Chaosmancer
Legend
This is false and a great example of your horrible ability to interpret. I said no. Period. End of story on that front. Then as you note, I went on to clarify why it was an answer of no in that paragraph. It was a no, because while the ideal LEANS chaotic, is is not actually chaotic. It can also be an ideal held by lawful individuals. Period. End of story on that clarification.
You then decided that I was saying something that I didn't actually say, that it was a chaotic idea, which is twisting what I said.
Except.... THAT IS EXACTLY WHAT I SAID YOU SAID.
That the ideal (which I was claiming was self-evidently chaotic) was not, sort of like how you phrased it here " It was a no, because while the ideal LEANS chaotic, is is not actually chaotic. "
My point, was that despite Helldritch claiming otherwise, most ideals do not need an alignment stinger on the end to tell us what sort of alignment they would fall under. They do not need to have their alignment attached to the end to prevent confusion. They are self-evident. This ideal "Independence. I am a free spirit—no one tells me what to do." is chaotic. You do not need to write "chaotic" at the end of it, to clarify that it is chaotic. It is self-evident. Unlike Helldritch's examples, you can't write "lawful" at the end and get a different ideal.
You jumped in, seemingly to a conversation you were not following closely enough to have your points straight, and agreed with the most surface level point (do we need chaotic here?), but your reasoning for agreeing with that point was because it can be either or, lawful or chaotic. Which was the point I was arguing was FALSE.
And, you can't keep accusing me of twisting your words, when you are LITERALLY saying that you are clarifying... by saying exactly what I said you said. You said that the idea might lean chaotic, but it could go either way. That was the point I was disproving.
Also incorrect. I was showing that you don't need alignment as part of the Ideal. I did not show that alignment modified the ideal. In fact, I showed the opposite in saying that both chaotic and lawful individuals could have that ideal.
RIGHT! See, you are admitting the thing. You know, the thing I said that you said. That disagreed with my ACTUAL point. The thing I was debating Helldritch on? The thing you admitted you didn't read and just skimmed?
You have now twice confirmed that you disagreed with my point. So, now I'll likely get an apology from you for all the accusations of twisting your words and trying to interpret that which needs no interpretation. Or more than likely I'll be accused of bad faith arguing and twisting your words again, as per normal.
So are you of the opinion that an ideal can't be used along with alignment for a person who wants to play with both?
That is generally what someone means when they say "this is one thing".
If your moral and ethical framework (the thing ideals relate to) is tied around the idea of being a free spirit and no one telling you how to live your life, then the very idea of a lawful society or organization that tells you how to live your life, would be incompatibly. Remember, Lawful characters (in theory) believe in order and structure of society, which means you would believe in someone telling you how to live your life.... the exact opposite of the ideal.
Would I tell a player they can't write it down? No. Because I tell them they don't need to write down alignment at all. It is a non-factor at my table, so if they had some off-beat way to twist this into someone connecting, I'm not going to shut them down, but to my eye they look about as compatible as Cesium and Water.
It's not a stand alone ideal. None of them are. You'd need a paragraph to a page for an ideal to be stand alone, and it would then well define your character if you chose it, which is probably why they are left so vague. Vague is good. You can expound on what the ideal means to your character both with or without alignment. Regardless of your personal belief here, alignment can in fact be an aid to that.
You are both right and wrong.
Firstly, you are wrong because Ideals are not left vague. We need to keep shutting this down because it is seriously hampering discussion. Open your PHB to the backgrounds. All of those ideals? Those are EXAMPLES. And yes, examples are left vague, sort of like a writing prompt. We need to make this clear, because this is a root cause of a lot of confusion it seems. Those are examples, nothing more.
But, you are also right. If you want to fully explain and define an ideal, you need a lot more than a single sentence. You expound upon them, flesh them out to be specific to your character. That is generally why I've found people tie ideals to specific things in their backstories, or give examples. They expound on them, and keep that in mind, but they don't need to write down every single word. The written sentence is the core of the idea, the kernel the rest of it grew from.
And, sure, alignment can aid in that... but I find that "are you a good person or a bad person" combined with "do you follow the rules" to be such a basic level thought that it really doesn't aid in a significant way.