Well, I was referring more to the specific philosophies that the groups hold rather than the groups themselves. As others have stated, it's virtually impossible for an actual person to adhere completely to either philosophy; it's more the dogmatic reaction and the lack of consideration.The Romulan Republic wrote: That's hard to say canonically, as far as I can tell. But it can't be "Jedi" and "Sith", because we have a whole bunch of canon Light and Dark Siders (mostly Dark Siders) who are neither.
Is Ashoka Dark Side because she's not a Jedi? Or Light Side because she's not a Sith?
Is Ventress Light Side following her departure from Dooku's side? She was never a Sith. What about the other Nightsisters?
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This is getting somewhat circular. You're arguing that Light Side=Jedi by using an Old Republic Jedi definition of Light Side.
Basically, the difference between using the Prime Directive as a guide or trying to adhere to it mechanically.
Yeah, I always assumed it was some sort of Force-induced shared hallucination, a metaphor writ large, as opposed to actually literally happening. Then again, I think Artoo was there (it's been a while since I saw that arc) as well and hallucinations don't affect droids, so maybe it did literally happen.Maybe look at the Mortis arc (despite my mixed feelings about it). Unless you dismiss it as deception or hallucination, it gives us physical personifications of the various aspects of the Force (although would also corroborate the existence of a grey or neutral side).
That's actually not bad, really. Again, though, the respective Sith and Jedi philosophies exemplify those poles. It's the dogmatic assertions of them that's the problem.I would (broadly, probably oversimplisticly) describe them as "the Selfish Side" and "the Selfless Side". Which isn't quite the same as pleasure/no pleasure. Or maybe "the impulsive side and the non-impulsive side".
You can be Light Side and feel emotions, as long as you don't let them drive you toward fundamentally selfish/impulsive actions. That would be my preferred take, anyway.
In Kreia's philosophy, no. The nature of the goal itself does not matter. That said, one can certainly add more restrictions to the goal (this is what flavors the grey).That's an interesting definition, but surely the nature of the goal would matter as well? Only it seems to you that it doesn't.
Right, and this is what gives the shades of gray. If your goal is to end suffering in the universe and you had no restrictions on how to achieve that, then killing or mind controlling everything might make sense. If you wanted to end suffering, but added a restriction of not removing the free will of others (either by destruction or mind control), then you would find other means to do it.Suppose your goal was to end suffering by exterminating or mind controlling every life form in the universe. Now, I'd call that Dark.
And peace and serenity could be a goal to achieve, if not necessarily the right method to achieve that goal.
The point is to consider your options and make a plan based on those options to achieve the goal.
Fair enough. I can certainly see the argument there.I actually question weather the officer's argument logically follows from the Sith Code. The Sith Code praises unrestrained passion as the route to freedom and power- overly simplistic and self-indulgent, in my opinion, but not necessarily obligating one to destroy a defeated enemy.
I'd prefer to just say that the office was an idiot following a particularly rigid interpretation.
I'm only aware of the one in KoTOR, honestly.I'd also say that the Jedi Code is not all that inflexible. Particularly since there are two main versions IIRC (though I'm not sure that any of the codes are still canon).
Agreed (and this fact is part of the reason Kreia hates them both so much -- they're incomplete), but the point is that the philosophies of each are meant to exemplify the Light and Dark sides, not that the organizations themselves are able to perform them (they obviously can't, considering how many Jedi go to the Dark Side and how many Sith end up doing things Lightly).And in any case, I would say that neither Order, in practice, really lived up to its ideals. And certainly neither is synonymous with Light Side and Dark Side. That is an oversimplification.
Right, but if the means don't accomplish the goal (or do so inefficiently), then you're not using the right means.But the means matter, not just in and of themselves but because they effect your ability to actually achieve your goals. This is something that "ends justify the means" types always seem to miss- perhaps because "the ends justify the means" is, in my experience, usually an excuse to justify the means you want to use, regardless of weather they're necessary.
Though I feel like maybe we're getting a little sidetracked/muddled, here.
Again, there's not a problem with attaching specific limitations on the goal, as long as they are considered and not just knee-jerk assertions of right or wrong.
Oh, absolutely. I'm not defending Kreia here, I'm just trying to describe her philosophy as I understand it. I think she's clearly insane and may be completely wrong.You do realize that Kreia is an individual with individual biases, not the objective voice of truth on the nature of the Force or morality, right?