Diff: Selective True Neutral
Comparing revision #2 (2026-06-22 05:07:58) with revision #3 (2026-06-22 05:19:45).
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= Selective True Neutral = |
= Selective True Neutral = |
'''Selective True Neutral''' is a custom moral-alignment profile used by the [[Moral Alignment Portal]] and related alignment pages on iWiki. It combines '''Selective''' temperament, '''True Neutral''' decision-making, and a '''Neutral''' moral focus. The profile is a writing and self-reflection shorthand. It is not a clinical category, a legal label, or proof of a person's character. |
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'''Selective True Neutral''' is a custom moral-alignment type in the [[Moral Alignment Portal]]. It combines the selective trait with a true neutral outlook. In ordinary terms, it describes a person who is careful with trust, loyal by choice, and unwilling to treat every claim on their time as equal while being mainly concerned with balance, independence, proportion, and distance from extremes. |
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The type is useful for character writing, roleplay, self-description, and comparing moral instincts. It is not a medical or legal category. The value of the label comes from the behaviours it describes: how someone chooses sides, handles pressure, treats trust, and responds when their principles are tested. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
! Element |
! Element |
! Meaning |
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! Detail |
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| Trait |
| Trait |
| Selective profiles are cautious about trust. They do not give the same energy to every person, group, or cause, and they tend to protect what has proved its value to them. |
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| Selective: careful with trust, loyal by choice, and unwilling to treat every claim on their time as equal. |
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| Ethical stance |
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| The true-neutral side avoids a fixed pull towards law, chaos, altruism, or dominance. It is centred on balance, proportion, and independence from extremes. |
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| Alignment axis |
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| True Neutral: balance, independence, proportion, and distance from extremes. |
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| Moral stance |
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| The neutral side is measured, self-controlled, and more focused on balance than moral display. |
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| Core tension |
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| The selective method can make the true neutral aim more effective, but it can also distort it when pride, fear, impatience, or secrecy takes over. |
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== Summary == |
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A '''Selective True Neutral''' profile describes someone who tends to combine careful loyalty with the habits of a True Neutral outlook and the priorities of a Neutral outlook. In plain terms, the type is defined less by a single belief and more by how it chooses, commits, protects, refuses, and reacts under pressure. |
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== Core Outlook == |
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Selective alignments are defined by boundaries. They do not spread loyalty, trust, sympathy, or effort evenly across every person and cause. They decide what has earned attention and what has not. It avoids automatic loyalty to law, chaos, altruism, or dominance. It judges the moment by scale, cost, evidence, and the danger of overcommitting to one side. |
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In practice, the profile describes tendencies rather than fixed behaviour. A person may show parts of it in one setting and very different behaviour elsewhere. Context, maturity, stress, experience, and incentives all affect how the pattern appears. |
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For a '''Selective True Neutral''' character, the important feature is the interaction between method and motive. The selective side shapes how the person thinks, plans, reacts, and presents themselves. The true neutral side shapes what they consider worth protecting, changing, preserving, exploiting, or refusing. |
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== Decision Style == |
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A true-neutral version asks what is proportionate before it asks what faction, rule, or moral banner would approve. It can co-operate, refuse, preserve, or disrupt depending on the facts. A neutral version does not rush to condemn or praise. It asks what is proportionate, what is sustainable, and what is actually known. When the '''Selective''' element is added, the result is more specific: the person tends to use careful loyalty to decide when to act, when to wait, and how much trust or force a situation deserves. |
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This combination gives the type a specific flavour. It is not simply 'Selective' with a different label attached. A selective true neutral person uses selective habits in service of a true neutral standard, which changes the way strengths and flaws appear in daily life. |
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This style can be useful when a problem is messy and a simple rule would give a poor answer. It can also create tension, because other people may not understand the reasoning until after the decision has been made. |
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== Typical Behaviour == |
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In calm situations, this type is usually easiest to recognise through priorities. It notices what other people reward, what they ignore, and where the practical consequences are likely to land. It may not explain every thought aloud, but its choices reveal what it values. |
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Under pressure, the selective side becomes more visible. This trait works by filtering commitments. A selective person may be slow to help at first, but once a person, place, or standard is accepted as worth protecting, the commitment can become strong and durable. The true neutral side then decides where that method is aimed. In conflict, it slows the room down and asks what is known rather than what is loud. It may mediate, refuse involvement, or act sharply if balance itself is under threat. |
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The result can look very different depending on maturity. A mature '''Selective True Neutral''' keeps the method connected to purpose. An immature version may use the same habits defensively, turning a useful tendency into an excuse. |
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== Distinctive Features == |
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The distinctive part of '''Selective True Neutral''' is the way the selective habit changes the true neutral aim. Its practical strength is triage. A selective type does not treat every request, danger, friendship, or cause as equal, so it can focus energy where it believes the claim is strongest. This axis gives the type a concern for proportion and independence. It resists being captured by a faction, slogan, or emotional weather of the room. |
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Its social strength is earned loyalty. Once trust is accepted, the bond is usually serious, private, and harder to shake than casual approval. In groups, it often acts as a balancer. It may mediate, step back, or intervene sharply if one side is consuming all oxygen. |
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This means the alignment is usually recognised less by a single opinion and more by repeated handling of trust, risk, duty, sympathy, power, and limits. A person with this type may share an outcome with a neighbouring alignment, but the route taken to reach that outcome is different. |
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== Strengths == |
== Strengths == |
* Sets clear boundaries |
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* Does not waste loyalty on bad faith people |
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* Stays calm when others demand instant commitment |
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* Can be highly dependable once trust is earned |
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* Applies the True Neutral approach without losing sight of the Neutral priority |
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* Can be effective in situations where motives, loyalties, and risks are mixed |
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* Sets clear boundaries and wastes less energy on bad-faith demands |
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* Forms strong loyalty once trust has been earned |
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* Can resist guilt pressure and group panic |
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* Keeps private matters private unless disclosure has a purpose |
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* Protects attention, time, and emotional energy from constant claims |
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* Can judge commitments by evidence rather than by noise |
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* Avoids being captured by faction or mood |
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* Keeps proportion when others escalate |
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* Can judge competing claims without needing a tribe |
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* Uses selective judgement to make the true neutral outlook more practical |
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* Can stay functional when motives, loyalties, and consequences are mixed |
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* Often notices the difference between a stated value and the behaviour that proves it |
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* Can be memorable in fiction because the inner motive and outer method are not identical |
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== Risks and Limits == |
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* May look cold before people understand the boundary |
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* Can withhold help for too long |
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* May judge new people too quickly |
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* Can mistake caution for fairness |
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* The main risk is becoming so committed to balance that urgency, loyalty, or moral responsibility is treated as bias. |
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* The main risk is detachment. The person may become too comfortable watching from the side while others carry the cost. |
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=== Strengths in Detail === |
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The practical strength of '''Selective True Neutral''' is that it does not rely on one flat moral reflex. It has a method and a direction. The selective method helps it judge timing, effort, and presentation, while the true neutral direction gives that method a reason to be used. |
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Its practical strength is triage. A selective type does not treat every request, danger, friendship, or cause as equal, so it can focus energy where it believes the claim is strongest. This axis gives the type a concern for proportion and independence. It resists being captured by a faction, slogan, or emotional weather of the room. Taken together, these qualities can make the alignment effective in situations where a simpler approach either freezes, moralises, or reacts too late. |
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The social strength is different. Its social strength is earned loyalty. Once trust is accepted, the bond is usually serious, private, and harder to shake than casual approval. In groups, it often acts as a balancer. It may mediate, step back, or intervene sharply if one side is consuming all oxygen. When mature, this allows the type to hold a clear place in a group without needing constant approval. |
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== Weaknesses == |
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* May look cold or dismissive before the reasoning is understood |
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* Can withhold help too long while deciding whether someone deserves it |
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* May punish uncertainty as if it were betrayal |
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* Can become suspicious by habit |
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* May expect loyalty while offering little explanation in return |
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* Can become too comfortable with exclusion |
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* Can mistake detachment for wisdom |
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* May underreact when loyalty or urgency is appropriate |
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* Can seem evasive to people who need a clear side |
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* Can use the true neutral aim to excuse excess in the selective method |
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* May be misunderstood when motives are private or poorly explained |
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* Can become less self-aware when stress turns a habit into a reflex |
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* May need outside challenge to separate conviction from pride |
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=== Weaknesses in Detail === |
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Its main risk is exclusion. The habit of filtering can become a reason to dismiss people too early or to make loyalty tests that nobody was told they were taking. The axis can become passive if balance is treated as automatically wiser than commitment. |
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It is often misread as cold because it does not offer instant access, but its distance may also hide fear of being responsible to others. For '''Selective True Neutral''', this misreading matters because the outward behaviour may be judged before the motive is visible. The alignment is at its weakest when it expects others to trust a conclusion without being shown enough of the reasoning behind it. |
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The recurring danger is loss of proportion. The selective side can become a habit that is defended automatically, while the true neutral side can become a justification rather than a real limit. Once that happens, the alignment keeps its vocabulary but loses its discipline. |
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== Decision-Making == |
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A '''Selective True Neutral''' decision usually begins with reading the situation rather than reacting to the loudest demand. The person looks at risk, loyalty, incentive, and consequence, then chooses a response that fits the true neutral aim. |
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The decision-making style can be effective because it avoids empty slogans. It asks what action will actually matter. The danger is that the person may become too confident in their own reading and may treat disagreement as ignorance rather than information. |
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In character writing, this type benefits from visible trade-offs. A strong scene or profile shows what the person gains by being selective, what the true neutral outlook demands, and what price is paid when those two forces clash. |
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== Common Scenarios == |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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! Scenario |
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! Typical response |
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| Crisis |
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| A '''Selective True Neutral''' character sorts the situation into what must be protected, what can wait, and what does not deserve immediate trust and slows the situation down long enough to separate facts from momentum. |
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|- |
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| Authority |
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| The type asks whether the authority has earned obedience or is merely demanding it and judges authority by evidence and effect rather than by automatic obedience or rejection. |
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|- |
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| Betrayal |
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| It narrows access quickly and watches behaviour over time before rebuilding trust and looks at scale, cause, and consequence before deciding whether the bond can continue. |
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| Group pressure |
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| It often protects a smaller circle or defined purpose instead of trying to satisfy everyone and tries to prevent the group from being swallowed by extremes, panic, or factional pressure. |
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|} |
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== Relationships and Trust == |
== Relationships and Trust == |
In relationships, '''Selective True Neutral''' is usually read through behaviour rather than slogans. The type is more convincing when it communicates limits clearly, keeps promises, and accepts correction when it has misjudged someone. Trust is strongest when the person explains enough of their reasoning for others to understand the boundary, even if every detail does not need to be shared. |
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Socially, the selective trait can look reserved, private, blunt, or difficult to read. It values earned closeness over broad approval and is usually more loyal to a small trusted circle than to a crowd. In relationships, it can be calm and fair, but hard to read. People may trust its judgement while still wishing it would show clearer emotional investment. |
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The type can become difficult to work with if it expects loyalty without showing transparency in return. People around it may respect the competence while still feeling unsure about the motive or the next step. |
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Trust with this type is rarely abstract. It is built through repeated behaviour, kept promises, useful honesty, and the sense that the other person understands the line that must not be crossed. The type may value loyalty, but it is usually sensitive to betrayal, hypocrisy, or manipulation. |
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== Conflict Behaviour == |
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Under conflict, the '''Selective''' part tends to shape tactics, the '''True Neutral''' part shapes the attitude towards rules and independence, and the '''Neutral''' part shapes the end goal. A healthy version keeps those three parts in proportion. It does not use a good aim, a neutral pose, a protective role, or a harsh result to excuse poor conduct. It also does not use cleverness, caution, firmness, compassion, or resolve as a substitute for evidence. |
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In close relationships, the strongest version of '''Selective True Neutral''' balances its instinctive method with enough openness to be understood. The weakest version expects others to accept the result without ever being allowed to understand the reasoning. |
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A poor version can become defensive, secretive, or too certain that its own reading of the situation is the only serious one. The quickest way for the type to lose credibility is to demand understanding while refusing to offer any. |
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== Boundaries and Limits == |
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Its boundary is the point where one force, side, or appetite begins to dominate the whole situation. The selective side determines how that boundary is noticed and defended. It may plan, filter, endure, care, or act firmly depending on the first trait. |
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It grows by making its boundaries understandable and by checking whether caution has become automatic suspicion. For '''Selective True Neutral''', growth also requires remembering that the true neutral aim is supposed to limit the method, not give it unlimited permission. |
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== Conflict Style == |
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In conflict, '''Selective True Neutral''' tends to combine selective pressure with true neutral priorities. It may watch before acting, test the other side, look for leverage, hold a boundary, or move suddenly when the moment is right. |
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The conflict style is strongest when it remains proportionate. It is weakest when the person starts enjoying the method more than the purpose. For example, strategy can become manipulation, loyalty can become possession, stability can become stubbornness, compassion can become enabling, and firmness can become cruelty. |
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== Healthy Expression == |
== Healthy Expression == |
At its best, selectiveness protects attention, time, and emotional energy. The person chooses commitments carefully and then takes them seriously. In a healthy '''Selective True Neutral''' profile, the True Neutral element provides a method and the Neutral element provides a limit. The person can explain what they are doing, why it is proportionate, and what would make them change course. |
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Healthy selectiveness gives loyalty weight. It allows care to be serious, focused, and sustainable rather than performative. In the '''Selective True Neutral''' version, that healthy expression is aimed at balance, independence, proportion, and distance from extremes. The person can explain the principle behind their action, accept correction when evidence changes, and keep the result connected to the original value. |
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A healthy version does not need to perform goodness, neutrality, guardianship, or strength. It can act plainly and let the consistency of the behaviour carry the meaning. |
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== Unhealthy Expression == |
== Unhealthy Expression == |
At its worst, selectiveness becomes suspicion. The person may use distance as a shield, refuse reasonable compromise, or keep people outside the circle after they have earned a chance. In an unhealthy '''Selective True Neutral''' profile, the True Neutral element becomes an excuse and the Neutral element becomes a label rather than a discipline. The person may still sound principled, but the behaviour becomes harder to justify when examined closely. |
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Unhealthy selectiveness becomes suspicion and gatekeeping. It can turn caution into a wall that even sincere people cannot cross. In the '''Selective True Neutral''' version, that unhealthy expression usually appears when the true neutral aim becomes a shield against criticism. The person may still use the language of principle, balance, protection, order, freedom, or survival while acting mainly from fear, pride, appetite, or resentment. |
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The warning sign is loss of proportion. Once the person can no longer name a limit, admit a mistake, or recognise the cost paid by others, the alignment has moved into its distorted form. |
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== Writing Use == |
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As a character type, '''Selective True Neutral''' works best when it has both appeal and danger. The appeal comes from competence, clarity, and a recognisable moral direction. The danger comes from the same qualities being pushed too far. |
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This makes the type useful for protagonists, rivals, mentors, antagonists, faction leaders, protectors, investigators, survivors, reformers, rebels, or morally complicated allies. The role depends on which part of the alignment is emphasised and what the story treats as the cost of that emphasis. |
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== Comparison == |
== Comparison == |
Compared with other '''Selective''' profiles, '''Selective True Neutral''' is shaped most by its True Neutral method and Neutral aim. Compared with other profiles that share that axis, it is more strongly marked by careful loyalty. This makes the page useful for comparing nearby profiles, but it should not be used to rank people or reduce them to one label. |
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Compared with other '''Selective''' alignments, '''Selective True Neutral''' is shaped by the true neutral aim. Compared with other '''True Neutral''' alignments, it is shaped by the selective method. This is why two pages can share one word but describe very different behaviour. |
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Nearby alignments may share goals but differ in method, or share method but differ in moral direction. Those differences matter. A [[Cunning Chaotic Good]] character, for instance, is not just a less formal [[Cunning Lawful Good]] character; the attitude towards authority changes the whole risk profile. |
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== See Also == |
== See Also == |
* [[Moral Alignment Portal]] |
* [[Moral Alignment Portal]] |
* [[Moral Alignment Test Application]] |
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* [[Selective Lawful Good]] |
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* [[Selective Neutral Good]] |
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* [[Selective Chaotic Good]] |
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* [[Selective Lawful Neutral]] |
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* [[Selective Chaotic Neutral]] |
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* [[Selective Lawful Evil]] |
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* [[Selective Neutral Evil]] |
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* [[Selective Chaotic Evil]] |
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* [[Selective Neutral Guardian]] |
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* [[Selective Chaotic Guardian]] |
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[[Category:Moral alignment]] |
[[Category:Moral alignment]] |