediately made a counter-example of a Barrister acting in the exact same way, but with a radically different impersonal motivation such that the needs of the system were more important than his own, and he was sacrificing himself to it to obtain those ends, but those ends and means were both clearly evil and clearly not-chaotic. And my point in doing so is that I think if you insist on selfishness being the trait that defines evil, you miss the possibility of evil where no component of the system is selfish. (Though I suppose you could say the system as a whole was selfish with regards to other systems, this I think would run into a contradiction as each system has something it can't tolerate, if only intolerance itself). Naturally, mortal systems that were on the aggregate LE would be made up of people of mixed motives, but I don't want to classify systems that are on the aggregate lawful or lawful evil until I'm sure of the definition of those terms.
If that's your underlying point, I have no response. I had thought it was understood (especially since I explicitly said it a few posts ago) that we were using modern Western morality as our baseline. If we're not, specify the baseline and perhaps I'll choose to re-engage. No promises, as I may not agree with or find the new baseline particularly moving. Also, my table isn't going to use that baseline, nor are most posters, so it's just a mental masturbation to discuss it (although, to be fair, most all of this is mental masturbation).