n7axw wrote:My contribution to this discussion is that the shared values are already there. There are lots of Temple Loyalists who are very uncomfortable with the way the Inquisition is acting and are caught in the bind between the behavior sanctioned in the Book of Schueler and what they have been taught by the rest of the Writ along with what they know in the marrow of their bones about right and wrong. It's not a conflict being played out between the COGA and the Church of Charis nearly so much as it is being played out in the souls of those who yearn to be loyal to the Church as they get up in the morning and ask if they like what they see gazing back at them in the mirror.
So far Thirsk and Duchairn are the clearest examples of the turmoil I am describing.
Don
So true, Don. Yet that is the central point to this story. Choice and free will. The standard is there for all to see with respect to Safehold. Its called the Writ. The Writ has conflicting messages. How those conflicts are reconciled using the standard written in our hearts is what free will is all about.
People of good conscience might well respond to the same moral dilemma in completely different ways. Thirsk's and Duchairn's conflicts are indeed the perfect examples. Each prioritize the Writ's various sections in different ways from the non-Inner Circle Reformists. Yet, no one can say that these two are evil. Judging solely their actions, we see they conflict with "the good guys". Yet their willingness to engage in conflict and war to serve their convictions is the very thing that makes them admirable. That strength of conviction is one of the few things each share with Cayleb and Mykel. Not the beliefs themselves, but the strength of their convictions.
Having that standard is truly not enough. Both sides of any dispute must agree on how that standard applies to the issues in dispute. They must agree because even the belief in God and His active participation in the world must still account for the free will of human beings. Achieving agreement REQUIRES that both sides find enough points in common that the remaining differences might be negotiated. Absent SOMETHING to build on, negotiations are useless and war is the only options for disputes that cannot be ignored.