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Guest 85555
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Right, but in your hurry to show both sides, you ultimately show that the sides are empty. One side can or cannot lead to atrocities and the other side can or cannot lead to atrocities, there is no practical difference. A large chunk of people believe in many things, some of them good, some of them bad. The entire point of critical thinking, science, and other such things is to look at the REASONS people believe things, and then judge if it is sound to continue believing in them.
I did't say there isn't a difference. I just said both can lead to bad things. I would argue the absence of this paradigm can lead to much less restraint and to more atrocities (not in all cases but overall). However I do understand that is a hefty debate and one where there are plenty of good points to be made against my position (I've been on both sides of the debate one rate years and ultimately come down on the one I expressed, but I do think it is one where reasonable arguments can be made for both positions).
The majority of humanity believes humans are special, but that doesn't mean they are right, or that their reasons for believing it are more sound than "because I want to believe it".
Sure and that is a deep philosophical and spiritual question which we probably can't get too far into on this forum. But I think it is easy to draw up a caricature or a simplification of both positions here.
And there has been much discussion about whether or not the Barbarian class needs renamed, because the name isn't really tenable.
Is it though? No one today is really called a barbarian in the sense of the class (well my wife calls me one, but that is because she thinks I open doors too loudly). And when people do use this term it doesn't describe a way of life, but more typically, acts of extreme cruelty during war (i.e. the bombing of civilian targets was barbaric). And people use it to describe their enemies all the time, but even then that isn't the Conan sense of the term. In Conan being a barbarian is a good thing.
For example, people often point out that "Conan the Barbarian" was articulate, well-educated, nobility or royalty multiple times, and solved many of his challenges with a quick wit and sharp intellect. Does that sound like the stereotypical DnD barbarian who screams "ME SMASH SMALL!"? Doesn't sound like it to me.
No, because the D&D barbarian is largely influenced by movies. But people also oversell Conan's intellect in the Howard stories. He was smart and cunning, but he also was a man of very simple tastes and certainly not a scholar. He just didn't sound like Arnold. Personally though I love Arnold depiction of Conan. I think it's great
So, again, we are faced with a DnD trope based on the most shallow, least accurate depiction of something possible, and then claiming that because it IS a depiction of that thing, that it is good and we should keep it. I also like the barbarian class, but we could really stand to expand it more, and show more of the truth of the people these myths and legends came from.
Again though this is just a slow whittling away of the things that make the game work. The barbarian class is a lot of fun. People love the rage ability. People adore the concept. It is packed with flavor. Albeit its simplistic, it doesn't tell you anything about history but it works wonderfully in a fantasy or sword and sorcery RPG