buzz said:From the rulebook.![]()
The section on alignment is entirely devoted to describing how characters act. It never addresses the imagined in-character intent behind those actions. This is a good thing, because imagined intent is a slippery slope that leads to the ability to justify any sort of action (usually using bogus real-world "what ifs" as comparison) under any alignment, with no way to effectively adjudicate anything. By focusing on action, we can look at the choices players make for their PCs and the context, and come to definitive answers.
And the Detect spells.
None of them detect "intent" anymore, even the paladin's ability is no longer detect evil intent.
The spells detect actual alignment and "type" which has nothing to do with intnent.
A very politie vampire lord (LE) will detect as evil regardless to whether or not he wishes to commit an evil act at the time. He can (and most likely is) extremely polite and engaging but will still detect as evil and is still subject to the paladin's smite ability accordingly.