Value of Slaves

FreeTheSlaves said:
I don't think we can use the term indoctrination can we? I mean, freely engaging in a discussion of an issue using reasoned debate, is hardly indoctrination.
Except that "Consciousness Raising" isn't used so. It's used as a way to emphasize the unassailable rightness of a position based purely on emotive identification and to produce peer pressure against those who do not conform to it. Good or Ill it's all a tool of indoctrination usually by those who are blinded to the irony of their own situation.
 

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I don't play with people who cannot seperate reality and fiction/fantasy - or those who think no one else can. I could not really DM if my players believed that I wanted to become a lich, vampire, or sell my soul for greater power over shadow magic.

As far as slave pricing goes, I tend to run it by the ear. If work horses go for X, then unskilled laborers usually go for the same amount of money. Skilled laborers go for more, but supply and demand and the general randomness of auctions mean that usually there's no fixed price.

Roleplaying-wise, we've had enslaved PCs, PCs freeing slaves, and PCs keeping slaves, all in the same campaign. But then, I consider serfdom as slavery as well, and feudalism without serfs as not that much better, being a rather radical democrat/republican (We Swiss tend to be, with direct democracy, and the ability to vote on anything, from new VAT rates to the purchase of fighters for the air force). So, if I play in a Fantasy campaign, then I can either

a) make it a world where I would feel happy in, without feudalism, knights, kings, and all that, which would make it, basically, to "western 21st century, just without guns or technology, and with magic added in". Not very appealing.

b) play a character from modern times stuck in such a world, reforming it to world a), or

c) I could play in a fantasy world with all that stuff I hate in real life, but have fun playing around in with a character that was born there, and fits in.
 

Alzrius said:
I'm honestly not sure why you're posting this here. Are you suggesting that this article somehow lends weight to your assertion that engaging in fantasies not only necessarily reveals insight into a person's character/mental health, but also shapes their personality?

No, I thought it was related (as we are questioning how seriously to take our game play), somewhat supportive (as other people take different aspects of playing seriously for their impact on growth of the self), but only tangentially so, which was why I started a different thread for the discussion.
 
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