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[Very Long] Combat as Sport vs. Combat as War: a Key Difference in D&D Play Styles...
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<blockquote data-quote="FireLance" data-source="post: 5808946" data-attributes="member: 3424"><p>Actually, now that you mention it, I have a different definition of herosim.</p><p></p><p>At its most basic, heroism means doing the right thing (at least to me). Of course, the harder it is to do, the more the odds are stacked against you, the greater the heroism. However, if what you're doing isn't right in the first place, then you're not a hero in my book. Someone who wins the lottery succeeds where he's not expected to succeed, but I don't consider him a hero.</p><p></p><p>The guy who rushes into a buring building to save a trapped child? He's a hero. To me, it doesn't matter whether he's a fireman who's been specially trained and has the right equipment so that the chance of him succeeding and surviving is more than 90%, or some man off the street who decides to do it because he's the only one around who can help and the trained firemen will not arrive in time. </p><p></p><p>Now, while I would consider the latter to be more heroic because it requires a great deal more courage for Joe Everyman to rush into a burning building than for a professional fireman, that doesn't stop the fireman from also being a hero. After all, he's doing the right thing, and he's risking his life to do so (a 90% chance of survival still means a 10% chance of not surviving).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FireLance, post: 5808946, member: 3424"] Actually, now that you mention it, I have a different definition of herosim. At its most basic, heroism means doing the right thing (at least to me). Of course, the harder it is to do, the more the odds are stacked against you, the greater the heroism. However, if what you're doing isn't right in the first place, then you're not a hero in my book. Someone who wins the lottery succeeds where he's not expected to succeed, but I don't consider him a hero. The guy who rushes into a buring building to save a trapped child? He's a hero. To me, it doesn't matter whether he's a fireman who's been specially trained and has the right equipment so that the chance of him succeeding and surviving is more than 90%, or some man off the street who decides to do it because he's the only one around who can help and the trained firemen will not arrive in time. Now, while I would consider the latter to be more heroic because it requires a great deal more courage for Joe Everyman to rush into a burning building than for a professional fireman, that doesn't stop the fireman from also being a hero. After all, he's doing the right thing, and he's risking his life to do so (a 90% chance of survival still means a 10% chance of not surviving). [/QUOTE]
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[Very Long] Combat as Sport vs. Combat as War: a Key Difference in D&D Play Styles...
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