Author Topic: Question about the first law  (Read 12826 times)

Offline Rasins

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Question about the first law
« on: June 22, 2017, 04:07:19 PM »
If a Wizard wanted to be an assassin, but they didn't want to break the fist law, would this do?

Cast a veil on themselves, and use a gun to kill with.  While under the veil, escape.

Would this be a violation of the first law?
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Offline Quantus

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #1 on: June 22, 2017, 08:14:20 PM »
If a Wizard wanted to be an assassin, but they didn't want to break the fist law, would this do?

Cast a veil on themselves, and use a gun to kill with.  While under the veil, escape.

Would this be a violation of the first law?
I dont think so, but it's a damn fine line.  I think that would still fall into the same category as the Wardens that use lots of protective magics but kill with swords. 

Put turning invisible and then pushing somebody into traffic still feels like Lawbreaking, but isnt qualitatively different. So does casting an illusion to make a red light look green.
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Offline jamescagney22

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #2 on: June 22, 2017, 08:28:29 PM »
It would most likely be a case by case basis, killing in the name of the white council, probably okay, killing for profit, you are looking at a response of some kind. In any case I doubt any wizard wants the attention especially since the Blackstaff can take matters into his own hands.

Offline Rasins

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #3 on: June 23, 2017, 01:51:54 PM »
Put turning invisible and then pushing somebody into traffic still feels like Lawbreaking, but isnt qualitatively different. So does casting an illusion to make a red light look green.

I can totally see this as breaking the first law.  They are using magic to directly cause the death of another.  Where as the magic under a veil or invisibility to push someone is used to protect themselves. 

Fine line indeed.

It would most likely be a case by case basis, killing in the name of the white council, probably okay, killing for profit, you are looking at a response of some kind. In any case I doubt any wizard wants the attention especially since the Blackstaff can take matters into his own hands.

But most Wizards don't know about the Blackstaff.
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Offline jamescagney22

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #4 on: June 23, 2017, 06:54:39 PM »
But most Wizards don't know about the Blackstaff.
[/quote]
True but most wizards are already risk adverse, and would not want to risk the wardens wrath or attentions, but the Blackstaff is someone you go to as a last resort, accidents and disasters do happen, as the Council would say.

Offline Quantus

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #5 on: June 26, 2017, 12:19:35 PM »
But most Wizards don't know about the Blackstaff.

True but most wizards are already risk adverse, and would not want to risk the wardens wrath or attentions, but the Blackstaff is someone you go to as a last resort, accidents and disasters do happen, as the Council would say.
Again, that only works if the Blackstaff is publically known (and also publicly known for charity and mercy).

McCoy is somebody you go to as a last resort, but mostly only to his friends.  The Blackstaff is somebody you call more when Somethign needs doing and you cannot afford Kincaid's prices. 
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Offline jamescagney22

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #6 on: June 27, 2017, 06:05:32 AM »
Well I meant that if a wizard was causing too much publicity and skirting the first law and otherwise being a nuisance to the rest of the supernatural world that they would task the Blackstaff with ending the problem. The White Council is many things merciful is not one of them.

Offline Quantus

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #7 on: June 27, 2017, 08:56:39 PM »
Well I meant that if a wizard was causing too much publicity and skirting the first law and otherwise being a nuisance to the rest of the supernatural world that they would task the Blackstaff with ending the problem. The White Council is many things merciful is not one of them.
Eh, I tend to think they'd simply send the Wardens and declare that said wizard had actually violated a Law.  It's not like the Accused get to mount a defense or anything.  I expect the Blackstaff is going to be reserved for things that another unprotected practitioner actually can not do safely, as opposed to using it just to save face.  So if you need a Necromantic Aura (and dont have a t-rex), you call the Blackstaff.  If you need an undead Duke killed and the only way possible will have collateral damage, call the Blackstaff.  If you are facing a Warlock sooo Powerful that you dont think it will be possible to take tehm alive and kill them by non-magical means*, you call the Blackstaff.  Or if you need to trust ONE GUY with knowledge of the Outer Gates, you call him (and likely he calls the Gatekeeper).  But if you just need to kill somebody and not seem like too much of a hypocrite, there are tons of options that dont require Cosmic Artifacts of the Universe. 



*NOTE that even with Kemmer, it didnt come to this; per WOJ they took him alive and killed him non-magically. 
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Offline Shift8

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #8 on: June 28, 2017, 03:02:53 AM »
Personally I have always just disregarded the first law, seeing it as kind of stupid. There is even a WOJ if I recall basically stating that not all the magical laws actually make sense ethically. I believe law one is mentioned.

The law always seems stupid to me in general. Magic is just a tool like any other. If I can kill with non-magical instruments, why should magic make a difference. I know the WC justification is that Magic used to kill somehow corrupts the end user, but this would seem to be self-evidently preposterous. For starters, even if there were true in this manner, it would render the use of magic indirectly unjust as well in some circumstances. If I make a magical sword specifically to kill my enemies, I have still invested my magic in a death implement.

But even aside from that, its philosophically nonsense. As I understand it, they dont like it because it has some kind of negative affect on its user because the user had to invest their "self" in the killing in order to produce the magic. If this is the case, then only killing for unjust malicious intent would have said affect. If the wizard killed justly, then any adverse affect should be essentially nil since the justification of the killing would be a reflection of the "self" applied to the magic. Additionally, this law seems to imply that this presumed negative affect would affect the person free will. If a person who killed justly is still negatively affected, it should still not matter so long as they can theoretically exercise choice. Not to mention that you could equally stupidly apply this logic to non-magical means of killing. And if this were true, the whole WC and Dresden would have to step down due to "killing stress" or some nonsense.

Offline ITheHellAmFan

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #9 on: June 30, 2017, 01:10:05 PM »
Personally I have always just disregarded the first law, seeing it as kind of stupid. There is even a WOJ if I recall basically stating that not all the magical laws actually make sense ethically. I believe law one is mentioned.

The law always seems stupid to me in general. Magic is just a tool like any other. If I can kill with non-magical instruments, why should magic make a difference. I know the WC justification is that Magic used to kill somehow corrupts the end user, but this would seem to be self-evidently preposterous. For starters, even if there were true in this manner, it would render the use of magic indirectly unjust as well in some circumstances. If I make a magical sword specifically to kill my enemies, I have still invested my magic in a death implement.

But even aside from that, its philosophically nonsense. As I understand it, they dont like it because it has some kind of negative affect on its user because the user had to invest their "self" in the killing in order to produce the magic. If this is the case, then only killing for unjust malicious intent would have said affect. If the wizard killed justly, then any adverse affect should be essentially nil since the justification of the killing would be a reflection of the "self" applied to the magic. Additionally, this law seems to imply that this presumed negative affect would affect the person free will. If a person who killed justly is still negatively affected, it should still not matter so long as they can theoretically exercise choice. Not to mention that you could equally stupidly apply this logic to non-magical means of killing. And if this were true, the whole WC and Dresden would have to step down due to "killing stress" or some nonsense.

Two Counters to this.  First, at least as I see it, one of the themes of TDF is that actions have consequences, and those consequences are often entirely unrelated to the intent behind the action.  Put another way, ethics and morality in the Dresdenverse seem to be closer to Deontological systems than Utilitarian ones.  So, while the act of killing may at times be a necessary bad act, within the context of of this universe it is still an inherently bad act, and so it adversely effects the user.  And it isn't a bad thing becasue it adversely affects the person who does it, it adversely affects the user becasue it is a bad thing.  As for why this doesn't affect apply to non-magical killing, well, that's becasue magic.  It takes an effect that already results from killing (look at the kind of PTSD suffered by soldiers/police/etc., even those involved in ultimately justifiable or at least necessary violence) and cranks it up to 11 becasue the supernatural nature of the event gives that trauma a direct line to your soul.  Same general type, just massively increased scale.

Secondly, and I'll point you to what Luccio said in Turn Coat.  Basically, the White Council and it's Laws aren't actually about right/wrong, good/evil, or morality.  So, even if your argument did apply (which I don't think it does, at least not in context of the Dresdenverse), it doesn't change the fact that killing with magic is way, way easier than killing without it.  sure, when you look at things like Nukes or chemical weapons there are mundane ways of killing on a similar scale, but the are not generally the sort of thing an individual would have access to.  On the other hand, think about the amount of death someone like The Merlin, Ebeneener, Morgan, or even Harry could do if they went off the deep end and just started killing people.  So, the White Council takes a hardline at restraining that particular use of power, above and beyond the morality of the situation.  This also means that mundane killing, completely apart from morality, is simply not their department.
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Offline Quantus

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #10 on: June 30, 2017, 01:55:01 PM »
It's worth keeping in mind that Jim has very specifically and intentionally left the Morality of the Laws vague and ill-defined. It's something that's often misunderstood even to the characters that live in the world.  All this to say that this is a particular theme that I expect to see explored more as the series goes on before we get anything like a settled answer or a clear understanding of the metaphysics of it all.

Here are a pair of rather long WOJ's on the nature of Black magic and the ambiguity of the Laws, I think it's highly relevant to what we're talking about:

(click to show/hide)

(click to show/hide)

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Offline ITheHellAmFan

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #11 on: June 30, 2017, 05:27:22 PM »
Good point Quantus.  I suppose I should rephrase my previous post to state that is my interpretation of how the morality of it works based on the info I have available, but since that information is incomplete at this point in the series it is not necessarily correct.

I will say the part about the White Council's Laws of Magic, as divorced from the underlying metaphysical laws that informed them, being more about controlling power than Good or evil still stands though.
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Denoting this and that by this and that,
Your world immutable wherein no part
the little maker has with maker's art."
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Offline Shift8

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #12 on: July 01, 2017, 06:46:40 AM »
Two Counters to this.  First, at least as I see it, one of the themes of TDF is that actions have consequences, and those consequences are often entirely unrelated to the intent behind the action.  Put another way, ethics and morality in the Dresdenverse seem to be closer to Deontological systems than Utilitarian ones.  So, while the act of killing may at times be a necessary bad act, within the context of of this universe it is still an inherently bad act, and so it adversely effects the user.  And it isn't a bad thing becasue it adversely affects the person who does it, it adversely affects the user becasue it is a bad thing.  As for why this doesn't affect apply to non-magical killing, well, that's becasue magic.  It takes an effect that already results from killing (look at the kind of PTSD suffered by soldiers/police/etc., even those involved in ultimately justifiable or at least necessary violence) and cranks it up to 11 becasue the supernatural nature of the event gives that trauma a direct line to your soul.  Same general type, just massively increased scale.

Secondly, and I'll point you to what Luccio said in Turn Coat.  Basically, the White Council and it's Laws aren't actually about right/wrong, good/evil, or morality.  So, even if your argument did apply (which I don't think it does, at least not in context of the Dresdenverse), it doesn't change the fact that killing with magic is way, way easier than killing without it.  sure, when you look at things like Nukes or chemical weapons there are mundane ways of killing on a similar scale, but the are not generally the sort of thing an individual would have access to.  On the other hand, think about the amount of death someone like The Merlin, Ebeneener, Morgan, or even Harry could do if they went off the deep end and just started killing people.  So, the White Council takes a hardline at restraining that particular use of power, above and beyond the morality of the situation.  This also means that mundane killing, completely apart from morality, is simply not their department.

 I have to disagree.

Ethics is not a magical force that acts independent of logic and reality. The Dresdenverse can have as many commonly accepted ethical standards as it wants, but that doesnt make them make any sense. It doesnt matter how much the book or its characters believe in them, it doesnt suddenly make them have efficacy. The idea that events have some kind of intrinsic negative quality is absurd, especially from the standpoint of magic in the DV. The trauma that a person receives, or does not receive, from a "bad" event is entirely subjective.

I also disagree with your second point, and what Luccio said. If anything, it just reveals how utterly preposterous the 1st law is, and probably some others. All the first law does is limit direct killing with magic. When you compare this to every way magic makes any task easier, killing included, the 1st law is at best arbitrary nonsense. Considering ONLY Dresden, his killing ability is massively enhanced by all the indirect utility he gets from it. The degree of inconvenience that not being able to using is precisely pales in comparison to all the utility it would still have. Not to mention that guns in DV are many times better than magic at killing. Dresden gives quite a few reasons for why he carries a gun, but one of them was specifically that it is often easier and faster than magic. So using this logic, the first law does far more harm that it does good,  for no good reason.

To me this just reveals how stupid the WC is when it comes to the 1st law. It has no ethical or practical use. Even if the DV is "supposed" to work this way, I would still criticize that on the grounds of it being silly. It about as crazy that the law in HP that prevented people from using the killing curse from some silly reason. Kill all the death eaters you want, just dont use that dreaded evil killing curse. Oh no, that would be too awful....


Offline Shift8

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #13 on: July 01, 2017, 07:03:25 AM »
It's worth keeping in mind that Jim has very specifically and intentionally left the Morality of the Laws vague and ill-defined. It's something that's often misunderstood even to the characters that live in the world.  All this to say that this is a particular theme that I expect to see explored more as the series goes on before we get anything like a settled answer or a clear understanding of the metaphysics of it all.

Here are a pair of rather long WOJ's on the nature of Black magic and the ambiguity of the Laws, I think it's highly relevant to what we're talking about:

(click to show/hide)

(click to show/hide)

Ive read those before, and they are interesting. Jim's second link makes much more sense than his first though. His first bit about intentions having little to nothing to do with culpability or evil is in my estimation absolutely absurd. His examples in the first paragraph are not comparable at all to his later example of gun shot wounds etc. His examples range from everything from bad actions that could not have been predicted, to negligence, to lethal force ethics. A person cannot be culpable or liable for actions that they could not have prevented, could not have predicted, or were the result of choosing the least bad action. Creating a moral standard which held people responsible for "bad consequences" independent of intent, nature of the act, or predictability/probability of the consequences would be utterly evil and completely untenable. By the logic Jim appears to use in that example, I would be morally accountable if stepping on a fly actually happened to be Listens to the Wind.

Offline Rasins

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Re: Question about the first law
« Reply #14 on: July 05, 2017, 03:36:05 PM »
I have to disagree.

Ethics is not a magical force that acts independent of logic and reality. The Dresdenverse can have as many commonly accepted ethical standards as it wants, but that doesnt make them make any sense. It doesnt matter how much the book or its characters believe in them, it doesnt suddenly make them have efficacy. The idea that events have some kind of intrinsic negative quality is absurd, especially from the standpoint of magic in the DV. The trauma that a person receives, or does not receive, from a "bad" event is entirely subjective.

I also disagree with your second point, and what Luccio said. If anything, it just reveals how utterly preposterous the 1st law is, and probably some others. All the first law does is limit direct killing with magic. When you compare this to every way magic makes any task easier, killing included, the 1st law is at best arbitrary nonsense. Considering ONLY Dresden, his killing ability is massively enhanced by all the indirect utility he gets from it. The degree of inconvenience that not being able to using is precisely pales in comparison to all the utility it would still have. Not to mention that guns in DV are many times better than magic at killing. Dresden gives quite a few reasons for why he carries a gun, but one of them was specifically that it is often easier and faster than magic. So using this logic, the first law does far more harm that it does good,  for no good reason.

To me this just reveals how stupid the WC is when it comes to the 1st law. It has no ethical or practical use. Even if the DV is "supposed" to work this way, I would still criticize that on the grounds of it being silly. It about as crazy that the law in HP that prevented people from using the killing curse from some silly reason. Kill all the death eaters you want, just dont use that dreaded evil killing curse. Oh no, that would be too awful....

Shift8,

If magic is a power source that has an "intelligence", if not conscience, then it is entirely possible that using that power contrary to said source's purposes would have negative consequences.

For instance, and I'm NOT espousing this particular scenario but it fits.

If all magic comes from TWG, and TWG says it's for creation and building, but someone uses it for nefarious purposes, it's entirely possible that TWG ordained that anyone who uses it for purposes other than Building and Creation would suffer.

Thus anyone who uses magic would have nasty consequences for breaking the law, while using mundane means would not have said consequences.
At times I wish I had a clone, but then I realize, I could never live with that a-hole.

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