Any word yet on 3.5 Paladins?

Remathilis said:
IMHO, I'd reverse the two, but then again, is Lawful "obey the law" or is lawful "follows some code of behavior/honor"?

Everyone has a different idea of what Lawful behaviour is, especially Chaotics who think that Lawful == mindless obedience to the law. This is as much a caricature as the mindset that Chaotic == act completely randomly with no thought or planning.

In my view, a Lawful character would respect the law of the land, and would follow it in so far as it does not clash with the laws of his society. It is not enough to have a personal code of honour, it must be one that is accepted by society. I use the word "society" here loosely - it could be a religious order, a culture, even a criminal organisation. The essence of a Lawful character is that he does not determine right and wrong by his own standards, but by the standards of the group that he identifies with.
 

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Dave G said:
My paladin's code is modelled loosely after the Jedi Code.

Seems to work. *shrug*

I kind of like the Old Code from the movie Dragonheart:

"A knight is sworn to valor. His heart knows only virtue. His blade defends the helpless. His might upholds the weak. His word speaks only truth. His wrath undoes the wicked."
 

my 2 cents on Batman

I think Batman works best as Lawful Good, since he's the polar opposite of his arch-enemy The Joker, who is clearly Chaotic Evil.
 

Batman....LG?

Ya know....it gets pretty chilly in here, when someone takes iconic character....and PUT him into a catergory of medival fantasy, code behavior and such.

The BAT........LAWFUL??????

What hit you? A joke grenade?
 
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Re: Batman....LG?

Truth Seeker said:
Ya know....it gets pretty chilly in here, when someone takes iconic character....and PUT him into a catergory of medival fantasy, code behavior and such.

The BAT........LAWFUL??????

What hit you? A joke grenade?

I've made the point about Batman before...he's not really Lawful Good, since he directly opposes the Law, but part of his character is that of a Paladin's. There's a part of Batman that wants to believe the best of people, that wants to believe a sick person can be cured. Batman doesn't, at least when I was reading him, want to kill his enemies, he wants to stop them and get them help.
 

Remathilis said:
My Friend Got into a discussion where Batman was LG (planning, careful, follows a disciplined code of honor) and Superman was CG (more prone to emotional response and relying on power, not planning, to defeat bad guys.)

IMHO, I'd reverse the two, but then again, is Lawful "obey the law" or is lawful "follows some code of behavior/honor"?

I think Lawful is "You believe laws are a natural and necessary part of society." In this sense Batman is probably Chaotic. He does not personally believe in his socieity's laws, although it could be argued that he thinks there SHOULD be laws, just not the ones they've got right now (that prevent the cops from doing what they need to, this requiring him).
 

lawful what?

In response to FireLance's:
"In my view, a Lawful character would respect the law of the land, and would follow it in so far as it does not clash with the laws of his society. It is not enough to have a personal code of honour, it must be one that is accepted by society. I use the word "society" here loosely - it could be a religious order, a culture, even a criminal organization. The essence of a Lawful character is that he does not determine right and wrong by his own standards, but by the standards of the group that he identifies with."

I would agree that a lawful character would respect the law of the land, but the philosophy there after would seem to break down. Your later presumption is that the "lawfulness" of an individual would be relative to the ideas of the society that instilled those beliefs. I believe that mattcollville would be closer to describing what lawful should be when he says of a lawful character: "(he) believe(s) laws are a natural and necessary part of society."
When you begin to say "The essence of a Lawful character is that he does not determine right and wrong by his own standards..." you blur the distinction between Moral and Ethical alignment.
However, I do see why you would have reason to think along those lines, as the PHB does a very good job at avoiding a clear distinction in these two areas.
When describing "good" and "evil" they (PHB writers) list qualities or actions that we can recognize as clearly one or the other. When they later describe "lawful" they again list qualities that many people would deem favorable, or that are also "good"... and when describing "chaotic" they list both favorable qualities, and drawbacks that a "chaotic" character might have. However, and this next part is very important, they list "freedom" as a quality of a chaotic character... as though somehow the characters who have "lawful" in there alignment do not have freedom? The terms (used in each alignments description) are used ambiguously and thus cause confusion in our ideas of what alignment means. In truth, freedom should be a quality that should be listed for any thinking (read "freethinking) or willful (read "free willed") individual/character. We can see the truth in that statement by knowing this: That at every point in any one of our lives, when any character comes to a point where a decision must be made, he has precisely this, the ability to make the decision, and the freedom to choose as he wills.
Which would mean the ideas of law and chaos are simply inclinations in each individual's or each character's mind. The character can not necessarily make the "lawful" (or chaotic) choice, because there simply may not be a "lawful" (or chaotic) choice to make.
Who then has the most freedom, the lawful character who would favor order or structure in society, the chaotic character who’s inclinations would be directly opposed, or the neutral character, who is not "bound" by inclination to either.
It is difficult to say what the "lawfulness" of a character or his decisions would be if a decision he made would support the concept of and orderly or lawful society yet defies the laws of a particular society (especially if said decision is made in or directly affecting that society). The reason for this (difficulty) is that the argument can not be made in absolutes. All concepts here are relative to terms and definitions and our concepts/perceptions of them (albeit I would expect that we can all share quite similar thoughts on our definitions) Because, as in the example above, we can not say or define "what is absolutely lawful". Again, that may just be reiteration of the fact that as far as "law" and "chaos" are concerned, we have only inclinations. Those inclinations however may/would be affected by our ideas of what is "best" for society, and thus we begin to cross the line from Ethical to Moral once again, for when using the term "best" we imply that something could be better, or "more good" than another thing. (best being "most good"). "Absolute good"- that can be argued (which means what IS good would extend infinitely beyond a societal standard), however, (no matter my beliefs) it doesn’t seem to have a place in the philosophical D&D system, which uses a pantheon for its religious system, and favors the ideas of dualism (that good and evil are equal and opposite forces, taking this one step further to include equal and opposite forces embodied in the ideas of law and chaos)... but that is fine for a fantasy game. So I'll step of the soap box, and apologize if this post seems as though it belongs in some philosophy message board elsewhere on the internet. :)

From what is given in the description from pg 88/89 of the PHB, we see that we can expect actions from a lawful person that are expectable... another problem is, this "expectable" changes from the description of lawful good ["A lawful good character acts as a good person is expected or required to act"] (where the "expected" seems to indicate societal expectation), to lawful evil ["A lawful evil villain methodically takes what he wants within the limits of his code..."] (which now indicates that what is expectable is only the manner in which this villain has acted previously). So the villain sets his own code? How is this any different from the chaotic good character "...act(ing) as his conscience directs him"? Ironically enough, both of these characters follow there own conscious, but the villain has no compulsion to help others, where Soveliss the ranger (as used in the PHB example) does, but cares not for what others expect of him.

As far as Batman is concerned, unless this D&D philosophical system can be applied to reality (which we can very easily argue that it cannot be, given the example above), we cannot truly categorize any person existent or conceived outside the system using the same definitions (defining characteristics) given therein. However, his actions would most closely match what is described as "Rebel(?)"-Chaotic Good.

We also see here that the idea of Paladin used in D&D is just that... the D&D idea of Paladin, which has always been (since its conception) the lawful good "Crusader" (see PHB entry of "lawful good"). Thus any argument outside of that definition, stating that the Paladin "should" be anything other than what it is (in D&D) is merely subjective (subject to our own opinions, perceptions, or ideas of what we want the paladin to be), and thus all arguments pertaining thereto are equally valid... and invalid at the same time. Thus, sorry to say, each is pointless WHEN or IF trying to convince another individual (whose subjective view is not like your own) that your subjective argument or view is (absolutely) more valid or better than their own. At best, those with different opinions can merely recognize the merits of the supposed arguments that others give.
Me? I like Paladins they way they are, and truly, I see no point in trying to change what a Paladin is. As others have said, you would merely be creating a new concept, or taking a different existing one, and calling that "Paladin", when the term is already used to describe it's current concept.
 

Hi, Daedrova, welcome to the boards.

I'm still digesting your post, but here's a quick reaction to your point about blurring the distinction between moral and ethical alignments.

"Right" and "wrong" do not only apply to Good and Evil. They can apply to Law and Chaos, also. To a Lawful person, Lawful behaviour, however you define it - honouring your word, supporting your society's institutions, whatever - is "right". Not doing so is "wrong". The moral dimension comes in when considering whether the behaviour is Good or Evil. Support for a tyrant's rule or for the institution of slavery, for example, is Evil, but may be considered "right" by a Lawful Evil or Lawful Neutral person.
 

Thank you kindly for the welcome FireLance. ::bows::

Yes, I must apologize for the lengthy post, as it may have been too in depth and wordy (but I hope you enjoy it :) )

To proceed any further here we must agree on some terms and definitions, so we may also establish some premises. Then we can then attempt to come to a final conclusion.
Foremost, when one says that a thing, or rather a decision, can be either "right" or "wrong", he implies that there would be a standard against which the affect the decision should be judged.
As we know it, “good” would be that which is within/not below the standard. This is of course thrown into question once more if there is not absolute authority. If there is not absolute authority, then there is no absolute standard, and thus absolutely no good or evil. Our entire conclusion would fall not only to “right and wrong do not only apply to good and evil…”, but, again, there is no right and wrong at all.
Now, in the dualistic philosophy of D&D, this simply could not be. To say the good and evil are equal but opposing forces (as it does), right and wrong could only be said to be subjective. You can not say then, absolutely, that evil decisions are wrong, and good decisions are right, but merely the choices that we make would fall into one category or the other. We could say that if I hold my standard to, or judge my decisions against "the force of good", that force would say this: (what we know as) evil decisions would be wrong, and good decisions would be right. From the other side, if I hold my standard, or judge my decisions against "the force of evil", than any decision the would bear the results of a "good" work would be wrong, and "evil" decisions would be right. Even still, how are we to know which decisions fall into the category of “good”, and which into “evil”. Furthermore, the two forces being equal, the names should be interchangeable, where now the same set of decisions that would have applied to evil now (not otherwise changing) are said to be good, and vice versa. The same statements would hold true for "law" and "chaos".

This philosophy then does raise some interesting questions though.

We know that characters can also be “neutral”. If there is also a force of “neutrality”, then what is right or wrong to neutrality? The system seems to indicate that neutrality is not a force, (there is not opposing force to neutrality, spells and enchantments do not harm or benefit anything “neutral”, but tend to ignore the very “thing” outright) but rather a state of existence that must be for “balance”… (as though something disastrous would somehow happen if “good” or “evil” became to strong… somehow). This would indicate that characters don’t “follow” neutrality, since it is not a force that exists, just a concept of balance.
Indeed, if it were, that would mean decisions could also fall into this “neutral” category.

A societal standard could also be this: You should do what you think is best, and should not be held to what others tell you is best. Then that standard seems to be along the lines of what the PHB would say is chaotic. What then, is a characters alignment if he feels, makes decisions that oppose that society? Perhaps his motives and beliefs are that society should uphold like and orderly standards. His ideas then would be lawful, but that very idea would throw itself against the only standard that society has. Does society then determine what is lawful, and is he chaotic for opposing the “standard” of that society?
Do you see the contradiction in a society uniformly believing that their decisions should not be held to the standards of society? (lets all believe that we should not all believe the same thing... thus creating a standard that holds each person to it, but tells them not to hold themselves to such standards)
This is not a problem with anything other than the concept of chaos, which doesn’t actually exist (we call things “random” because we do not see what the result will be. For us to know a future result, we must be able to account for all possible factors). Society, conceptually, must adhere to the ideas of law, because (logically, not idealistically) there can not be a society without order, or defining what that society is.

The best we can do for argument within D&D is to use the specific information within the “religion” heading inside the PHB pages (which certainly limit’s the possibilities J). That leaves us only with finding and choosing from those guidelines the description within that system which would best suit our desires for a character's overall outlook, and is therefore impossible to argue from the other direction.

edit: philisophical comparison to non-D&D religion was deleted. Hopefully people can respond to this post with logical thoughts/arguments of their own without worry of getting into "real world religion."
 
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