06-04-2009, 06:39 AM | #1 |
Sent to the cornfield
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Fate, Free Will, and Sarda being a jackass
In this most recent comic 1136, Red Mage makes the point that Sarda was to blame for all the ruin and death caused by the Light Warriors because he put them on the course of their actions.
To which Sarda retorted, "It's my fault you people kill and cheat your way through your miserable lives?" Sarda is putting the responsibility of the consequences of the Light Warrior's actions at their feet - as though they had a choice in the matter. However, as the last several comics have demonstrated - the Light Warriors never had a choice. #434 and all that - everything that happened was going to happen, there were no choices. Fate, determinism, and all that. How can a person be held responsible for their actions if they had no choice in the matter? The events that happened could have happened in no other way. Holding the Light Warriors responsible for their inevitable actions would be like holding fire responsible for burning something. We know and understand fire, the consequences of fire are predictable and we know it. Sarda knows too what the Light Warriors did, what they had done, what they will do, and he further knows that the actions they take must be taken and they lack the power to do otherwise. So how rational is it for Sarda to hold the Light Warriors accountable for the atrocities committed against the Onion Kid? The Light Warriors could no more resist their fates than fire could resist burning something. It sounds really dick for Sarda to play the fate-card to justify his own authority, holding back the free will-card for when it'll hurt the LW's case. This looks like a glaring contradiction. And this is why fate is not a valid perspective with which to view the world. The consequences of absolving yourself of the responsibilites of your actions would be disastrous. Could you imagine someone committing a crime and then using the explanation, "I had to do it, I was compelled by my destiny to murder that person and take their money. I could not resist my fate." "Well ok buddy, that's your confession. See you in twenty to life." Sarda is using fate to justify himself, but is holding the Light Warriors accountable to free will. That's not right. |
06-04-2009, 06:52 AM | #2 | |
The End of Evolution
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Quote:
In other words, deterministic thinking is only a really faulty way to view the world if you're stupid enough to believe that not being in control of your actions means that you have no accountability for your actions. There are obvious examples where people are in no control of their actions and because of those specific circumstances can't be held accountable, but those don't apply to the overall deterministic viewpoint. Also, yes, Sarda is being completely irrational.
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06-04-2009, 07:00 AM | #3 |
Pure joy
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Pretty much exactly as rational as it is for the Light Warriors to commit sins agains human-, elf- and dwarfity whereever they go. He's as caught up in this as everyone.
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06-04-2009, 07:30 AM | #4 |
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Did they? Did they really?
Did they commit sins against elfity? I don't recall that. Well, the lying. Oh! You must mean the dark elves. Yeah, got it, nevermind.
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06-04-2009, 08:04 AM | #5 |
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Sarda is just stupid, that's my opinion. I think that there IS a destiny, but that you CAN screw this destiny. So easy. He can't tell me, that his theory was actually working. Because it isn't. On a million levels.
Therefor, in my opinion, Sarda now outranks Fighter as the most naiv character in the comic. -.- So, and now burn me as a witch for saying what I think.
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06-04-2009, 09:04 AM | #6 |
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Well, here's my views on if there were such a thing as Fate, and its relation to free will. Let us say that everything is predetermined. Everything is going to happen a certain way, and there is absolutely no changing that. That includes our thoughts and behaviors. However, it is still possible for free will to exist. Just because what we do is already decided does not change the fact that it is predetermined because we make those decisions that are already decided.
Just because I know you are going to let the cup fall to the ground because that's what is decided to happen does not change the fact that you chose to let the cup fall to the ground. Ya dig?
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06-04-2009, 11:56 AM | #7 | |
Dr. Izz'l
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From Sarda's perspective, the Light Warriors were always going to traumatize him just as he was always going to kill them. To him, there's no avoiding either one.
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06-04-2009, 12:05 PM | #8 | |
for all seasons
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Nothing about the comic proves or disproves Free Will either relative to reality or the fictional reality of the comic itself.
Quote:
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06-04-2009, 12:32 PM | #9 |
We are Geth.
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He's spent all of eternity in blinding rage of the Light Warriors for orphaning him twice as a child, so he doesn't care about logic that could possibly steamroll or interrupt his quest for humiliating vengeance.
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06-04-2009, 01:14 PM | #10 |
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Then again, maybenot...!
Or, y'know, let's not and say we didn't?
See the ultimate problem with Fate, or Destiny, or Determinism, or whathaveyou, is that people often use it to justify why they do very, very bad things. It can be as simple as "the devil made me do it"* or "I was just following orders, and thus had no choice" or it can be as complex as "due to the stable, unchanging nature of time, I am absolved of all responsibility of my actions". In either case, the answer is "No, you're wrong." Actions merit responses. Justification fails for evil actions. Even if** Sarda were correct - that there is nothing he could have done differently - the fact is he chose to do it this way. He may be telling the truth, but the fact that he absolves himself is absolutely wrong. Do the Light Warriors*** deserve death for their overwhelming evil? Absolutely. Buy, hey, so does Sarda. Sucks, eh? *This statement in and of itself carries an entirely massive amount of world-view assumptions that aren't really bourne out by any religious text. Even when people are indicated to be "possessed of a malicious spirit" the indication is that they were possessed through their own devices in the first place - in other words, they opened themselves up to it. This need not involve satanic rituals... but again, it's a whole other topic of conversation. It's also stupid and against the scriptural devil's MO. Occasionally used for humor. **I am presuming that Sarda is correct as of Brian's responses. But I guess we never know for sure. ***Excluding Fighter. He's a casualty.
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