Well. That was... An interesting tangent in an otherwise rather cringey thread. I also liked the bit with the proposed fantasy taxonomy.
Yeah, I had completely forgotten the context of that thread before I went looking. Sorry about that.
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I will drop the subject as people asked. But not before I say something. Read my claim. I never said that. So I don't understand why you are shouting.
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This is Robert asking for an opinion from an expert in a specific field designed to analyze actions/patterns and cause/effect. Unless Robert is lying to himself, or does not bother to self-reflect in a deep way, then he is the one who is correct. An author, especially one such as Tolkien, lived his life reflecting on his work. Deep reflection. Same with most author's I have learned about. To dismiss them because an esoteric expert decides a different interpretation doesn't make the new interpretation correct. It might add a new layer - specifically due to the historical context changing - but it should not change what the author says. And therefore, cannot be equal to the author's interpretations.
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I disagree. Jimmy can play a human with an Elf hat, or Elf costume, or Elf disguise. Jimmy is still just Jimmy playing pretend with his friends. I know I like playing pretend with my friends, we just don't feel the need for funny hats.
Okay, let me assume that you are right for a second.
Do you play characters with Magic? Do you play character from a Psuedo-medieval setting that takes place in a world filled with observable evil and monsters that are decidedly not human but have minds?
Congrats. You and your friends wear funny hats too. Because those are not human experiences.
No human on Earth has ever wielded true magic. No human on Earth has ever talked to a non-human mind and had it talk back.
So, since everyone playing DnD is wearing funny hats, can we stop saying it? Because that is the thing that is really getting people's hackles up. You keep presenting people who play races as other than human as somehow doing something lesser than you are doing while playing the game.
You are playing a role in a society and world unlike anything ever seen on Earth. So are they. Stop calling it "wearing funny hats" stop calling it "wearing a costume" stop calling it "wearing a disguise". By doing so you are like the novelist who turns his nose up at someone who is writing comics because "they aren't
real art"
And hey, maybe you don't mean it that way, but your point that "man is the measure of all things" is getting drowned out by the large neon sign behind you that makes it seem like you think you are better than the other side. Step to the side, and use more respectful language. Please.
They are knockoff humans because they are being played by humans. The anatomical variance and lore and etc. is all just fluff. The extra depth you perceive to exist because of the fluff can be achieved without said fluff. In my own personal experience I have found that eliminating the fluff adds depth to a PC because players are forced to create that depth through action within the narrative.
And in my experience you are wrong. Adding those extra elements makes me consider the character more deeply. Lets me explore why things are certain ways in our society and how they might differ in other societies.
I literally was writing a story and trying to imagine how a society would react to a biological eusocial knowledge of your place in society. It is a strange perspective, and one that makes me really examine the character within that society far more deeply than I would for a character from a typical human society.
Definitely not. As I said before we have no idea if my parrot conceptualizes things the way a human does. My parrot says "Dads gotta go to work" and "Dads going shopping" and "Dads going for a walk" but I have serious doubts he conceptualizes those things the way a human would. I think he knows I leave the house and then return later, but all the other concepts that give those different statements different meanings are beyond him.
But that is not Crit's point.
Crit's point is that in humans happiness is a result of chemical such as endorphin's in the brain. In parrots, we can observe endorphins acting in the exact same manner in their brains.
Therefore, happiness is happiness for both of us. It feels the same. It acts the same. It has the same chemical source.
And following from that, if a parrot suddenly underwnt ten thousan years of evolution and gained the capability of understanding the words "Dad's going shopping." we have zero reason to believe that their response to those words would be outside of the spectrum of human responses.
Maybe it will be. We can't say with 100% certainty, but considering the structural and chemical similarities it is also not outside the realm of the probable.
To me this is nonsensical, as in, the statement you make here appears to make no sense, at least not to me.
He is referencing what I am speaking to above. The similarities in brain structure, function, and chemical between various animal brains and human brains.