Flamestrike
Legend
Hiya!
I didn't read the whole thread, so here's a grain of salt.
Neutral is about "survival of self first, then family, then friends, then everyone else". Chaos is about "freedom to make choices and personal desires first". Evil is about "getting something for yourself through the suffering and pain of others". Good is about "helping those around you, even at cost to yourself, friends, and family".
CN mixes the "Freedom" with the "survival". The Chaotic part puts them in the "me first, friends and family second...everyone else has to fend for themselves". The Neutral part determines how they will go about getting the "me first" thing accomplished. In this case...Evil nor Good are considerations.
So, a CG person may think "I really want that money! I don't know the guy, so I could kill him...I guess. But then again, he could be a really nice guy with a family. I mean...just because someone wants him dead doesn't really give that someone the right to just take his life. That's not fair at all. Hmmm....naaaa. Forget it. I'm not killing anyone for money." Now, a CE person may think "I really want that money! And they didn't say how I had to kill him...my choice I guess. This is great! I can finally try out that new paralytic poison! If it works I can get in a little bit of fun torturing him to death. Count me in!".
Now, the CN person may think "I really want that money! I'll just take if from this guy now. Attack!" ... Or maybe he thinks "I really want that money! I'll kill that guy, sure!"... Or maybe he thinks "I really want that money! But I'm not up for killing anyone today. Pass."
The big difference is that the CN person doesn't have that "moral compass" to help him decide on what action to take. He doesn't care if it's good or evil. He doesn't care about the outcome at all. He only cares about himself and what he wants at that moment. And yes, for the record, I do see CN as the "insane" alignment. It's a very difficult alignment to pull off, as D&D is a group-based game, and CN characters are whimsical in what they will do. The player has to basically play the character in a way that will, eventually, result in the party killing him or otherwise "not being with him". For CN, think uber-spoiled 7 year old; they want what they want, and they want it now...and they don't care how they get it.
PS: Alignment is determined by the DM...not the player and not the characters "personal upbringing". If the DM says "Killing sentient life" is evil, then it's evil, regardless of the fact that the CE drow cleric lived in Erelhei-Cinlu and there "killing for fun and profit" was a noble and aspired virtue.
^_^
Paul L. Ming
I completely disagree.
The CN person does have a moral compass. He's morally neutral. He is neither evil nor is he good (nor as you suggest, alternating between both).
He avoids both evil actions and altruistic ones and lives in the shades of grey in the middle of the two extremes.
Neutral is not a licence to be evil and good. Youre not a moral switch hitter, just because youre Chaotic. A Neutral character is... well... neutral with respect to both. The chaos thing doesnt mean that he swings between them - any more than a chaotic good person swings between good and neutral.
A True neutral person doesnt murder people for money (as that is evil) nor does he give all he has to charity (that's good). He earns his money as best he can, and uses it to live a good life for himself and his family. He may occasionally lie and cheat for gain, but he wont murder and kill. He may occasionally give a few coppers to a beggar, or help a little old lady across the street, while retaining enough cash to live comfortably himself or if it doesnt otherwise inconvenience him.
The chaotic neutral person is morally in the same boat, just with little regard for tradition, laws, honor or rules. He'll cheat, lie and look after his own skin without being evil (or altruistic). His word doesnt generally mean much, if he gets an advantage from breaking it, and no-one gets hurt in the process. Your average petty criminal would be CN. The Lawful neutral dude will be morally the same, but stick to his word, and work within the laws of the land and out of a sense of duty or obligation. Your average judge or law abiding citizen would be LN.