cornholioprime wrote:There is virtually NO statement about a group of beings which locks ALL of those beings into the exact same set of behaviors.......HOWEVER, it can be argued that most reasonable people who look at such a statement -in this case, a statement of character -would assume that MOST of the beings that the statement refers to, DO fall within the 'parameters' of that statement of generalization.
I can readily agree that with anarchist alignment being the best possible, that Wild vampires would may average out around Miscreant (and thus evil) and with Masters all being evil, even if Secondaries averaged out at anarchist that could still be enough to tip the balance in favour of an evil average. There's no knowing for sure though, since we never got percentages, just a cutoff.
I don't concur that most reasonable people such a statement would assume that such a statement describes a majority. I instead weigh that it could merely represent a significant above-human-average portion, perhaps near-majority.
Various generalizing statements from around the Palladium Megaverse:
cornholioprime wrote:- (Paraphrased) "....Alien Intelligences know nothing of love or compassion, and exist only to inflict pain, sorrow and despair on other living things..."
- (Paraphrased) "Faerie Folk like to spend their days playing in the woods and forests, eating and drinking food (they especially love sweets), and are leery of Big Folk."
- (Paraphrased) "Undead are vulnerable to silver; weapons made of this substance inflict MDC damage to the creatures as SDC and Hit Point damage."
- (paraphrased) Mystic Knights are the antithesis of all that is good and noble."
- (Paraphrased) "The Noro have a high regard for sentient life."
- (Paraphrased) "Wolfen value individual honor and courage in combat above all else. They are also extremely protective of their families."
- (Paraphrased) "Orcs believe that 'might makes right' and as such, will follow anyone who is more powerful than they."
- (paraphrased) "The appearance of an Alien Intelligence is that of a mound of rotting flesh with tentacles and multiple eyes..."
All good examples of attributes possessed by species in high enough frequency to be noteable and stereotype-creating, but that can occur without it reaching majority status.
cornholioprime wrote:
"Undead Vampires live to dominate, terrify, and feed on inferior humanoid life......playthings to satisfy sadistic pleasures. The hellish things delight in the fear, pain and suffering of their prey, immersing themselves in their emotions...."
A so-called Generalizing Statement doesn't mean "Only the ones that you are explicitly told that that Generalizing Statement applies to."
A so-called Generalizing Statement doesn't mean "A few but not most."
A so-called Generalizing Statement doesn't mean "All of them without exception."
A so-called Generalizing Statement does mean "Most if not all of the individuals who belong to that group"
I would instead pick a middle ground between 'few' and 'most', that being 'many'. 45% for example would be too much to be few, but not most, yet enough to create bad impressions and seem excessive compared to human inclination.
eliakon wrote:The 'gods eye canon' statement was that they were a certain way.
What we're discussing is who exactly it was pertaining to. It's worded similarly to the examples cornholio has given and we're having a many vs most dispute (as I don't think anyone is arguing for the extreme viewpoints of few/all).
eliakon wrote:If the gods eye, canon statement was that wolfen murder humans and eat them, then it would mean that the average wolfen would do so.
I don't agree, I only take that to mean more than 1 (some) and probably many, maybe most, but literally speaking we need more than plurality to denote majority.
eliakon wrote:The reason is that the source is not an ingame person who may or may not be falliable, but it is the Author speaking from the point of view of the rules.
While I agree about the context, the terms used lack the explicitness to pinpoint them as a large number even though it could be assumed.
eliakon wrote:The statement is not qualified in anyway, thus choosing to retroactively add qualifiers is changing what is written.
To say it applies to majority because it says "vampires" is adding a qualifier. All we really know from this is that at least 2 vampires are this way. Obviously more than that is meant, but there's no way to resolve whether few/many/most/all is meant, all we know is that some are.
eliakon wrote:With out qualifiers a general statement means just that...its general.
Does it say 'in general' (implying a mode) or is it simply pluralized?
eliakon wrote:it doesn't have a limiter either (some vampires, elder vampires, vampires that have lost their humanity).
I'm merely hypothesizing what leads them to have such inclinations besides the whole 'evil essence' thing. A limiter isn't actually needed since and explicit includer is absent.