Argh:So you won't be nominating Slobodan Miloevic for the Nobel peace prize...
Slobodan Milosevik
Posted 28 March 2004 - 04:29 PM
Argh:So you won't be nominating Slobodan Miloevic for the Nobel peace prize...
Posted 28 March 2004 - 04:29 PM
Edited by jester, 28 March 2004 - 04:33 PM.
Posted 28 March 2004 - 04:37 PM
I am afraid that the last time I was the member of the Nobel Prize nomination commetee was...never.So you won't be nominating Slobodan Miloevic for the Nobel peace prize...
To me Irenicus is beyond redemption not because he killed Khalid or even Dynaheir (my favorite character after Kivan) - and even if it was Kivan's body there on the table instead of Khalid's (shudders - good thing it was not - I would have dropped the game at that point) but what does "disqualifies" him in my eyes is that he sought to destroy his own people to ascend to godhood. For me, anyone who seeks power through genocide cannot be changed into anything but a madman if he does emote on a human level what he had done.OK, all I am saying is that Jon's atrocities are by no means greater than many other killing sprees. It is not like he could be rightfully banned from redemption IMHO, because he killed Khalid.
Posted 28 March 2004 - 04:43 PM
Ok,I give you that. He really deserved to die in BG1 and should never have returned. Not very talkative anyways.And I am glad that Tazok got 0 votes. Heh, here it is personal for me.
Posted 28 March 2004 - 05:02 PM
Thank you. And BioWARE added insult to injury by bringing *him* back, but no Kivan.Ok,I give you that. He really deserved to die in BG1 and should never have returned. Not very talkative anyways.And I am glad that Tazok got 0 votes. Heh, here it is personal for me.
Posted 28 March 2004 - 05:19 PM
Last I checked, there is a scene in suldenesellar, where one of the invading forces (a drow I believe) makes a demand that everyone stay indoors, this throws a bit of doubt onto the idea that Jon was killing his own people as part the the method to fuel his ascension to godhood. Also, since Jon didn't kill everyone in Suldenessalar the first time he attempted to drain the tree of life and the fact that people in Suldenessalar (Dernim & Ellisime) act suprised about the corruption magics and parasites that Jon uses in the game it suggests that he used a different method the first time. Remember, Jon wasn't trying to become the new Lord of Murder, just a god....but what does "disqualifies" him in my eyes is that he sought to destroy his own people to ascend to godhood. For me, anyone who seeks power through genocide cannot be changed into anything but a madman if he does emote on a human level what he had done.
Posted 28 March 2004 - 05:52 PM
At least Kivan's not dead, mm? If Bioware had brought him back for a cameo, you'd have to deal with people posting about how they killed him in inventive and poetic ways.Thank you. And BioWARE added insult to injury by bringing *him* back, but no Kivan.
Posted 28 March 2004 - 06:04 PM
Actually, if Bioware brought Kivan back in any form, shape or size, I would never had known what other people think of the game. I only discovered the community because I was so dissatisfied with his absence in the game, and hoped so much that they'd put him into ToB, that I went searching for info and thus found Bio forums...At least Kivan's not dead, mm? If Bioware had brought him back for a cameo, you'd have to deal with people posting about how they killed him in inventive and poetic ways.Thank you. And BioWARE added insult to injury by bringing *him* back, but no Kivan.
Posted 28 March 2004 - 07:51 PM
A few quotes for in game NPCs, that may help clarify the fact that Jon's original ritual did not involve the deliberate genocide of the people of Suldanessellar:the fact that people in Suldenessalar (Dernim & Ellisime) act suprised about the corruption magics and parasites that Jon uses in the game it suggests that he used a different method the first time. Remember, Jon wasn't trying to become the new Lord of Murder, just a god.
And Ellesime said that his first attempt "endangered us all" or something to that extent. From the legends scattered around Sul, it is obvious that Tree of Life is something that is vital for the survival of Sul...It is even called the Tree of Life...
Together they sought more than was possible; they wished the power of the gods, and they were not concerned about the consequences.
He of the Exiles performed a dark ritual, and committed a grave offense against the greatest symbol of our longevity: the Tree of Life.
He sought to merge his essence with the divine tree, draining it and stealing its energy. He failed, but there was a price to pay for the rest of us.
He disrupted the elven connection to land and nature. There was a great shock that ran through Suldanessellar, and many of our weaker citizens lay near death.
That he would endanger so many for he and his sister's selfish goals was one thing, but to threaten the very nature of what makes us who we are was unfathomable.
Posted 28 March 2004 - 08:09 PM
Hm, I'd forgotten that scene...I must keep a look out for it next time around. As for me, I always thought that he was going on a nut-headed rampage while killing those people, doing it to get to revenge but not with any more purpose than that. If it's ever stated otherwise in the game, I must have missed it. And the first time around, I imagine that those unfortunate people died more as a side-effect of what he was callously doing rather than him methodically killing them.Last I checked, there is a scene in suldenesellar, where one of the invading forces (a drow I believe) makes a demand that everyone stay indoors, this throws a bit of doubt onto the idea that Jon was killing his own people as part the the method to fuel his ascension to godhood. Also, since Jon didn't kill everyone in Suldenessalar the first time he attempted to drain the tree of life and the fact that people in Suldenessalar (Dernim & Ellisime) act suprised about the corruption magics and parasites that Jon uses in the game it suggests that he used a different method the first time. Remember, Jon wasn't trying to become the new Lord of Murder, just a god....but what does "disqualifies" him in my eyes is that he sought to destroy his own people to ascend to godhood. For me, anyone who seeks power through genocide cannot be changed into anything but a madman if he does emote on a human level what he had done.
Posted 28 March 2004 - 09:47 PM
Edit: 3 votes only? Common, is that *all* TfV can master nowadays? Up it at least to 14, you, guys.
Posted 28 March 2004 - 10:43 PM
In the end, they are just as dead. If you break into a castle and kill all of the guards who try to stop you, what gives you the right to call it self-defense? The fact that the guards attacked you rather than standing aside? Think of it this way: suppose a heavily armed person with unbelievable combat skills walks into the White House (or the equivalent in your nation) and proceeds to kill the president (or equivalent leader) and everyone who stands between them. Are all of the deaths of the security personnel classified as 'self-defense'? Would they be classified so if the leader happened to be really evil from the warrior's perspective?It always annoys me when people talk as though all killing is morally identical--self-defense equivalent to killing for power, killing in defense of others just the same as killing for fun. Yes, you have to kill thousands of people in BG; no, you do not have to murder any of them.
Posted 28 March 2004 - 11:17 PM
Nothing gives you the right to call it self-defense, which is why I wouldn't try. Nice try, though.In the end, they are just as dead. If you break into a castle and kill all of the guards who try to stop you, what gives you the right to call it self-defense?It always annoys me when people talk as though all killing is morally identical--self-defense equivalent to killing for power, killing in defense of others just the same as killing for fun. Yes, you have to kill thousands of people in BG; no, you do not have to murder any of them.
Posted 29 March 2004 - 12:57 AM
Posted 29 March 2004 - 01:05 AM
Naturally if you are determined to believe that all killing is morally identical, arguments to the contrary are going to seem "all about semantics" to you.You are all about semantics in this case.
Posted 29 March 2004 - 01:14 AM
That's funny, I can't remember a single non-optional quest in BG1 or 2 where you had no choice except to break into someones home and kill them except in response to a threat against your own life or the life of another. You seem to have been playing a different game.In the end, they are just as dead. If you break into a castle and kill all of the guards who try to stop you, what gives you the right to call it self-defense? The fact that the guards attacked you rather than standing aside? Think of it this way: suppose a heavily armed person with unbelievable combat skills walks into the White House (or the equivalent in your nation) and proceeds to kill the president (or equivalent leader) and everyone who stands between them. Are all of the deaths of the security personnel classified as 'self-defense'? Would they be classified so if the leader happened to be really evil from the warrior's perspective?It always annoys me when people talk as though all killing is morally identical--self-defense equivalent to killing for power, killing in defense of others just the same as killing for fun. Yes, you have to kill thousands of people in BG; no, you do not have to murder any of them.
The protagonist has no choice except to go through this breaking and entering routine -- and more than once.
Posted 29 March 2004 - 01:21 AM
The moral and legal distinction between the use of force in self defense or the rightful defense of another and murder is not semantic.@ Althernai In the end, they are just as dead. Thanks for putting this in obviously more fitting words than I have.
@ Kish Nothing gives you the right to call it self-defense, which is why I wouldn't try. Nice try, though.
You are all about semantics in this case. That is ok. No, need to be defiant.
@Tazok: Sadly mentioning his name attracted unwanted attention.
An interesting thought from above would be what kind of god Jon would have become. Or is your portfolio up to you once you ar a god?
Posted 29 March 2004 - 01:24 AM
Let's just agree to disagree on that like others in this thread have. There is no way I can sway you with my arguments or the other way round as I see it.Naturally if you are determined to believe that all killing is morally identical, arguments to the contrary are going to seem "all about semantics" to you.You are all about semantics in this case.
Edited by jester, 29 March 2004 - 01:31 AM.
Posted 29 March 2004 - 01:33 AM
Irenicus and those around him do not know that they are fictional characters. Any discussion of the moral and ethical issues of Irenicus' redemption that proceeds from the idea that they are only fictional characters and that in their world only named characters matter strikes me as meaningless, unless Redemption is intended as a comedy mod.It was actually a reference to something said about the game mechanics and the whole fantasy setting a couple of pages ago.
I thought that this rated a slightly lengthier reply;OK, all I am saying is that Jon's atrocities are by no means greater than many other killing sprees. It is not like he could be rightfully banned from redemption IMHO, because he killed Khalid.
I don't claim to know where the line is beyond which spiritual redemption becomes impossible, or when it has been crossed. The argument that some people's lives are vastly more valuable in a cosmic sense than the lives of others is accurate from the point of view of xenophobes, self justifying thugs and hack authors;
In the real world, yes, absolutely, and I never doubted this for a second nor argued against it. I was going for headcount, kish for semantics and morals. The way the game is designed there is no peaceful solution to the game, sadly. Besides there are some who think of history in 'what if' terms and some people might have made a difference IMHO, but I am neither of your three mentioned categories.it's not an argument I find appealing in fiction, and it fuels quite a lot of violence in the real world.
100% agreed upon. Not part of the argument though. This is not about the real world.A story that takes Irenicus on the path to redemption as he realizes the depth of the atrocities he has committed might be worth reading;
That is personal development which hopefully occurs. I was arguing about a principle of fairness.allowing him and those around him to write off his victims as "no one of importance" is not redemption of any sort at all.
I am sure dorotea took care of this and it does not happen. Insight into your wrongdoings are paramount for the process.
Posted 29 March 2004 - 01:43 AM