Canis said:
I could just as easily demonstrate that "Groups of being sthat work for the collective" are Lawful Evil. Or just plain Lawful, which it is, IMO.
"Groups of beings that work for the collective" by giving of themselves are LG.
"Groups of beings that work for the collective" by, say, killing those who break the rules, are LE.
Julius Caesar was working hard to improve the lot of his collective, Rome. Does that make him good? No.
You're attributing collecting people in a functional group to good.
I could just as easily prove that it's evil because it's precisely the impluse that is ultimately responsible for war, famine, and overpopulation.
Sure, you could demonstrate that beings working for the collective are lawful, and non-good. But since working for the collective is also a trait of goodness -- this isn't me saying this, BTW, but lots of other people who have told me in clear terms -- that <I>chaotic good beings work together</i> to solve problems which threaten them all.
Which is my point. Helpfulness of the group is seen by many as lawful <i>and</i> a good trait. That is is a lawful trait does not mean it is not a good trait -- people keep telling me that it is, which is why I'm bringing it up and why I'm unsatisfied with the group vs. the individual as a description of the difference between law and chaos. It isn't seperate enough from good and evil.