Celebrim said:
Bauglir: Err... Hmmm.
"IMO he will fulfill promises, but only those he makes himself."
Errr... what other kind is there?
Typically for a PC there will be promises made by another party member on behalf of the party as a whole. My vision of a CN character would feel no compulsion whatsoever to honour this. (Not to say that he would rail against it 100% of the time.. he would do it if he feels it's worth doing, or maybe if whoever made the promise asked him nicely

)
"I promise you that Joe will fix your car", is a promise I'm making, not Joe. Even if I say, "Joe will promise you that he will fix your car.", I'm still the one making the promise, not Joe. Perhaps you meant to say, "IMO he will fulfill promises, but only those he makes _TO_ himself.", which is probably more on track but not completely.
Precisely - if Joe was in any way lawful and you had some kind of position of authority over him (his boss?) he would consider that promise binding on his behalf. But not so chaotic joe..
Basically, you are trying to convince me that because of a chaotics _code of honor_ he will be more _honest_ than some lawful who believes in honesty?
Not at all. Just that he will be true to his own word above all other concerns.
Just to whom does he think he owes this honesty? And whom does he think has the right to punish him for failing to fulfill a vow to someone else?
Himself and himself. Of what worth is individuality if the word of an individual freely given is not followed?
Who is he trying to please other than himself, and why would he keep an oath to others that burdened himself greatly?
Because he's Chaotic Neutral, not Chaotic Evil.. his own concerns aren't always paramount...
I'm willing to accept that some chaotics could have a code that they keep out of pride in themselves, with themselves as enforcer of this code, but not that they are required to do so by virtue of being chaotic.
People see CN as random and untrustworthy. I don't agree and I'm attempting to paint a picture to illustrate this.
"I would even go as far as to say the CN character could be most trusted to keep his promises."
In general, more so than any other alignment? I don't think you are going to get alot of agreement on that.
Perhaps. It does rail somewhat against the traditional version..
"A good character would break the promise rather than allow someone to be hurt or even killed needlessly"
That's debatable, and the answer depends probably on the particular goods lawfulness with respect to oaths. For some LG's, an oath is an oath is an oath.
This would be an issue of Law and not of good...
"and a lawful character would break the promise if it was superceded by some 'greater authority"
Errr... close. One has to ask why a lawful character would make an oath if it could bring him into conflict with his code and heirarchy, and even then, the answer probably depends on the particulars of the code. Most lawfuls, an oath is an oath is an oath.
If the lawful character made the promise, then later found out that it was necessary to steal something (possibly even kill someone) to honour it, they would break the promise. To place personal vows above society's tenets is an inherently chaotic action IMO.
"The CN character on the other hand belives in individuality above ALL things..."
Keep that in mind while making this arguement. You seem to forget it elsewhere.
I do?
"...and as such he will honour his promise, freely and individually given above all other concerns."
Why? Because he identifies himself as honest? Is that a necessary trait of individuality in general? And what if he discovered that his promise placed him in a situation that unexpectedly conflicted strongly with his self interest? What if he discovered that his promise placed him in dept to someone else, and he had to comprimise his freedom? For that matter, don't all promises by thier very nature endebt the self to someone else and contrain your freedom to act? And go back to your tests. Could or would a chaotic break a promise in order to prevent someone from being hurt or killed needlessly? Well, yeah. Could or would a chaotic break a promise if they had something to gain? Well, yeah. Could or would a chaotic break a promise if he found that it was in conflict with something in his code of honor that he valued more than his honesty (recognizing again that honesty and even a code of honor are not necessary conditions of chaoticness)? Well, yes. So what we conclude then is that chaotics can or will break thier promises in a broad variety of circumstances. We don't even have to event scenarios to debate about. Does that mean all chaotics are dishonest? No, but it does mean that dishonesty never violates a chaotic moral code (unless the code is 'to one's one self be true', in which case you just need to avoid decieving yourself).
Hmmmm...
Again this comes down to how you view chaotic alignment. Is it just randomness or is it a belief in individuality, and should an individual honour his word freely given? IMO he would.
With this in mind, the chaotic neutral character has no other concerns, moral or lawful that would impede the honouring of the promise.
I can't help but think that you YOURSELF pride yourself on being a person of your word, and that you YOURSELF pride yourself on your individuality and free spirit and that this is coloring your thinking. I think it is a fair assessment that if someone believes that chaotic implies more honesty than any other alignment, that this is some evidence of bias toward chaos.
Perhaps you're right. I imagine I'd be chaotic good if I was in D&D. (I'd also be a gnomish sorcerer but that's not the point

)
Moving on...
I agree with you that absence of action is not proof of moral virtue. One doesn't become more good by not killing 9 out of the 10 people that you are angery with, any more than one becomes more evil by giving to only 1 of 10 beggers one sees on the street, or giving only 1 hour in 10 of your time to work in your community.
"So while the good character has limited options, the evil character does more or less whatever they think they can gain from - they are unconstrained."
Alot of people would like to think so. I can definately see how an average person who didn't do things because he was afraid of the consequences (under the law or whatever), would be tricked into believing this. And I also understand that you have to believe something like this for evil to be even in the remotest attractive as a moral system, but nonetheless the idea that evil people are less constrained in thier actions is all hogwash.
The problem is so basic to your argument it goes right under your vision. You can see that the good person is choosing right from wrong, and you believe that the evil person is choosing wrong from right - but that's not what is happening. Your arguement is based on the belief that a good person immediately becomes evil for doing evil, whereas an evil person does not become good for doing good. Again, that is not what is happening. In the simpliest terms, the evil person has lost thier ability to choose good. I'd go further. The evil person has lost thier ability to distinguish between the two. Evil things seem good. Good things seem evil. It is all the same. The evil person has lost thier violition in the matter. They may think that they are acting as they please, but its only an illusion to themselves. To everyone observing the evil person, he is clearly enslaved to his habits. This doesn't require a game explanation. A pragmatic one will suffice. Think of all the evil behaviors in the world, and all the people that practice them. We can pick an example like smoking, but even lying will suffice. The average liar doesn't stop lying even when it is obvious that they are caught and that lies are destroying themselves and thier relationships. I could pick on drug abuse, but that would be too easy. How about spousal abuse? How about child abuse? Do you think that once its begun that they are still in control of themselves and thier lives?
You understand this at a basic level. A good person can fall easily. You said so yourself. It is not nearly so easy to change once you are at the bottom. A good person has constraints, sure, but I don't find them nearly so onerous as those contraining evil - nor would you had you spent time amongst self-destructive people. Heck, who among us is so good that we don't have aspects of our life that are out of control and that we wish we could change but can't?
Interesting viewpoint. I had always pictured the difference between good and evil being that a good person was selfless, while an evil person was selfish. Just as the good character faces an alignment shift for hurting others for his own benefit, the evil character would face an alignment shift for helping someone else with no benefit to himself. I think it takes some effort to be selfless.. the character often loses out. Not so to be selfish.. the character typically gains, and an intelligent evil character can still maintain good PR (the evil rogue who secretly pockets the shiniest item in every chest they open would (unless he gets caught) seem to the party to be a good character, willing to help out with those trapped chests)
TBH having read it a few times I think the above are examples of mental defects rather than some form of alignment. I guess it depends on whether you think alignment is defined by actions or by motives. Does the paladin lose his paladinhood if he kills an innocent while under the influence of a Dominate Person? IMO no, to someone else maybe yes..
The same arguments can be made at length for chaotic, but I've made them before. In the case of stealing, which crosses the border into evil so probably isn't the best example, it is not so clear cut as you make it.
Stealing doesn't have to be evil. Was Robin Hood evil?
Suppose a CN is walking through the park and he sees a wallet on a park bench. He opens the wallet and finds a five thousand dollars. There is no one anywhere in sight. The chaotic would probably say that he could have chosen not to take the money, maybe turned it over to the cops, maybe tried to find its rightful owner - but an outside observer knows that hogwash. Once the money was found, and once the CN decided that it was safe to procede, he had no choice but to take the money. And he could probably find lots of ways to legitimize that action to himself (the only person that it is important to legitimize it to). You see, because as you said, there isn't anything more important to that CN than himself and therefore it follows that no one needs that money more than he does. To do otherwise would not be true to his own needs. Does this mean all Chaotics are kleptomaniacs? No, but it does mean that if you leave your wallet on the park bench, you'd rather a lawful person see it than a chaotic.
Given that situation here's what I think the various alignments would do:
LG - hand it to the cops
NG - attempt to find the owner and return it - if they can't easily do so then hand it to the cops
CG - find the owner and return it, handing it to the cops only as a last resort
The neutral alignments would do something similar, but would expect a reward for finding and returning the wallet.
The evil alignments would all probably keep the wallet, unless the PR gain of returning it was of more value to them (they would of course demand a reward too)