Supreme Commander
From LSWiki
(Difference between revisions)
Revision as of 03:40, 24 October 2017 (edit) Sukie (Talk | contribs) (double surprise twist ending) ← Previous diff |
Current revision (03:40, 24 October 2017) (edit) Sukie (Talk | contribs) (double surprise twist ending) |
Current revision
[edit]
Description
a thick black-leather-bound papyrus tome
The writing is in Archaen, and reads: Supreme Commander
This is a thick volume of papyrus bound in black leather. A title is boldly engraved upon the spine. It is open to page one of fifteen. It is open to page one of fifteen. You estimate that it is worth something upward of three thousand five hundred gold. It looks about a quarter of a dimin long, one and seventeen twentieths dimins wide, and two and nine twentieths dimins tall. It weighs about four fifths of a dekan.
The commands 'open <item>', 'close <item>', and 'turn page [in <item>] [to <number>]' may be used with it. Keeping the thick black-leather-bound papyrus tome costs twelve keep points. The thick black-leather-bound papyrus tome was created by Marcosy, who wishes to credit J.R.R. Tolkien and Sun Tzu as inspiring this work, and is maintained by Chaos; the source code was last updated Tue Jun 13 12:17:54 2017. The material leather was created by Lost Souls; the source code was last updated Tue Mar 15 02:18:23 2016. The material papyrus was created by Lost Souls; the source code was last updated Tue Mar 15 02:18:42 2016.
Spoiler warning: information below includes details, such as solutions to puzzles or quest procedures, that you may prefer to discover on your own.
[edit]
Text
SUPREME COMMANDER A Meditation on Tactics, Strategy, Responsibility, and Ethics by Ahrikol, Prisoner of Empyrea --- CHAPTER ONE --- I never knew my father. Until quite recently, the very idea would have seemed unusual to me, if not outright unthinkable. Among my people, the young are raised by the community -- protected at the center of the settlement, where defenses are the heaviest. I am certain that my father participated in my upbringing, probably quite effectively, but so did many others -- men, women, and hijra -- all working to preserve and raise the precious offspring of our embattled race. For much of my childhood, I knew what other fomori children knew: the bustling pace of life within the city's inner wards, the dizzying flurry of instruction and examinations, and the burgeoning questions of life, purpose, and identity that I suspect all sapient beings experience. Even as I grew into manhood and pursued my career and studies in my chosen field, I rarely questioned the universality of my experiences or my circumstances. It was only when I began to study the disciplines of psychology and philosophy that I first
contemplated the idea that facts we assume are true for ourselves are true for all, and began to realize the power of the double-edged sword that is military intelligence and information control. In those days, the War between my people and the tuatha had been raging for nearly fifteen millennia; a span of time so long that each of our cultures had been irrevocably changed in myriad ways by our ongoing struggles. Initially I believed, as others did, that the tuatha had attacked our world through their spiritual arts and were siphoning the life of our realms for their own selfish power. However, as I learned more of history and economics I began to question the events of the past, eventually coming to the conclusion that although the specifics of the War's beginning were irreprably lost to antiquity, the balance of evidence suggested that complex factors provided ample motivation for both sides to wage wars of self-preservation to capture and hold the silirala, for the benefit of each society's environmental well-being. Upon deciphering this revelation, I was confronted with the first problem that I could not easily solve - the question of whether behavior which is ethical from one's own perspective but not from another's can truly be considered ethical behavior. At the time, the question seemed highly academic -- after all, I was training to fight a war to prevent the extinction of my people and the eradication of our lives and knowledge from existence -- but I have had ample time to ponder and reflect during my
centuries of captivity. Upon thorough review, I believe I have solved this conundrum, which I put forth in decisive terms: Lesson the First: When your enemy seeks to eradicate you, you are morally justified in defending yourself, regardless of the morality of any past, present, supplemental, or second-order effects of your own defense. For ethics to have meaning beyond the subjective frame, either an objective ethical standard must exist, or subjective ethical standards must be considered valid at minimum within the purview of self-preservation. Any objective ethical standard which might exist cannot, by nature of its objectivity, be proven decisively to apply meaningfully to beings of subjective experience, and as such, only the fundamental supposition remains. --- CHAPTER TWO --- Each day, my captors visit me, in an attempt to convince me to forswear my allegiance to the cause of the fomorian people. On those days which are pleasing, we debate philosophy or economics; on less enjoyable days, I am subject to endless sermons or distasteful discussions upon the nature of corruption and agency. In their hubris, many of the so-called "angels" which populate the plane upon which my prison sits view themselves as supernal beings; life-forms of an order above that in which ordinary sapient creatures
can be categorized, even viewing themselves as superior to the chaosborn which populate our oldest legends. They speak at length of their ascendancy to higher planes of thought and veracity, equivocating with patronizing expressions and regretful tones upon the failings and shortcomings of mortals. I pity them. But, I remind myself, the truth of what they posit is beyond their experiences. The tuatha exalt the angels as elevated beings; they do not question their assumptions nor their judgments. In ages past, my people were not so different. When the tuatha made their pacts with Adonai, our entire paradigms of military thought were overturned in an instant; what had been the soundest conceivable stratagems only days before were now useless against forces that could call down mile-wide sheets of burning light from the sky, immune to traditional constraints of infrastructure or supply. If my people had not contracted with Adonai's enemy unhesitatingly and decisively, the grim realities of supernatural warfare would have driven us to extinction within scant years. And yet, when those who had pacted walked among us, we did not see them as exalted or elevated; we saw them as symbols, brave souls who had made terrible sacrifices for the safety of their homes and children. How could we do otherwise? The asmodeans were wise, yes; they were possessed of great power, yes, and cognizant of theological and
conceptual realms that the rest of us could scarcely comprehend; but for all their strengths, they could not stand in the court of truth which my people esteem above all else and prove, with logic and rhetoric, any claim of superiority which no scholar could refute. Though my people looked to the asmodeans and their demon kin for protection, and took their magicks into our own bloodlines in a bid for survival and greater fitness, over the millennia we began to question their mandate to dictate the greater questions of our society. Hundreds of years before I was born, philosophers debated the moral repercussions of allying our entire race with a fundamental force of pure evil. Although each of these arguments could in turn be spun into endless circular loops of reasoning (what is evil? what is the qlippot? what are positive ethics, and do they have any place in discussions of normative ethics?), over time the sentiment grew that though the asmodeans and other demons were critical to our survival, they could not be trusted with the greater questions of our future as a society. Slowly, over many centuries, a schism began to take place, as our society fractured along social and political lines. The asmodeans and other demons formed a group of primarily conservative actors, while the scholars and theologians grew to form the backbone of a progressive movement that would eventually rise to gain control of our system of government and provide the critical impetus for the crucial decisions which would shape our future as a civilization. As
a result, after much careful thought regarding the universality of my people's experiences, I have formulated the following principle: Lesson the Second: Any technology or capability which provides a decisive advantage over your enemy must always be regarded as a means to an end -- the commander must be guided by a set of principles that dictate a rational and decisive approach to all points of decision, whether those be strategic, tactical, ethical, or moral. However, such a set of principles must also be sufficiently flexible to allow for the capitalization of any and all necessary advantages required to attain complete and total victory over one's enemies. In summary, the commander must win at any cost, but the commander's final goal must always be more than winning -- any victory won only to be victorious is both self-defeating and inherently immoral. --- CHAPTER THREE --- I am told that my homeland of Sheol was once densely forested, a jungle teeming with many forms of life. In stories, I hear descriptions of brackish but life-giving tarns and streams, and of the soaring canopy of twisting timber reaching up to the amber sky. I would not know. The first time I saw a tree was part of my first assault
onto Arcadian soil, which I first took cover behind and later set fire to in order to create a diversion for my unit to escape. The tuatha, as a consequence of their long tradition of self-veneration and tendency to see themselves as extensions of creation's firmament, identify strongly with the trees of their homeland, and viewed this action with horror -- I took note of the frantic behavior of the defenders to extinguish the tree, which they prioritized over our capture to an unreasonable degree. Upon my next assault, which was my first as a squadron leader and not merely an infantry soldier, I ordered the firing of an entire grove to preempt the mobilization of a large reserve force which would have obliterated my entire unit. Similarly, I found my own reaction of abject abhorrence noteworthy when tuatha raids attacked targets of value historically esteemed by my own people, such as our libraries, scholars, or children. In particular, the behavior of our disparate peoples towards our young has long been of interest to me; the tuatha seem to regard their children primarily as achievements or symbols of status, and view their deaths as either inconveniences or the cessation of suffering. While I have observed many tuatha parents dote lovingly upon their children, in the event of those children's deaths the parents seemed primarily comforted by the thought that their young one had "gone on to a better place" and on some particularly horrifying occasions put their own children to death rather than allow them to be captured or ransomed. In contrast, my own people hold children as inestimably dear and will often fight to the last in order to
preserve a single child; although I cannot deny this behavior seems natural to me, I must objectively conclude that it is of questionable evolutionary value. Children represent a lesser concentration of resources than a trained and educated member of society; therefore, should we not prioritize our more valuable assets over those that merely have the potential to be valuable? Nevertheless, I find that I cannot divest myself of such predispositions; I suspect that they are a consequence of our environment, just as the tuatha's are consequences of theirs. In my homeland, the continuing depredation caused by the silirala weakens the planar boundaries even as it drains the natural resources and capability to sustain life from the land itself. As a result, my people have grown increasingly inured to events that would likely seem unthinkable to other races, such as constant attack by extraplanar terrors that can walk through walls and tear grown fomori limb from limb. Consequently, our society is structured to maximize optimization of our scarce natural resources, and our logistical and social standards have similarly evolved to enable us to best thrive in such an environment. After extensive theoretical and experiential testing, I have determined that knowledge of such phenomena is indispensible in both war and governance, enabling returns orders of magnitude more desirable than alternative approaches. I codify my findings thus:
Lesson the Third: Know yourself and your enemy, and how you differ from each other. Discern your enemy's weaknesses while concealing or falsifying your own, and understand thoroughly how your enemy thinks in order to predict which actions will be most effective against him militarily. The commander who controls the flow of information in war will always have the upper hand, even in situations where the enemy gains the initiative. --- CHAPTER FOUR --- Today, my chief captor paid me a visit. The archangel Melchizedek, as sie calls hirself, teleported unannounced into my cell. With a dramatic flourish, sie conjured a large mirror into my cell, replacing the northmost wall. It was likely intended to be impressive, but the primary element of the event for me was the less-than-perfect execution of the conjurative principle used. Sie commenced to demand that I stare at my own reflection, comparing my "base" form to the "elegant and sublime" forms of the tuatha and the angels. Could I not see, in hir words, how my people's association with evil had twisted our bodies and darkened our souls? I feigned shock and feelings of doubt, and sie teleported away in with a satisfied air. In truth, however, I enjoyed the opportunity to view my own form for the first time in recent memory. Alone once more, I examined myself in the mirror from horn to claw, marveling at the unlikely sequence of events which had allowed my people to survive and assume
such a form. Our original shapes are barely recorded in our most distant records, but what information survives seems to indicate that we were not dissimilar to the tuatha -- a bit stockier, perhaps, and supposedly equipped with a tail to aid in the navigation of our arboraceous environment. In ancient times long since passed out of reckoning, our peoples first met, and the tuatha derided us for our "brutish" forms and our inability to perceive their "true splendor" -- whatever that meant. Stung, my people retired to their own lands and began to pursue the accumulation of knowledge and insight with a titanic will, learning many arts and sciences with great rapidity. Within a few centuries, we had mastered the arts of biophrasty and gained the ability to alter our own forms. At first, our alterations were slight: greater height and health, increased longevity, and other such simple things. All too soon, however, Sheol began to be ravaged by the silirala, and our talents were soon put to grimmer uses. As our homeland became harsher and ever more infested with dangerous creatures from beyond the planar veil, our alterations became a matter not of aesthetics, but of survival. Increased fortitude and tougher skins, to survive the assaults of beasts we scarcely understood, and soon greater strength and razor-sharp claws, to fight off monsters that could attack when weapons were not close at hand. Horns and thicker skulls, to protect our precious brains and allow a weapon even when all limbs were bound.
To the tuatha, I imagine we indeed seem bestial and frightening. But to ourselves, we see only the end result of necessity and long endeavor, finely balanced and carefully shaped for both maximum efficacy and great aesthetic craftsmanship. It is ironic that we fear them as greatly as they fear us, for no fomor live today that do not know and dread the swift, lithe death dealt by the blades of their battle-dancers, nor the searing, anathemic destruction of their "blessed" projectiles. I have seen a fomor warrior three times the size of his tuatha opponent felled by a single arrow, but this gave me no cause for despair; in studying my opponents' actions, I quickly learned to discern the situations in which we could use our appearances against them, stirring their blood with taunting words from the shadows or making a rush from darkness to startle their scouts and begin a rout. As my rank rose within the command structure of our armies, I learned to apply these techniques to actions in a broader scope as well, learning key indicators within their troop movements and messages to each other that would presage an assault or a withdrawal. Although many of the tuatha made wild claims that I was "favored by the dark powers" or "had the unholy gift of the soothsayer", the truth is much simpler and more difficult to defend against: Lesson the Fourth: Learn from the past, but understand that the past is never a reliable predictor of the future. Study and comprehend the patterns
of force within your environment, and you cannot be caught unawares of changes that surprise even the most skilled diviner. The failed commander trains his army to fight the most recent war, but the successful commander anticipates the war to come and plans for all contingencies. --- IN CONCLUSION --- Although my spirit chafes at the restrictions which confine me, in this place, I must admit that as a venue for contemplation it leaves little to be desired. My daily needs are met, and my captors interfere with me only when it suits their whims. For much of the day, my time is my own, to spend in introspection, exercise, or research. Never idle, I have worked diligently to examine my options, both for escape and for self-improvement, and made a robust study of my own motivations and culpabilities. After much deliberation, I have determined that the path of magick is most likely to result in favorable outcomes for my endeavors. Though physical interaction and combat are occasionally satisfying, and the quandaries of pure intellectual inquiry are valid and worthwhile, it is the study of magick -- the translation of one's pure will into a force for direct change and progress -- that promises the only viable path to power. Philosophers may debate the nature of power and corruption until time itself unravels,
but the inescapable truth is that no quantity of rational thought can prevail in the face of a sufficient power differential. Without the power to protect oneself and enforce the conclusions of one's morals and ethics, no judgment can be meaningful in any real sense. By extension, no creature which can exert moral or ethical codes over any sapient entity which cannot contest its judgments can be said to possess any mandate which would justify its actions in any context beyond the willful exercise of its power. When the tuatha sought out the aid of Adonai, and later Yehovah, they did so out of a moral and ethical duty of self-preservation. However, in doing so, they ceded their authority to determine their own destinies to what they perceived as a "higher" power. Though my people were forced by their actions to make pacts of our own with Asmodai, we never ceded our rights to judge our actions by our own standards, nor our responsibility to question our own path and the paths of those who affect us. Though I have little news of my people since the end of the War, I predict that they will reject the counsel of Asmodai and his demons with little debate. Unlike the tuatha, who have mistaken their slavery to willful beings beyond their comprension for exaltation, our pacts with Asmodai were never anything but utilitarian. We agreed to worship him in exchange for the power to win our War, and now that the Adversary has failed to deliver, I doubt my people will show him any greater consideration than a common flim-flam artist. However, it is possible
that I am incorrect, either in whole or in part; despite the sanctimonious moralizing of the tuatha, it is indeed possible that we could be corrupted by the influence of such beings of such singular maleficence. Although economics and logistics tell us that ultimate power must eventually be located under the purview of a single actor at any given time, I posit that such an actor cannot be immune to, protected from, or otherwise unable to be held accountable for their actions and the consequences thereof. In summary: Final Determination: Any moral entity which cannot suffer the consequences of the decisions it makes is intrinsically unfit to make such decisions so long as those decisions affect any entity other than itself. Therefore, no entity can be trusted with decisions of any consequence unless that entity is capable of being affected by the repercussions of such decisions in a manner sufficient to cause the cessation of its existence. Only sapient beings with the capacity to die or be destroyed as a direct result of their own decisions are morally and ethically fit to hold responsibility over beings of a similar nature, as only such beings can be held accountable for their actions. In a universe where the vast power of gods can exist, there must therefore be some possibility of a balancing force; a power, wieldable by beings such as we, that can contend with the actions of deific beings. If it exists, it can be found; if it does not exist, it can be created.
Someday, I will be free of this prison. And on that day, in accordance with these principles and determinations which I have enumerated with due care and forethought, I will pursue the cause of freedom and justice for all thinking beings with every ounce of my industry and certainty. And I shall let nothing stand in my way.
[edit]
Relevant Skills
skills gained when read for first time go here
End of spoiler information.