Good point...
Here is a good quote from the Book of Yummy Goodness that is relevant to some of the threads above:
Here is a good quote from the Book of Yummy Goodness that is relevant to some of the threads above:
Book of Exalted Deeds p9 said:When do good ends justify evil means to achieve them? Is it morally acceptable, for example, to torture an evil captive in order to extract vital information that can prevent the deaths of
thousands of innocents? Any good character shudders at the thought of committing torture, but the goal of preventing thousands of deaths is undeniably a virtuous one, and a neutral character might easily consider the use of torture in such a circumstance. With evil acts on a smaller scale, even the most virtuous characters can find themselves tempted to agree
that a very good end justifies a mildly evil means. Is it acceptable to tell a small lie in order to prevent a minor catastrophe? A large catastrophe? A world-shattering catastrophe?
In the D&D universe, the fundamental answer is no,
an evil act is an evil act no matter what good result it may
achieve.
A paladin who knowingly commits an evil act in pursuit of any end no matter how good still jeopardizes her paladinhood.