Welcome to my ignore list! I can handle alignment threads. I can handle edition wars(not that I want to). I cannot abide that heresy.
(jk)
I don't know why they call it hamburger helper. It does just fine by itself.
Welcome to my ignore list! I can handle alignment threads. I can handle edition wars(not that I want to). I cannot abide that heresy.
(jk)
I never said an LG paladin would.
But if following the law doesn't make you Lawful, then how is it a useful metric? If it is about respecting title and structure why is a member of a Gang who respects the title "Don" and follows the rigid code of their gang Chaotic for enjoying wanton violence and arson?
And the more times you say "but that's neutral" then the more and more space the center of the axis's take up, which makes it less and less useful except for zealots.
Vicki, can I help you with that Kool-Aid? Please?I don't know why they call it hamburger helper. It does just fine by itself.
They are the very definition of chaotic neutral. They’re called the Sons of Anarchy for Pete’s sake. Anarchy is chaos.Alignment is a system that fit well with the epic fantasy produce in the 60 and 70.
Absolute characters, great scheme and worldly plot, it fit well to stereotype characters and sometime flirt with the caricatural ones.
My latest debunk on alignment happens when I watch Sons of Anarchy lately.
A band of outlaw with their own code, law, pride. At which time you call them chaotic or lawful? Jax Teller switch from a ruthless killer to a caring father and husband.
And I dont buy the neutral for those characters. SoA is definitively not Neutral.
Yes, alignment is a simple tool, to give quick reminder or help to play a character, but for more complex ones we should get rid of alignement.
I have an absolutely massive soft spot for the Principia Discordia. I picked it up sometime when I was fairly young, and it was my introduction to some really important concepts that have remained valuable to me. I have no doubt that I would have been introduced to them in other ways if I hadn't read it - but that would have been later, and I would certainly be a different person.I think it would be enlightening to mention the Principia Discordia. Written back in 1963, it is a reaction and rejection of the fairly strict societal norms of the 1950s. In the following quote, I think you'll see the similarity to D&D alignments:
This.I quite like the concept of relative and absolute morality.
That is, mortals have relative morality - their good, evil, law and chaos are just ways that mortals use to talk about things, and are as make-believe as justice, love, and the like. They have exactly the effect on reality as we give them.
Outside in the wider multiverse, there can be beings of Absolute Good, or Evil, or Law, or Chaos (and, depending on setting or system, maybe Justice and Love) - and any direct action of such a being on the mundane world (regardless of what absolute they represent) is potentially catastrophic to any poor mortals who get in the way.