How is that to be determined, if not by some account of the connection between the act and some good? But then who gets to define the latter good? If the character, then in what sense does the "cosmological force" have a monopoly on what counts as good? If the objective force, then how come it disapproves of the character acting in pursuit of its own ends?What he knows is whether a specific action is good, evil or neither. Only he can decide what is right or wrong in the broader circumstances.
In that case, how does a character who takes action to further that ideal count as acting evilly? Which is what you are positing, when you posit a character who acts evilly yet can plausibly claim to be acting for the greater good.The fact that the rules list them as the ideals of Good seems to me to provide the game conceit that they are motivated or generated by reference to that ideal.
And? I pointed out that those who adhere to the rules don't believe them to be arbitrary, typically because they have a conception of the underlying rationale for adhering to the rule, which they then give effect to in their judgements as to what counts as compliance or non-compliance.You are the one who began the discussion of adherence to arbitrary rules.
You are positing "cosmological forces" that apply precepts without any regard for the underlying values they serve. That is rules fetishism. You also seem to think that it can simultaneously be LG and LN, but that's a contradiction I'll leave for you to resolve.
When I play D&D, I don't first read the rulebooks about Law and Good and Evil and whatnot. I draw upon my own knowledge of the culture and tradition and tropes and history and legend and wish-fulfilment and ludicrous romance that the game is built upon.What ideals did he profess to live up to? The defined by game rules ideals of Law and Good, or did he define his own ideals, which may best be demonstrated outside actions one might define as Lawful and Good?
When I was a boy, that was Lego Castle and knights and dragons. I would like to think that today my conception of chivalric romance is more sophisticated. It can certainly be adapted in ways I had never thought of when I was young (for instance, the treatment of duty in Act 2 of the Valkyrie, which I at least find incredibly moving).
For me, the point of fantasy RPGing is to connect to these stories, and tropes and themes. To the extent that I have a conception of what LG is, its because I know its the alignment of paladins, and I know what a paladin is because I know those stories. To the extent that I have a conception of what LN is, its because I know that is the alignment of the quintessential martial artist, and I know that trope. To the extent that I have a conception of what CG is, its because I can imagine Robin Hood and his merry man, jolly outlaws who only rob from the rich and who give to the poor.
You seem to be positing something exactly backwards: that I would read the alignment system, try to get some independent handle on it (though I'm not sure how, because you don't want me to use the only methods that strike me as relevant), and then from that to work out what a paladin is, or what a monk is? I personally find that a very strange way to approach the game.
From the d20 SRD:In a game featuring mechanical alignment, I need not assess whether a character is "honourable". <snip> I do not see "Honourable Kindness" represented among the alignments
a paladin’s code requires that she respect legitimate authority, act with honor (not lying, not cheating, not using poison, and so forth), help those in need (provided they do not use the help for evil or chaotic ends), and punish those who harm or threaten innocents.
. . .
A paladin who . . . grossly violates the code of conduct loses all paladin spells and abilities
. . .
A paladin who . . . grossly violates the code of conduct loses all paladin spells and abilities
In other words, to adjudicate a paladin within the mechanical alignment and code framework of 3E I do need to adjudicate his/her conduct by reference to honour and also helping those in need (which = kindness, as far as I can tell).
Here is some more from the same source:
Lawful characters tell the truth, keep their word, respect authority, honor tradition, and judge those who fall short of their duties.
Now how is "acting with honour" defined? As not lying or cheating (= telling the truth and keeping one's word). So lawful characters are defined as honourable. Indeed, the definition of the paladin's code overlaps heavily with lawfulness ("respect legitimate authority" is very close to "respect authority", given that I think it is widely accepted that LG types don't respect tyrants and other illegitimate authorities). The "helping those in need" and "punishing those who threaten or harm innocents" seems to come from the paladin's goodness, however:
"Good" implies altruism [= kindness], respect for life, and a concern for the dignity of sentient beings. Good characters make personal sacrifices to help others.
The particular form of personal sacrifice the paladin makes is the sacrifice of risk-taking in the defence of others: that is the sacrifice appropriate to an honourable warrior (= knight).
Put it this way: I don't think I'm claiming knowledge that I don't have.you sure claim a lot of knowledge of mechanical alignment while indicating you don't use it and have not for many years.
Are you intending to imply by this that GM-enforced alignment is needed to keep players true to their conceptions of their characters? I can't see what other purpose this particular remark serves.And we're back to Brave, Brave Sir Robin - he has written it on his character sheet, and thus when he flees, wets himself, or refuses to emerge from beneath his bed, he must be doing so bravely.
If that is what you are intending, then I see no evidence that it is true. On this point my experience is very much the same as [MENTION=22779]Hussar[/MENTION]'s - most players, when given the freedom to do so, will play sincerely. That a player's sincere conception of what honour, or paladinhood, requires might be different from mine, or from another player's, is not a problem. It's a wonderful thing!
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Did I ever assert that all knights are paladins? No. Did I assert that paladins state the ideal of knighthood? Yes. I stand by that second assertion.Given that the term is defined only by reference to knighthood, I'll give you the relationship. Now, does every knight live up to these ideals, or is it the case that not all knights are Paladins? I note Sir Elton John and Sir Paul McCartney, neither of whom, I suspect, would lay claim to dexterity in arms.
<snip>
Where does a Black Knight fit into your assertion of the game's intentions?
A black knight is a villain. A blackguard, even! In the language of the original game, an anti-paladin. (Just as an evil high priest is an anti-cleric, and a person wrongly exercising the power of the papacy is an anti-pope.)
And what knighthood as part of the contemporary British honours system has to do with D&D at all is beyond me. (Though at least I didn't anticipate the red herring. I had assumed that your irrelevant example would be the chivalric aspirations of some of the WWI fighter pilots.)
The whole point of the story of Joan of Arc is that she is a knight, is truer to the ideals and aspirations of knighthood than those who call themselves knights. (Two classic cinematic representations of this idea is found in John Boorman's Excalibur, first when Arthur hands Excalibur to Uriens so that Uriens can knight him as a necessary condition of swearing fealty, and then when Percival is knighted so he can take up the challenge to defend Guinevere's honour. In both cases, each is inwardly a true knight than those around them, and the ceremony merely reflects that. Natural law, and providence, is a significant component of the cultural outlook from which the paladin archetype springs. And to allude to [MENTION=6701124]Cadence[/MENTION]'s example of Yamamoto Date, in The Seventh Samurai we find the similar idea expressed with respect to Toshiru Mifune's character, who even though not literally a samurai is in certain ways truer to the underlying ideals than some of the "real" samurai.)Does it also follow that there can be no Commoner Paladins? What was Joan of Arc's rank in the nobility?
<snip>
for some reason, D&D 4e absolutely dismisses the idea of any Paladin who has not been raised to noble status by being Knighted
Who do you think these were? (Hint: French, German and English knights.) Who do you think there greatest exemplars were? (Hint: the crusading orders of knighthood, such as the Templars and the Teutonic Knights.) How did they fight? Whether in the lands around Anatolia and Jerusalem, or in the lands around Prussia and Poland, they fought by putting on heavy armour, getting onto heavy horses, and charging. That was the source of their military power - the mounted charge. What is the name for a heavily-armed mounted warrior? (Hint: a knight.)Crusaders, perhaps?
Have you read Three Hearts and Three Lions?Right after dismissing your comparison as superficial.
In the meantime, here are some of Wikipedia's greatest hits:
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Holger Carlsen is an Allied covert operative who assists the Danish Resistance to the Nazis. After an explosion, he finds himself carried to a parallel universe, which proves to have the Matter of France as its historical past. . . His quest finally leads him to discover that he is Ogier the Dane . . .
The Matter of France, also known as the Carolingian cycle, is a body of literature and legendary material associated with the history of France, in particular involving Charlemagne and his associates. . .
Central figures of the Matter of France include Charlemagne and his paladins, especially Roland, hero of The Song of Roland . . .
Ogier the Dane first appears as one of Charlemagne's knights, in Chanson de Roland
[/sblock]The Matter of France, also known as the Carolingian cycle, is a body of literature and legendary material associated with the history of France, in particular involving Charlemagne and his associates. . .
Central figures of the Matter of France include Charlemagne and his paladins, especially Roland, hero of The Song of Roland . . .
Ogier the Dane first appears as one of Charlemagne's knights, in Chanson de Roland
Gee, I wonder if any of that involves knights? That's right, ALL OF IT DOES. In other words, the book that OSRIC cites as the immediate inspiration for the D&D paladin is a modern version of mediaeval stories written for knights about knights.
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