Artoomis
First Post
That’s a reasonable position. Although I can defend the position that unarmed strikes are natural weapons, really, in truth, they are a special category that sometimes are treated like natural weapons. This is very ill-defined in the rules.Borlon said:...Finally, I reject the "unarmed strikes are natural weapons" argument. I contend that unarmed strikes are what people use when they are unarmed; that is when they don't have weapons. In other words, unarmed strikes aren't weapons at all. They aren't manufactured weapons, and they aren't natural weapons. However the rules that apply to unarmed strikes overlap with the rules for both kinds of weapons. The iterative attacks work like manufactured weapons, and enhancements that apply to natural weapons apply to them too.
No, I don't think so. He is applying common sense - very much like the painting the plastic chair example above. In fact, I'm going to re-phrase that example to make it even more applicable:Borlon said:...It seems clear to me that the Sage has conflated meeting prerequisites with qualifying for benefits, and that this is an innovation. Specifically, the principal that "unless otherwise stated, if something counts as X for the purpose of qualifying for benefits, it also counts as X for the purpose of meeting prerequisites" is a new rule, something that he is adding to the RAW. Now maybe that is something that is well within his power to do; that's for a different thread. All I want to say in this thread is that the Sage is in fact making a new rule, not simply applying the old ones.
1. A monk's special plastic chair counts as wood for effects that enhance it appearance.
2. Paint exists that allows one to change the color of a chair (enhancing its appearance).
3. The paint requires, as a prerequisite, that the chair be wood before this paint may be used.
By the logic the anti-INA side would apply, this chair CANNOT be painted with the paint in questions because it's not wood.
By the logic the pro-INA side (and the Sage) is using, it's a no-brainer and the chair can be painted. This side of the debate, I think, feels that a little common sense goes a long way here. If the chair could be painted only if it was wood, but it counts as wood for effects that enhance it's appearance (like painting), then a wood-only paint can, in fact, be used on the chair.
Or, to replace a few words:
If the monk's attack could be enhanced only if it was a natural weapon, but it counts as natural weapon for effects that enhance it (like doing damage as one size category larger), then a natural-weapon only increasing-size effect, in fact, be used on the attack.
The very thought of somehow splitting out prerequisites (or even feats) as though they existed totally separate from the feat (or the feat’s effects) is silly – if you have something that let's you qualify for the feat ONLY in the context of the benefits of the feat, then it's tortured logic to say you don’t qualify.
In other words, "effect," in this context, includes feats and their prerequisites even if one would normally state that feats produce effects and are not effects themselves.
This is true partly because "effect" is not a defined D&D term, and so, to know what is meant by any particular mention of the word, one must look to context.
I realize that the other side of this argument is having a great deal of trouble of accepting the concept that prerequisites need to be taken in context in this case, and not a completely separate logical entity all their own.