Heh heh heh, the Imperium of Man has that in droves. You should try making the case for Warhammer 40000 being a very well-disguised eutopia rather than gothic cosmic horror.
(Speaking seriously, though, my revealed preferences indicate that I assign enormous value to freedom and liberty, and I’m aghast at others, even people as wise as EY, being ready to sacrifice a bit of them for mere “fun”’s sake. I’m going to do a main-level post about the heuristic of jealously guarding freedom seen in some people.)
You should try making the case for Warhammer 40000 being a very well-disguised eutopia rather than gothic cosmic horror.
Well, there are plenty of inhuman enemies that we can all feel good about brutally dismembering, and of course so much knowledge has been lost that Brennan would feel quite at home. The fluff mentions souls and reincarnation IIRC so you could argue that no-one is actually dying, and I suppose they might not feel pain as … keenly … as we do? It still seems hard to justify all those faceless masses being ground down into the dirt by oppressive dictatorships or tortured to death by faceless horrors from beyond the stars, but such is the price of heroism. Perhaps they’re NPCs.
Souls aren’t a point in WH40K’s favor when you remember that a dead human is either
Cast into the Warp without a Gellar Field to protect them from even the weakest demons / warp phenomenon.
Eaten by the God Emprah of Mankind.
Grimdark is pretty much the opposite of ethical hedonism, so while it is much much cooler than most utopias you can’t make much of an argument for it in terms of utility. I personally would argue it from aesthetics, but while that’s not all less rational than adding up the utilons it’s not likely to score you points around here either.
Ah, but while that’s certainly claimed by some factions, it’s far from demonstrated. (I recently went on a WH40K jag, so I’m a bit better informed than when I wrote that comment.)
Most hope for souls comes in the form of the Imperial mythos, which claims—among many other, contradictory things because this is 40K—that He shelters the faithful after death (still fairly dark, but actually quite plausible); and, interestingly, that He was originally “the collective reincarnation of all Earth’s Shamans” (this doesn’t tie in that well with anything else, but is perfectly plausible and gets repeated a lot; and reincarnation is a great way to turn unfair settings into fair ones.)
On the other hand, the Eldar seem to know the most about souls—they can manipulate them—and they seem pretty certain that theirs are being eaten by Slaneesh; although this seems to only apply to them, as a result of their whole Fall thing, rather than being the standard fate for all the dead.
Only the devotees of the Dark Gods, as I recall, have been mentioned to believe the only way to escape eternal torment as the playthings of their masters / getting soulnommed is to be chosen by the Gods to serve them as Daemons; but then they would, wouldn’t they?
More seriously, 40K fluff is designed to be flexible, but I wouldn’t usually be desperately trying to twist it into a cunningly disguised utopia if I hadn’t been challenged to do so.
I will, however, note that any utopia ( though not necessarily wierdtopia) worth a dam will have immersive 40k VR games. So your aesthetics may be in luck yet.
It’s warhammer, so of course it isn’t actually that nice. Souls exist, and resurrection, but so do predators who’ll eat the souls—if you’re dead or, sometimes, if you aren’t. Normal humans are the equivalent of plankton to daemons.
Heh heh heh, the Imperium of Man has that in droves. You should try making the case for Warhammer 40000 being a very well-disguised eutopia rather than gothic cosmic horror.
(Speaking seriously, though, my revealed preferences indicate that I assign enormous value to freedom and liberty, and I’m aghast at others, even people as wise as EY, being ready to sacrifice a bit of them for mere “fun”’s sake. I’m going to do a main-level post about the heuristic of jealously guarding freedom seen in some people.)
Well, there are plenty of inhuman enemies that we can all feel good about brutally dismembering, and of course so much knowledge has been lost that Brennan would feel quite at home. The fluff mentions souls and reincarnation IIRC so you could argue that no-one is actually dying, and I suppose they might not feel pain as … keenly … as we do? It still seems hard to justify all those faceless masses being ground down into the dirt by oppressive dictatorships or tortured to death by faceless horrors from beyond the stars, but such is the price of heroism. Perhaps they’re NPCs.
Souls aren’t a point in WH40K’s favor when you remember that a dead human is either
Cast into the Warp without a Gellar Field to protect them from even the weakest demons / warp phenomenon.
Eaten by the God Emprah of Mankind.
Grimdark is pretty much the opposite of ethical hedonism, so while it is much much cooler than most utopias you can’t make much of an argument for it in terms of utility. I personally would argue it from aesthetics, but while that’s not all less rational than adding up the utilons it’s not likely to score you points around here either.
Ah, but while that’s certainly claimed by some factions, it’s far from demonstrated. (I recently went on a WH40K jag, so I’m a bit better informed than when I wrote that comment.)
Most hope for souls comes in the form of the Imperial mythos, which claims—among many other, contradictory things because this is 40K—that He shelters the faithful after death (still fairly dark, but actually quite plausible); and, interestingly, that He was originally “the collective reincarnation of all Earth’s Shamans” (this doesn’t tie in that well with anything else, but is perfectly plausible and gets repeated a lot; and reincarnation is a great way to turn unfair settings into fair ones.)
On the other hand, the Eldar seem to know the most about souls—they can manipulate them—and they seem pretty certain that theirs are being eaten by Slaneesh; although this seems to only apply to them, as a result of their whole Fall thing, rather than being the standard fate for all the dead.
Only the devotees of the Dark Gods, as I recall, have been mentioned to believe the only way to escape eternal torment as the playthings of their masters / getting soulnommed is to be chosen by the Gods to serve them as Daemons; but then they would, wouldn’t they?
More seriously, 40K fluff is designed to be flexible, but I wouldn’t usually be desperately trying to twist it into a cunningly disguised utopia if I hadn’t been challenged to do so.
I will, however, note that any utopia ( though not necessarily wierdtopia) worth a dam will have immersive 40k VR games. So your aesthetics may be in luck yet.
Well...
It’s warhammer, so of course it isn’t actually that nice. Souls exist, and resurrection, but so do predators who’ll eat the souls—if you’re dead or, sometimes, if you aren’t. Normal humans are the equivalent of plankton to daemons.