The whole of the Superman canon makes sense only if Superman is a paragon of goodness - of truth, justice and the American way! Yet he has never stopped mass poverty, mass starvation, mass conflict, or many of the other affronts to truth and justice that are found in the real world and that are replicated in Superman comics and films.
And he isn't cosmic Goodness, as I said, which the Good gods of Krynn are supposed to be. And again, the only times he commits genocides are in non-canonical stories where he's evil. If Superman isn't going around saving everyone, that doesn't make him evil. It makes him one person who lacks the ability to cure all social ills. If Superman actively commits genocide, then he
is evil.
We suspend our ordinary moral judgement when we watch a superhero film, or read a superhero comic, and instead step into the moral world that makes sense of supers - where stopping Luthor, or Magneto, or Doom, or whomever is of higher moral weight than reliving the real causes of real human suffering.
I tend to not suspend my moral judgement. Heck, I have a friend who couldn't get into Supernatural because the Winchesters used identity theft and credit card fraud to fund their hunting. But on the other hand, I also can't recall the last time I watched or read something that features a character who is
supposed to be cosmically Good doing something evil--but if I did, it would likely sour me to the media. Unless it was a set-up for some interesting character development. I'm not even fond of having good characters do evil things
unless i
t is called out in the media as being an evil thing. In that case, great! Otherwise, no--that's just a symptom of Mary Sueishness.
Abandoning the world for centuries is not character development.
There are moral and political critiques of the superhero genre that build on the point I've just made - again, Watchmen is one of them produced in the same medium as the genre itself - but if you take those critiques fully on board you have to abandon the genre, casting it aside as romantic or reactionary nonsense.
And again, you are comparing various mortal characters of various levels of morality to literal gods of goodness. You can't compare them.
There are criticism of this genre which think it is so irredeemably tainted, as reactionary ideology, that one shouldn't even enjoy it in imagination. When we play our FRPGs with righteous paladin rulers, and contented peasants in their rightful place, we are implicitly rejecting those criticisms. It doesn't mean, though, that we think that divine right of kings is a genuine political principle. We're just pretending!
Of course one can enjoy these media! A lot of characters I like are the bad guys or people of dubious morality. I just don't pretend that they're good. Once upon a time, I read a Buffy the Vampire Slayer fanfic where the writer had decided that Spike had never ever killed anyone except for that one guy in his first episode, but there were extenuating circumstances so it was OK, because that writer couldn't handle liking a bad guy. I liked Spike a whole lot, but I never pretended he wasn't a mass murderer many times over.
And you can like Dragonlance as much as you want. What you
can't do, in all honesty, say that godly beings who committed genocide are paragons of Good.
So it doesn't really matter if you're pulling out examples from comics or Tolkien or Arthurian legend. Is the character you're talking about a god who committed genocide when they literally had the power to choose a different way to achieve their goals? If yes, then that character cannot be cosmically Good. The end. If no, then you can't compare them.
If Dragonlance changed so there were just gods of varying alignment but not Gods of Good and Gods of Evil, and the gods with good alignments did something evil, then that would be
fine. Because there is a difference between lawful good and Cosmically Good.
And the same with DL, just as with JRRT's downfall of Numenor. We use our imagination to step into a world where a people's hubris is a grave sin; where righteous punishment is what the Law of Consequence demands. In using our imaginations that way, we're not endorsing the imagined moral outlook any more than we do so when enjoying a King Arthur story, or a superhero story.
(Of course, there are real people in the real world who don't need to use their imaginations to step into the moral outlook of DL, because it is one they actually inhabit. This is what I mean when I say that the moral outlook of DL is an extremely familiar one.)
Yes. And the real world does not have people who are cosmically Good in it. We just have good people.
I don't know what you mean by "as good as one can expect". Someone who is a sincere pacifist or anti-militarist would expect the knights of Solamnia, in so far as they are genuinely good, to eschew the use of lethal violence - for instance, as various real-world religious figures in multiple traditions have done from time to time.
Really? Because I explained myself. The Knights of Solamnia are not cosmically Good. They are simply good people, or at least people who strive for goodness. Their society and technological level isn't one that can support people stopping bad guys by means of a friendly therapist and job coach.
So please understand this: I am talking about the gods of Good. Not mortals who are not cosmically Good. You are consistently comparing apples to carburetors. They are completely different things.
Of course we can imagine that theologians in Krynn debate how a baby, newly-born on the morning of the Cataclysm, warranted the punishment they suffered. Some of them might also ask how it is just for a Knight of Solamnia to kill an enemy and thus ruin the livelihood of that enemy's innocent spouse and children. Or even how it is just for a Knight of Solamnia to spend a fortune upkeeping arms, armour, steed, castle etc while the ordinary people live in poverty. In the real world, theologians and moral philosophers and policy makers come up with answers to these questions that satisfy some of the questioners at least some of the time. Maybe our thinkers of Krynn do the same. But the more we imagine these sorts of questions being asked, and the harder we press them, the closer we are coming to imagining our way out of the genre altogether.
I don't need to debate Krynnish theologians. I am talking about a fictional world from a meta-perspective, which insists that the Gods of Good committed genocide and kept their good alignments. I literally do not care about the in-setting perspective.
But I suppose I could turn the question around: what is the punishment for the sin of mass murder?