Alignment - because we ...ing can't let it pass
Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 5:49 pm
Orifinal post by PoliteNewb
Yes, of course what "chaotic behavior" and what "lawful behavior" are vary depending on culture ("who else is doing it too"). So the fuck what? You can act lawfully or chaotically without necessarily being lawful or chaotic, depending on situation.
Being lawful means you act lawfully even when it is not in your best interest...because you believe in fucking laws. You think collectivism, organization, hierarchy, etc...these are "right" things. Even if it might suck for you at a given moment, you don't want the system to break down because the system has generally worked for you before. (Or hell, maybe not even...I know tons of suckers who have been raped by the system yet steadfastly defend it as the right way for society to work)
You are a "when in Rome" kind of guy...and if Rome happens to be crazyland where there are no laws, you will probably feel very uncomfortable most of the time, because you feel there SHOULD be some fucking laws.
Being chaotic means you feel that individual freedoms are more important than consensus. That mob mentality is not necessarily the best way to run a society. That someone else's rules may in fact be entirely arbitrary. It also means that while a law may be in your best interest (and you may even sometimes take advantage of that fact), you generally are in favor of less laws, and would happily do without them. Again, I know people like this...there are people who refuse welfare money that they are entitled to because they believe "the government shouldn't be doing that". Likewise there are people that smoke marijuana or own weapons in places where those things are illegal because they feel regulating them is none of the governments business.
Owning weapons, smoking weed, swearing in public, prostitution and many many other things, are not inherently good or evil. But numerous governments have (and do) regulate these things. Whether or not you think that's a good idea determines whether YOU as a person are lawful or chaotic. Whether or not you OBEY those regulations determines whether you are acting lawfully or chaotically at any given moment.
So no, all leaders are not chaotic...though most of their followers probably are lawful. If a leader even believes in some sort of approval of the masses for justifying his rule (whether it be democratic republic, inherited right to rule, or just appointment by deity), he is being lawful. Because positing rules mean that those rules can be turned against you (there is a recount, someone proves you're a bastard, or the dude down the street works a better miracle).
Okay, I said I was done, but I can't let this pass.schpeelah wrote:Well, that's the whole problem with Chaos meaning individualism - all leaders are Chaotic, their followers are Lawful, talking and acting in a given way is Lawful of Chaotic dependiing on and whether other people are doing it too, the whole system falls apart.
Yes, of course what "chaotic behavior" and what "lawful behavior" are vary depending on culture ("who else is doing it too"). So the fuck what? You can act lawfully or chaotically without necessarily being lawful or chaotic, depending on situation.
Being lawful means you act lawfully even when it is not in your best interest...because you believe in fucking laws. You think collectivism, organization, hierarchy, etc...these are "right" things. Even if it might suck for you at a given moment, you don't want the system to break down because the system has generally worked for you before. (Or hell, maybe not even...I know tons of suckers who have been raped by the system yet steadfastly defend it as the right way for society to work)
You are a "when in Rome" kind of guy...and if Rome happens to be crazyland where there are no laws, you will probably feel very uncomfortable most of the time, because you feel there SHOULD be some fucking laws.
Being chaotic means you feel that individual freedoms are more important than consensus. That mob mentality is not necessarily the best way to run a society. That someone else's rules may in fact be entirely arbitrary. It also means that while a law may be in your best interest (and you may even sometimes take advantage of that fact), you generally are in favor of less laws, and would happily do without them. Again, I know people like this...there are people who refuse welfare money that they are entitled to because they believe "the government shouldn't be doing that". Likewise there are people that smoke marijuana or own weapons in places where those things are illegal because they feel regulating them is none of the governments business.
Owning weapons, smoking weed, swearing in public, prostitution and many many other things, are not inherently good or evil. But numerous governments have (and do) regulate these things. Whether or not you think that's a good idea determines whether YOU as a person are lawful or chaotic. Whether or not you OBEY those regulations determines whether you are acting lawfully or chaotically at any given moment.
So no, all leaders are not chaotic...though most of their followers probably are lawful. If a leader even believes in some sort of approval of the masses for justifying his rule (whether it be democratic republic, inherited right to rule, or just appointment by deity), he is being lawful. Because positing rules mean that those rules can be turned against you (there is a recount, someone proves you're a bastard, or the dude down the street works a better miracle).