"A roleplaying game is a game of character development, simulating the process of personal development commonly called 'life'."
According to my Google-fu, yes. From the second edition, published in 1980, and one of the earliest RPGs to attempt to define what an RPG is.Runequest?
The interesting next question - if we have to force that statement into one of my two boxes, which one?"A roleplaying game is a game of character development, simulating the process of personal development commonly called 'life'."
You may not be conscious of it, but your personality determines your reactions to everything. If I'm trying to simulate that in a game, I have to consciously choose a personality for my PC and follow it.The interesting next question - if we have to force that statement into one of my two boxes, which one?
I'm going to push it towards the "function" box - if we're simulating life, we're simulating a process in which external circumstances and institutions make demands upon a person and thereby shape his/her choices. Unless we're Nietzschean or Foucauldian supermen, we're not, in living our lives, self-consciously cultivating and acting out particular personalities.
The interesting next question - if we have to force that statement into one of my two boxes, which one?
Would this definiton mean that chess is a RPG?It could mean filling a role that is defined by functions, capacities, responsibilities, etc.
No. This has been covered multiple times upthread.Would this definiton mean that chess is a RPG?
Simulating a process of determination that operates in a manner that is not self-conscious by means of consciously choosing certain things is, in my view, a very dubious mode of simulation.You may not be conscious of it, but your personality determines your reactions to everything. If I'm trying to simulate that in a game, I have to consciously choose a personality for my PC and follow it.