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Emotional Involvement

Started by Marco, September 15, 2004, 07:50:33 PM

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Ron Edwards

Hello,

We're close enough to one another for listenable jazz, I think, on this one.

Now, I must go defend Gareth's point against some argument of yours in some other thread, I'm sure.

Best,
Ron

eef

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This issue has caused you fits on your Sim-related posts, Marco. To try insist that Sim is inherently emotionless is simply contrary to my experience.


Fits, eh? That's needlessly condescending.

You're right Marco.  It was condescending.  My apologies.
<This Sig Intentionally Left Blank>

contracycle

Quote from: Marco
But if the person feels the emotion and then rescues the scientist anyway in a functional fashion then the question's been answered: the player has acted and Gareth's assessment of whether the emotion impacts the game-space is, IMO, moot.

What you are eliding, yet again, is that the character might not care a fig about some politically correct sob-story in which we are all expected to hate the nazis as a part of our cultural conditioning and therfore experience moral qualms; and they may well engage with the game purely as a challenge, and punch the air with joy when they succesfully complete the mission.

In which case, there has been an emotional engagement, that does not in any sense imply that it is Nar, or proto Nar, or anything like it.  The player may in fact have some opinion on the Nazis but not enough to derail or inform play - they did not act on it, no premise was addressed, therefore, Not Nar.
Impeach the bomber boys:
www.impeachblair.org
www.impeachbush.org

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- Leonardo da Vinci

Marco

Quote from: contracycle
Quote from: Marco
But if the person feels the emotion and then rescues the scientist anyway in a functional fashion then the question's been answered: the player has acted and Gareth's assessment of whether the emotion impacts the game-space is, IMO, moot.

What you are eliding, yet again, is that the character might not care a fig about some politically correct sob-story in which we are all expected to hate the nazis as a part of our cultural conditioning and therfore experience moral qualms; and they may well engage with the game purely as a challenge, and punch the air with joy when they succesfully complete the mission.

In my opinion its different. My experience too. I know how you feel about it, though.

-Marco
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