Bagpuss
Legend
This conflation of just an "animal" and "having a reallife human culture" is where racism starts to happen.
I'd like to know what real life human culture you think orcs have?
This conflation of just an "animal" and "having a reallife human culture" is where racism starts to happen.
I'd like to know what real life human culture you think orcs have?
I see the point.
At the same time, these descriptions are matter-of-fact. The method of reproducing between sapient species is done by means "magic" and "wonder". Magics and wonders are common and ordinary in most D&D settings.
It is like saying, "Thanks to scientific technology, different sapient species can have children together." It would be a statement about what is normal.
So.. it's a feature that every species is portrayed as a bunch of uniform scumbags I don't want to play because they're all worthless and terrible as people.
I mean if you're writing a group of semi sentient monsters then using stone age technology makes sense. That's not racism, it's just logical. It took humans hundreds of thousands of years to advance past the stone age, while groups of modern monkeys and apes are already creating and utilising stone tools. So anything in between a human and an ape in intelligence will also be in the stone age.
Of course orcs are no longer written as semi sentient monsters, and are playable species matching humans for intelligence. So writing them as simple monsters doesn't make sense, and in fact come across as racist af.
Stone age is both right now (including some human groups still), and millions of years ago (when human relatives first entered the stone age). Macaques and chimps are currently in the early stone age as well.The Stone Age is not so long ago.
For example, the Neolithic Revolution is about 10,000 years ago depending on where one is referring to.
The people of the Stone Age are us. They are normal modern humans, Homo sapiens sapiens. They have the same brain size as we do. They are as smart as we are. Their languages are as sophisticated as ours.
If they have a "culture" and a "language". They are us.
The point of concern here is − human culture and language.Stone age is both right now (including some human groups still), and millions of years ago (when human relatives first entered the stone age). Macaques and chimps are currently in the early stone age as well.
And yet a modern stone age human isn't the same intelligence as a tool making and using chimp, despite both being in the stone age. The intelligence gap is vast.
Animals have cultures and language too. Many animals like chimps and elephants do ritualistic behaviour when one of their group dies. There is even a group of chimps recorded as having to place a stone at the base of a certain tree when they pass it. Orcas have regional languages with hundreds or even thousands of words.The point of concern here is − human culture and language.
If they have reallife cultures like we do, then they are us.
The capacity of speech is key.
If they are sewing clothes, they are us.
We know who our genetic cousins are, namely bonobo and chimpanzee. We see what they can do. They arent "Orcs".
Not to the degree that humans do. The difference between the language of humans and of other animals is quantitative and qualitative.Animals have cultures and language too.