SemperJase said:
Finding out what is good and evil from a good perspective means that you are tyring to improve the world around you.
"From a good perspective"? Okay, so suddenly we're talking about intention. Fair enough.
So it seems we agree on the notion that exploration is worthwhile. I assume my argument has convinced you of that much, at least. You're now moving to the position that what determines the value of exploration is the intention behind that exploration. There are some profound problems with this idea. Let me lay out two of them:
Problem One: Knowing intention
Playing an evil character and exploring from that perspective indicates you are trying to find out what is evil so you can commit evil.
It sounds as though you are claiming to know the intentions of others, and condemning them for the intentions you are attributing to them. I find this breathtakingly arrogant. What gives you the ability to sit in judgement on others and determine what lies within their hearts? Where do you derive this confidence that you have all the answers -- that there is no possibility you might be wrong, that there might be other reasons to play an evil character? I'm very curious -- how do you know these things?
I argue that what you are proposing is impossible -- that there is no way for any human being to know the true intention of any other. Or at least, it is always possible for us to be wrong about someone else's (perhaps even our own?) intentions. Therefore there is no means for us to determine the value of an exploration by examining the intentions of those who conduct it.
Problem Two: Prejudgement
Aside from the issue of determining intention (which I have indicated is impossible), we also have the problem that determining value by intention implies determining value BEFORE the exploration even takes place. In fact, according to your scheme, the nature of the exploration doesn't enter into the value equation at all. If the intention of the explorer is what determines the value of the exploration, than clearly any exploration can be as good as any other. Or as worthless. This is plainly ridiculous, and flies in the face of all human experience.
One exploration is NOT as good as any other. Some explorations are clearly more valuable than others, regardless of who undertakes them. I agree that one person may derive more from a given exploration than another person, for any number of reasons, but I do not agree that we can determine the actual value before the exploration has taken place.
As an alternative, I suggest that the value of an exploration can only be known AFTER the exploration has been conducted. We have to examine what we learned, what new truths have been revealed to us, what falsehoods have been exposed, in order to judge the value of any exploration.