Author Topic: Philosophic Discussions for Characters  (Read 16872 times)

Offline Quantus

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Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« on: April 17, 2017, 02:57:31 PM »
Occasionally I run across an idea that I'd like to make a core tenant of a given character.  But for them to hold up I need the odd sounding board now and then to see if people who think Not Like Me can poke holes agree and/or can reasonably argue against it.  Sometimes I have multiple characters discussing such things, and trying to play both sides is like playing chess against yourself (possible but fundamentally unsatisfying). 

So if anyone is like me and just needs loaner Minds to kick some abstract ideas around, this can be a place to do it. 




Ill start us off:

Stage: Two travelers, both honorable and selfless.  Each with what on the surface appear to be fundamentally opposed. The eventual destination would be to explore the places of conflict and to arrive at common ground shared by both philosophies, and a Battle (and accompanying motivations) that both would accept.

Character 1)  All motivation comes from a Desire to Protect something, and the "Something" will tell you everything you need to know about a Person.  Protect your Honor; Protect your Life; Protect who you Love, or what You've Built.  Protect an Idea.  Protect a Hope for the Future.   Protect that which you Love from The Which you Fear.  There is no dishonor in Fear, because Fear becomes Focus

Character 2)  All Motivation comes from EITHER Fear or Pleasure, and Fear is a slow toxin.  To live your entire life under the Weight of Fear is to miss the whole Point of Life in the first place.  There is no dishonor in Fighting for Joy rather than fighting for Fear. Joy of Victory, Joy found in the Peace that comes After, Joy of a Wrong Righted.
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Offline The Deposed King

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #1 on: April 25, 2017, 03:05:42 PM »
Character 2 might at first be the most firm and rejecting of character one.  but over time would be able to internalize that character one's desire to 'protect' all comes from fear or pleasure.  He protects for fear of his own personal loss, the loss of a loved one, the loss of his honor the loss of his etc.  And he protects because the act of protecting gives him pleasure.

The other guy would actually reject everything about the philosophy of character 2 but because to him while words are important ultimately actions speak louder than words.  So the more he realizes that character 2 talks a big game about seeking after pleasure and the danger of fear, as he sees that what guy actually does he realizes that what this guy actually follows the spirit a code of honor but rejects the letter of the code. Making him more of a Ronin or masterless samuria.  A dangerous individual in other words.  A lordless man unfettered by strictures he is like a double edged sword, entirely dependent upon the wielder's skill it increases his deadliness but the slighest slip can cause damage.  While a man bound by a code is like a single edged sword, still deadly, but with more potential to stop oneself from violating one's own beliefs in a fight of anger or rage.  To character 1 codes of honor don't just constrict you they protect you, at least the one's you willingly take upon yourself.  Character 2 on the other hand he's more a rebel without a cause doing what he pleases as he pleases and no one else tells him how he should feel, think or act.

Does that help at all.

The one character realizes that despite rejecting everything except for fear and pleasure, underneath it all the other guy actually is honorable.  He would have the easier surface acceptance trying to over time convince the other possibly.  And the other character utterly rejects the tenants of the first before eventually realizing that the despite all the pretty words about self control and honor and duty and all that, when it comes to crunch time Mr. Protection does the right thing in the end.  He still thinks he should loosen up and just admit when he's a secret adrenaline junkie but whatever.

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Offline Griffyn612

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #2 on: April 27, 2017, 10:08:29 PM »
I'll admit, I'm confused.  You've already listed the "common ground", which is that "both are honorable and selfless."  Under any conflict, if they share these two virtues, they'll find commonality.  You have to have one of them not possess one of these virtues to have any real difference.  Otherwise you've just got two characters that are going to do the same thing in most scenarios.

Offline Quantus

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #3 on: June 02, 2017, 01:37:27 PM »
These arent primary characters at all, they arent going to get the sort of stage-time that it would take for their own arcs.  Their purpose is embody and illustrate their opposing viewpoints, so that the young and sheltered MC who was raised on storybooks can get a look (on of several throughout) that the world is far more complex than he realized and that ideologies can be entirely opposed without one being "Good" and the other "Evil".  So while I want the two characters, their opposing viewpoints and debates, to be the vehicle of this and so want them to be living examples of the opposing ideologies, I need their philosophic arguments to be robust enough stand entirely on their own, ideally enough so that the debates end in stalemate.  Which is where Im running into trouble, Im not naturally schizophrenic enough to argue with myself to that kind of impasse. 
<(o)> <(o)>
        / \
      (o o)
   \==-==/


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"An entire life, an entire personality, can be permanently altered by just one sentence." -An Accidental Villain

Offline Griffyn612

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #4 on: June 02, 2017, 07:29:43 PM »
These arent primary characters at all, they arent going to get the sort of stage-time that it would take for their own arcs.  Their purpose is embody and illustrate their opposing viewpoints, so that the young and sheltered MC who was raised on storybooks can get a look (on of several throughout) that the world is far more complex than he realized and that ideologies can be entirely opposed without one being "Good" and the other "Evil".  So while I want the two characters, their opposing viewpoints and debates, to be the vehicle of this and so want them to be living examples of the opposing ideologies, I need their philosophic arguments to be robust enough stand entirely on their own, ideally enough so that the debates end in stalemate.  Which is where Im running into trouble, Im not naturally schizophrenic enough to argue with myself to that kind of impasse.
Give me an example.  I'm pretty good at looking at both sides of things, to the point I've argued for something enough to convince people of it, only to then argue against it and unconvince them. (Which is as obnoxious as it sounds (

Offline MikeTybu

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Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #5 on: October 20, 2017, 06:16:29 PM »
Yes, that sounds good Anita   

I think more people would recognise Enids characters than her herself to be honest... What about the Famous Five of Five Find-Outers?

Offline wardenferry419

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #6 on: October 20, 2017, 10:36:35 PM »
To be honorable and selfless is to be a martyr and martyrs would rather die well than live bad.
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Offline jonas

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #7 on: October 21, 2017, 09:55:03 PM »
I'll admit, I'm confused.  You've already listed the "common ground", which is that "both are honorable and selfless."  Under any conflict, if they share these two virtues, they'll find commonality.  You have to have one of them not possess one of these virtues to have any real difference.  Otherwise you've just got two characters that are going to do the same thing in most scenarios.
Harry and Marcone anyone?
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Offline Griffyn612

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #8 on: October 22, 2017, 01:51:14 AM »
Harry and Marcone anyone?
Marcone isn't selfless, nor is he honorable.  At best, he's compensatory and proportionate.

Offline wardenferry419

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #9 on: October 22, 2017, 08:14:54 AM »
Marcone is the controlling authority figure and Harry is the resistance to authority.
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Offline the neurovore of Zur-En-Aargh

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #10 on: November 14, 2017, 08:54:38 PM »
Marcone is Lawful and a fair amount of the way into Evil; Harry, whatever he may like to think, is Chaotic as all get-out.
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Offline Griffyn612

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #11 on: November 15, 2017, 04:56:10 AM »
Marcone is Lawful and a fair amount of the way into Evil; Harry, whatever he may like to think, is Chaotic as all get-out.
I'm not sure Harry would dispute that.  He'd only argue that he's chaotic not by nature, but by necessity.

To which others would look at his inherent disinclination toward social norms, in both the human and magical worlds, and simply raise a doubtful brow.

Offline jonas

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #12 on: November 15, 2017, 11:40:03 AM »
Marcone isn't selfless, nor is he honorable.  At best, he's compensatory and proportionate.
He's at least of proportionate Honor too though, to that of a tiger's sense of Honor of course lol. But he does have some, as with his new cohort Mab. Also completely ruthless, but that doesn't mean he'll intentionally do someone dirty under his own code. A code, any relavent to your actions code can be considered one's 'honor', look at Klingons and their skewed sense of it. Only one who seemed to get it right was Worf and he seemed very influenced by earth sensibilities in the same area, tempered by it. Marcone is tempered by the frost instead.
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Offline Griffyn612

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #13 on: November 15, 2017, 05:25:51 PM »
He's at least of proportionate Honor too though, to that of a tiger's sense of Honor of course lol. But he does have some, as with his new cohort Mab. Also completely ruthless, but that doesn't mean he'll intentionally do someone dirty under his own code. A code, any relavent to your actions code can be considered one's 'honor', look at Klingons and their skewed sense of it. Only one who seemed to get it right was Worf and he seemed very influenced by earth sensibilities in the same area, tempered by it. Marcone is tempered by the frost instead.
Personally I think you're confusing "honor" with "keeping one's word", but it's a common parallel, so I get where you're coming from.  But I don't think they're the same in his case.

Offline the neurovore of Zur-En-Aargh

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Re: Philosophic Discussions for Characters
« Reply #14 on: November 15, 2017, 07:42:31 PM »
I'm not sure Harry would dispute that.  He'd only argue that he's chaotic not by nature, but by necessity.

Harry embraces following his heart as a guide to doing what's right, and reacting to what is immediately in front of him, as modes of making moral choices.  He may well think he is doing the necessary thing, but his rejection of thinking through longer-term consequences and endeavouring to do things that will have better results overall when that cuts against what feels obviously right to him at the moment, and tendency to pretty much always think anyone who does think that way must be doing it for personal benefit, is getting good and evil tangled up in a classic Order/Chaos distinction, and as I understand it taking that position counts as a free-willed action in DV terms.

Hey, does DV free will come with the moral meta-obligation to examine and assess how one makes moral decisions and change one's nature accordingly, or should I just go back to hiding in my room for another year ?
« Last Edit: November 15, 2017, 07:48:28 PM by the neurovore of Zur-En-Aargh »
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