Felix said:
Pardon me? You mean you thought someone was going to reply? Would you prefer to be ignored?
Wow- I can really see that you are looking to argue. I was simply stating that I knew someone would get upset by what ever it was I had to say, not that I would be surprised by a reply or that I was trying to get a reply just that I knew someone would get upset. For once I can see I was correct.
Felix said:
You misunderstand. The Paladin is a base class in a rules system. As such it lacks thought, understanding, or opinions. Any given character has these things, but the class lacks it completely. So saying "the rules set that is a base class lacks understanding" is silly. Only a character can have understanding. "The Paladin" isn't a character. Get my drift?
Nope. Thou I think what your saying is that- actually I don't see what your point is. Sorry.
My point is that Paladins are very narrow in their line of thought, that they see evil as evil and good as good. They tend to catagorize people into one or the other- use a poison and you'r evil, commit an evil act you're evil, fight evil and your good.
Felix said:
No, no. The code of conduct says "Paladin's don't use poison. They also don't do evil things. They cannot consort with evil creatures." It does not say "Paladin's kill anything that uses poison because poison is evil." See, poison is not necessarily evil, Paladins are banned from using it because it is dishonorable. I think any given paladin understands that creatures use poison to survive. Or perhaps you'd like to explain it to every paladin's player?
I am trying really hard to stay on track with knowing that poison is mirely a tool and not a classification to evil deeds. When I started this I was of the mind that it was just a tool, now after reading posts from guys like you and a few others I am coming to the conclusion that it is because people have to justify themselves in commiting an evil act.
"No, no, I had no choice, I had to poison them, it was my only choice," is what I am reading and it just seems to much like trying to justify yourself some how.
Felix said:
You were the one who said murder is murder. I have no problem with this argument, but it is inconsistent with your first post.
Yes, and I was trying to make the point that feeling like a murder makes you a murder. My sniper bud sees the sniper shot into his first kill as murder. He feels terrible about it and would rather have not done it. It felt like murder to him.
Felix said:
You dodged my question. What amount of extra training one combatant has will turn a fiar fight into an unfair one. You mentioned the example of a 1st level commoner vs a 20th level fighter. Ok, that's not fair, says you. I imagine a 10th level fighter vs another 10th level fighter is fair? So we have a range here. Unfair at one end and fair at the other. At what point does the unfair fight become fair? 10 levels of separation? 5? 2?
Okay- proof to point you love to argue.
Commoner 1 vs Fighter 20- that is what you would call a fair fight? Wow!
Felix said:
...was meant to have you think about how a paladin might react to this kind of poison use. Not as an argument, but rather as trying to be helpful to someone who says they have a problem.
I do and that is why I have not given up on you yet. You seem fairly intelligent so I am trying to not just go with my instincts. Please continue.
Felix said:
The definiton is not up to the Paladin. The game rules define what is and isn't a poison.
Originally Posted by Talon5
I think what we need to to define what Paladin defines as a poison.
What this means is- a paldin defines P-Dragons as using a poison, should a wiz buddy have a P Dragon familiar and the dragon stings an Orc to save the pally's life does that not come close to offending his moral code. I mean an ally used a poison to help him.
By defining what a Pally sees as a poison the Pally can pet the P Dragon and say "thank you, friend," without cutting the edge of his moral code.
Felix said:
I agree, but you assume Paladins don't use poison because it's evil. Not so. Paladins don't use poison because it's not honorable.
Something I thought I had said in the beginning of this whole thing (should I have the time I will try to look), but now (as I have stated previously) I am starting to see it otherwise.
The use of poisons is unhonorable on that we agree. Now should an alley use a poison does that offend the Pally's code of conduct? Because his alley is unhonorable.
Felix said:
No, it is not in your mind's eye. It is according to the law. Saying something is murder does not make it so. I could think you're a cucumber, and see you in my mind's eye that way, but it's not true. Murder is unlawful killing. That's it. There might be a disagreement on what is lawful and what isn't, but that's why we have courts: to interpret and apply the law, sentiment and morality aside.
Murdering someone (to me and those that I know who have killed) is the deliberate killing of someone when they are unaware of the attack or unable to defend themselves. The law defined the woman I mentioned previously as having killed the two men in self defense and thus it wasn't murder, thou she still feels that she laid in wait for them (she was waiting for them to find her). The Marine Sniper was incerted into a foreign country, moved into position and waited for a couple of days for the man to arrive- guy shows and he gets the final call. Those two examples- while both legal in the eyes of the law do not change how the individuals view the killings they commited. They have to live with those deaths, and they had never viewed themselves as killers before, and now they are.
Felix said:
And so what she did wasn't murder... because the judge threw the charges out, nothing more. Because that's the law. Had he convicted her, she would be a murderer.
Ya, the law says she isn't, but that doesn't change how she feels.
Felix said:
And that's the law. No court, just death. A trial does not a murderer make. The law defines a murderer, and since animals killing humans is unlawful, any animal that kills a human is a murderer. If the law were the same for humans as it is for animals, then any killing we did would be murder.
Murder is a state of laws- yes. Murder is also a state of mind. I have two friends that have killed lawfully, but feel that those three deaths (while justified) were acts of murder. Neither likes what they did, thou the world views their actions as justified and legal, in their minds it was not- it was murder.
Felix said:
That's easy, tell the paladin this: "My poison puts people to sleep just like the wizard's spell. So arrest the wiz and me together, or bugger off."
Grayson will argue that poison is a tool, like an arrow or a sword or a hammer, or a rope, or a chisel, or saw or etc. State the arguement that is placed here on this thread, but when push comes to shove- he will back down. Why? Because he will lose the popular vote and he knows that and he wants to be there, he wants to be with his love interest and he wants to be part of something again (a family).
Felix said:
It does not have to be that way. "He's out? Tie him up." is just as reasonable a follow up. The cutting of the throat, and not the rendering unconscious by poison, kills the fellow.
50/50- kill or tie up.
Felix said:
I believe Saeviomagy was referring to the fact that most poisons don't attack CON. Str, Dex, Int, Wis, Cha poisons won't kill you, just render you paralyzed or unconscious. If they don't kill you, they arn't lethal. Being made vulnerable to a cut throat does not make the poison lethal.
Con poisons will kill (DMG pg72)- it is the only stat that will, the others render you helpless. As far as being rendered helpless and the poison making you vunerable to the end of the battle whows- well....
Felix said:
Again with the poison=evil. It's bleedin dishonorable, but not necessairly evil. And paladins can associate with dishonorable folk as long as they don't jeapordize their code of conduct. And if the Paladin doesn't use the poison, then he's not jeapordizing his code of conduct. No reason for the Paladin to throw you out of the party. Easy peasy.
Actually I doubt that Amilor would say "get out," no, I think he would say something like- "I can't work with someone that uses poisons. I must go," the others would jump all over him- "your not leaving for Grayson's poison use. If anyone is going it's him."
Felix said:
And the DM has to decide if the BoED is part of the rules set. The book isn't core, so if the things in that book are not being used, then it should be discarded as a hard and fast rule. A precident, maybe, but not a rule.
So many House Rules that we have to post them on our group site. We use a lot of different rules for things- the GMs are both players and we see the whole- if I make this ruling here then its gonna be the same in his campaign type thing. We talk a lot about rulings, few times has the GM ever jumped on- "this is my campaign and this is how its gonna be!" band wagon, usually it- "what do you guys think- these are the ramifications and this is what it means."
Felix said:
Still pondering. Thou I am starting to lean away from where I started towards the idea that poison use could be evil and that people that use it are trying to justify their use to it- no, of it.
Thank you for you're input.