this post was submitted on 27 Jan 2024
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[–] Infynis@midwest.social 28 points 7 months ago (20 children)

Isn't acting purely in self interest the general definition of chaotic neutral?

[–] Enk1@lemmy.world 26 points 7 months ago (12 children)

If while acting in your own self-interest you knowingly, through action or inaction, allow others to come to harm, even indirectly, that is evil. In the same way that a character knowingly doing something that benefits others would arguably make them good. A chaotic neutral person may act on a whim or in self-interest the majority of the time, but I doubt they'd let their actions cause actual harm to others.

But trying to pigeonhole human behavior into a rigid matrix of alignments is inherently flawed, people are much more complex than that. Fortunately, DND allows the DM free reign to define that or allow it to be a grey area - in reality, "alignment" will always be fluid.

[–] DawnPaladin@lemmy.ml 3 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I think this is a little over-broad. As written, the only way to be good is to stop all evil everywhere. Or am I missing something?

[–] Enk1@lemmy.world 5 points 7 months ago

No, it still requires something the person does or doesn't do (within reason) to influence or allow the evil act. If you see someone being mugged and you ignore it and keep walking when you have the power to help, even if just calling the police and walking away, then yes, that inaction makes you a bad person, IMO. But if a bad guy starts a war on the other side of the planet, you're not evil if you don't enlist and go fight the evil regime.

But like I said, it's all a grey area, there is no black and white good and evil in reality. It's rarely as simple as just "this is good, and this is evil" in real life.

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