Furn_Darkside said:
My group looks at it as means- chaotic believes the ends justify the means, and lawful believes the ends never justify the means.
This is how the other DM in the group tends to view it.
Personally, I think this makes CG less good than LG, which rubs me quite wrong. I tend to view Lawfuls to think in terms of groups whilst Chaotics relate to individuals.
So, a LG person is going to look at what's best for the whole group/party/society and act accordingly. A CG person looks at what's best for each person he meets or knows and acts to that view. The danger a LG person faces is becoming rather calloused to the plight of an individual, whereas the CG may be short-sighted because he doesn't think about the whole.
I saw an episode of Stargate SG-1 a year or two ago that illustrated the difference fairly well. I don't remember all the details, but here's the gist: There is a planet that has a huge stockpile of knowledge. So much, in fact, that it's practically impossible to learn it normally (and some other limiting factors). What this group does is to choose one child who is the "brain" of the group and keeps the society alive. The problem is that the child's brain will "burn-out" after a few years, leaving her basically retarded. Without this child, though, the civilization would collapse into ruin. A very LG thing to do (group thought).
O'Neil was, of course, appalled. He couldn't stand to see harm come to the child, even if it meant some inconvenience for everyone else in the society (not death, but significant regression). He eventually accepted the situation because the girl in question made it known that it was _her_ choice to do this. A very CG viewpoint -- concern for the individual over the group, but the willingness to accept another's decision about their own life.
I could elaborate, but it'd probably get the thread closed since it would no doubt tread into political territory.