robertsconley
Hero
Upthread, we talked about different assumptions.
This:
Again, that is OK. It is an age-old debate, and we are not going to resolve it here on the forum. And your views make sense in light of your assumption and I hope mine does in light of mine.
Taking one last stab at this: if you say I have a choice, then by implication, I can choose to be objective. I can choose to hold myself to a standard of conduct that my group can assess for themselves in order to determine whether I am applying that standard of conduct.
As a result, I choose to have the setting unfold according to its own internal world logic. When I exercise discretion, I choose do so in accordance with specific principles, such as only selecting from plausible outcomes. I chose to use my players goals and motivations as part of the criteria to make that selection.
This follows logically from your premise that any choice I make will reflect my personal views. My point is that I can choose to discipline those choices in a consistent, observable way that gives the setting internal independence from moment-to-moment improvisation.
Otherwise, let us agree to disagree.
This:
Embodies a distinct philosophical tradition. We do not have to get into the details, but the short version is that I do not share the assumptions of that tradition regarding objectivity. The fact that this is one of your beliefs is OK.There is no objectivity here at all. There cannot be.
That is fine too. Just so it is clear, the reason we are having a disagreement (not an argument) is due to our incompatible views on the nature of objectivity. This difference results from irreconcilable philosophical assumptions.I'm still rather failing to see how this is different than what any DM does.
Again, that is OK. It is an age-old debate, and we are not going to resolve it here on the forum. And your views make sense in light of your assumption and I hope mine does in light of mine.
I understood that from earlier in the thread. So we are good.I never questioned your methods. Your methods I agree with. Where I disagree is with this idea that your methodology results in some sort of independency of the setting from the DM. Since you are focusing on what is probable, but you are also the sole source of determining what is probable, any choice you make will always be the result of you and your personal views.
Taking one last stab at this: if you say I have a choice, then by implication, I can choose to be objective. I can choose to hold myself to a standard of conduct that my group can assess for themselves in order to determine whether I am applying that standard of conduct.
As a result, I choose to have the setting unfold according to its own internal world logic. When I exercise discretion, I choose do so in accordance with specific principles, such as only selecting from plausible outcomes. I chose to use my players goals and motivations as part of the criteria to make that selection.
This follows logically from your premise that any choice I make will reflect my personal views. My point is that I can choose to discipline those choices in a consistent, observable way that gives the setting internal independence from moment-to-moment improvisation.
Otherwise, let us agree to disagree.