A lot of the time I’m not sure whether Arrendis is trying to convince me to do stuff she thinks I should, or maybe persuade herself that I’m actually an awful person even if I don’t often act very much like one or think of myself that way. … Probably kind of both. It seems to be something that actually matters to her a little, since she keeps coming back to it. It’s a little cheering; it makes it seem like she might really care, and not just be messing with me because messing with people is fun.
… in the end, though … it seems like a main difference between her and me, and maybe you and me, too, is: I think I might have a different moral neurotype than either of you.
You might have seen stuff on this? There are basically two moral neurotypes, and every society contains both. There’s the fairness-oriented neurotype, which objects when stuff’s not fair. Then there’s the loyalty-oriented neurotype, which likes structure and authority and objects when people start ignoring the proper order of things.
I kind of expect you two are probably the former. I’m more the latter. Arrendis can be all “But people are suffering!” and I’m kind of, “Well, yeah,” and she’s “But it’s awful!” and I’m all “Yep.”
The world’s not … fair, and it never will be. That’s not really fixable. People trying to fix things with more enthusiasm than insight are likely to break more than they fix, and if you get a cascade of stuff like that you can end up with a terrible mess and collapse. But, then, if you don’t have people around pushing for things to be more fair, it’s pretty easy for things to just sort of sink into the kind of stagnant corruption people keep thinking the Empire is drowning in.
(It isn’t.)
So you kind of need both neurotypes to have a healthy society: some to keep it at least equitable enough to avoid social collapse and maybe do even quite a bit more than that, some to keep it stable.
I think I’m probably a somewhat oddly-placed keep-it-stable-er. So no matter how much Arrendis points at the injustices of the world, I’ll probably always just kind of be, “Well, that’s sad. It’s still not going to help if you blow everything up.”