Conversation
Notices
-
Embed this notice
I fell down a rabbit hole of contrarian Frieren essayists so I have some questions.
Seeing as the demons, whether you call them "evil" or not, are irredeemably morally alien to humans, does the story have any moral or political lessons about interacting with other humans, that you can draw from it?
-
Embed this notice
@sun Impregnate elf women.
-
Embed this notice
@Innsmouth_Mayor working on it
-
Embed this notice
@sun Yes, sometimes people just operate on a completely different moral compass than what you expect. If you are dealing with those people you must know their values and priorities to have any success.
-
Embed this notice
@sun a culture alien enough will never be compatible with yours
-
Embed this notice
@sun behead demons. use magical artifacts to make demons behead themselves. use new spell technology to blast demons who recently awoke from centuries of sleep.
-
Embed this notice
@sun
I can't respond to your question but this though came through my head.
>whether you call them "evil" or not, are irredeemably morally alien to humans
Be it evil, good or moral, all these three words are based on social concept that can and have been altered in history and still is today.
Meanwhile in the mango it's clearly stated that the way "demons" survive is by parasiting other lifeforms until extinction, which makes them defacto incompatible as humans evolved to the opposite of that.
My point is that there are physical, tangible aspects, in each types of lifeforms that can't be altered by moralistic judgement.