Killer Cyborg wrote:eliakon wrote:Killer Cyborg wrote:The issue at this point in the conversation is whether or not military basic training provides anything useful in a combat situation other than the specific skills of climbing, shooting, etc. that are listed on the website that somebody quoted earlier.
The article that I'd like you to read explains the kinds of things that one learns in boot camp that one does not typically learn in civilian training classes.
I know that.
Do you?
yes.
Killer Cyborg wrote:But its not RELIVENT
I disagree.
then explain, exactly, why it IS relevant.
Killer Cyborg wrote:The discussion is not "Have all mages gone to boot camp"
Because Boot Camp, while nice, and while it teaches a huge number of things... is not the be all and end all of training.
It IS the sort of training that is necessary in order to be "combat trained" by certain standards, the kind of thing that would help with maintaining discipline and self-control during combat.
again, that is a wonderful example of a circular definition.
You are claiming that training that provides self control is combat training... but only if that training is from the source that you say provides combat training
And then that the combat training is considered combat training because it provides the self control...
circular.
I don't see anything that says "this discipline, it can only be gained in military basic training and not in any other training. Oh, especially not in magical training which we are going to define by fiat as being not sufficiently rigorous to instill self control"
Killer Cyborg wrote:Are there other ways?
Sure. Combat experience, for one. But in gaming context, that's something that would happen as one levels up.
again your defining "military boot camp" as the only valid source of training... by circularly linking the source and effect.
I disagree with that sorry.
Now if you can back it up then maybe...
...but right now your "proof" is your assertion that it is true.
Killer Cyborg wrote:The problem here is that people are making the utterly false claim that if you do NOT go to boot camp then your training is inherently some sort of lesser civilian training class
Who made that claim? Where?
Well you just did.
You just said that if you don't go to formal military training then you have to get the same training through combat experience...
that is kind of exactly my point.
That people are defining "boot camp" as the only source of training. Which is bunk.
Killer Cyborg wrote:Its not.
THAT is the false argument that is the problem
THAT is why the article is utterly irrelevant.
There are plenty of ways to get training that are NEITHER boot camp NOR civilian training classes. Its not a binary situation.
The Spartans never went to Boot Camp.
The Spartans essentially
lived in military boot camp
Pretty much the same with the rest of your list--they all had some of the best military training available at the time, for their place and culture. They weren't just civilians.
They had training that provided them with the same kind of intense experiences that happen in Boot Camp, the kind of training that prepares one somewhat for real combat.
Bzzt
sorry.
Back up
Lets see...
Hmmm, odd
Nope sorry.
American Colonial Army? Nope, not 'the best training"
As for the rest. Again the claim being presented is that if you don't go to FORMAL training it doesn't count.
Because as I am trying to point out... the warriors used as examples? didn't have 'the best training available' many didn't go through 'intense formal training' and they CERTAINLY did not go through formal military camps...
...which makes the argument that a mage DOES have to do that pure bunk.
If a Zulu or a Souix can be a warrior just by being in their culture... then why cant a mage from those cultures?
And if THEY can then I want to know, exactly, why no society or place on Rifts Earth trains anyone to be warriors (other than formal military training)
Killer Cyborg wrote:Which in turn suggests that boot camp is totally, utterly, completely irrelevant to the discussion except as one of the myriad ways that someone can get trained.
And which of the myriad do you believe that LLWs as a rule undergo?
Because I don't know of ANY, and I don't believe that you've proposed any, except as a hypothetical "well, some of them might be in militias..." sort of thing.
We don't know.
I wasn't aware that there was a book description on the full background training of mages.
I wasn't aware that the book description of it, in describing how they get their training in hand to hand and weapons explicitly rules out that it was because they were in any form of training that might instill confidance and discipline (because we know that all mages are undisciplined and terrified rabble... oh wait, they are MORE disciplined than most soldiers... hrmmm)
Killer Cyborg wrote:And sure, SOME of them are almost definitely in militias at 1st level.
And SOME of them might have an unusual background that nets out as being the equivalent of basic training, something that gives them the kind of combat training that was originally being discussed.
But that'd be the exception, not the rule.
Source?
No seriously source that says that's the exception?
Because that sounds suspiciously like your head canon being passed off as a fact.
Killer Cyborg wrote:Meanwhile, every single Man-At-Arms OCC that I'm aware of does have that kind of training. They're either soldiers, mercenaries, knights, or some direct equivalent.
But may or may not have gone to boot camp.
That's the point.
The artificial distinction that some how a formal place called "boot camp" is what makes you a man-at-arms...even though you might not actually go to one.
it doesn't.
What DOES matter is if you have the training, not where that training came from.
The claim that some how mages, and only mages, need to account for exactly where and how they got trained is, to me absurd.
ESPECIALLY in a game that doesn't track that for anyone else.
We don't track what specifically about their back ground automatically makes every juicer a man-at-arms... we just roll with it.
But some how a mage is automatically NOT combat trained... because they are a mage?
Its basically defining combat training as "what a mage doesn't have"
or in this case "if you went to boot camp" but only for mages. No one else has to go to boot camp, anyone else can just say "we trained m'kay"... but mages... nope, they some how need to get this special imaginary training that doesn't have any rules, and is not described in any book and seems to only exist in certain peoples head canon that only certain people can get... that certain people being "anyone who is not a mage" apparently.
Or put bluntly.
I am waiting for someone to use something other than their personal head canon to explain why a mages skills can not be considered to be valid training but a man-at-arms with the IDENTICAL skills is.
Because there is nothing in the book that I am aware of that describes where that training took place so right there the claim that 'well the mages didn't get it in the right place' is automatically head canon as it requires inserting a house rule on OCC training.
A house rule that seems to be predicated on the idea that the only valid source of combat training is military basic and that thus only military personal are considered combat trained.
Similarly a claim that mages training was not sufficiently rigorous to instill the 'right kind' of discipline, again, sounds exactly like a house rule.
So does the claim that some how every mercenary, bandit, juicer, assassin, etc.... DID manage to get exactly that training... regardless of THEIR background.
Its a great house rule... for those peoples games.
I am however not interested in their house rules.