glass
(he, him)
Well, I'd prefer to term it that a monk can benefit from the feats effect due to his ability, but does not meet the prerequisites because of it (although he may do so in other ways). EDIT: But essentially yes, that is my position.Pinotage said:Can I just quickly ask something to make sure I understand the basis of your argument:
You're saying that a feat is not an effect, but that the benefit is, and as such, given that the monk can qualify for the benefit, but not the prerequisite, that implies the monk can't take INA? Is that correct?
If it is, how do you justify that a feat is not an effect?
These are the relevant clauses from dictionary.com. A feat fits either of those definitions, so it is not an effect.dictionary.com said:
- Something brought about by a cause or agent; a result.
- The power to produce an outcome or achieve a result; influence:
glass.
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