Tom: Sure, yes, I agree with what you say about chaos and order in a broad sense. No doubt about it. To me, though, people tend to read far too much into the alignment use of these terms than is justified. The law and chaos in D&D was firmly stated to be an adoption of the Moorcockian concept at the time (historical antecedents aside- boy, that is giving D&D too much credit), and I tend to regard it in those simple terms. When you read the material on it, it certainly comes across that way.
I think people may be agonizing over wringing complexity out of a very shallow and ill-conceived system instead of doing what is much more fun and productive from a role-playing perspective, which is giving your character personal ethics and then playing them. If you have an alignment change at some point, so be it. It is only a broad guideline, not a map for playing your character in every situation. The player provides that.
That's my perspective. I do intend it to be a constructive contribution here, not a contrary view.
Kamikaze Midget: "To give a helpful answer:"
That seems like a snide thing to say, but perhaps I miss the point.
Cheers
I think people may be agonizing over wringing complexity out of a very shallow and ill-conceived system instead of doing what is much more fun and productive from a role-playing perspective, which is giving your character personal ethics and then playing them. If you have an alignment change at some point, so be it. It is only a broad guideline, not a map for playing your character in every situation. The player provides that.
That's my perspective. I do intend it to be a constructive contribution here, not a contrary view.
Kamikaze Midget: "To give a helpful answer:"
That seems like a snide thing to say, but perhaps I miss the point.
Cheers