I still suggest corrupting the earth with chaos. Because fuck the environment, WE DON'T NEED NATURE WHERE WE'RE GOING.
-1
I really hate this idea of "We don't need nature" IRL, too. If you bring up this idea again, I swear
I will subject you to a rant on the topic.Words.
Sentience is experiences. Protein chains and bacteria and even sponges(apparently) and whatnot lack this. They're robots. Input output. Sapience is thought(and yes, language is a side effect), plus reasoning. What we're using right now to discuss this(or should be). Arguably any being that can grasp hefty ideas. Such as ceasing to be in all your entirety, or, possibly, the idea of god. Is sapient. As a side note, apparently some consider chimps sapient, and whether or not it is true it is very interesting.
A bit irrelevant to the issue at hand--the disagreeing assumptions about the intellect of troglodytes.
I assume they(the Trogs) are no better than intelligent canines, or parrots, because we've no idea of their intelligence otherwise, and the chunk of their souls that is missing has to have been removed somewhere- I'm placing my bets on them having animal thought patterns(and have the idea that if we remove that and replace it with devotion, well..). If they're caveman smart, then excellent, we don't have to do much more work in shaping their brains to be built for non-caveman lifestyles.
I assume creatures are sentient/sapient/self-aware/intelligent/whatever until otherwise shown. It's easier that way; less of a chance of getting surprised by intellect or moral consequences.
Anyways, the fact that they
have a soul shows that they're significantly more intelligent and self-aware than dogs or whatever. The weakness just means that some portion of them (intelligence? wisdom? spirituality?) is less notable than in humans.
The reason I suggested making them into new creatures was so they could start again as entirely new beings, with new intelligence and understanding. Instead of having to slave away at teaching the Trogs, we could have intelligent, loyal bug people. Or plant people. Or whatever we mold them into.
I have no problems with modifying the troglodytes.
Grumugga has had some success with making orcs incredibly loyal. If we can't bind them to us, specifically, we may have to settle with making them enjoy serving under a higher power. Something the knowledge goddess may be able to help us with.
Give them work they're happy with, don't force them to be happy doing the work we want them to do.
Also, they still have free will, as beings with souls, and can be spurned and leave, but lacking 'complete' souls, they'd be harder pressed to do such a thing. The only beings that love(serve) us entirely and unconditionally are our soulless creations. Another evil thing would be completely removing their free will, instead of enticing them to work for us.
What is the difference between forcing someone to work for us and mindraping them so they need to do so the feel happy?
Also, we're a young god and just considered something like this. The Empire has probably known about this sort of thing for years, if not decades, or even centuries!
Then why do you think it's possible?
The only reason I can consider why they wouldn't do something like this is because of internal disputes(heh), or the fact it'd slash their mana income.
Internal disputes are no reason to discard something useful to all.
And if it would "slash"
their income somehow, what would it do to us?
They probably don't even need lesser-souled beings to work for them, after all, they're probably loading their people to the gills on propaganda.
More is better than less. Obviously, they don't have enough propaganda if they have people fleeing to villages run by young chaos gods.
We can make angels capable of defending our afterlife and repairing it; I don't think we need butterflies in addition to angels. Just seems like an unnecessary additional creation that only fills a single purpose that something else could already do in addition to other useful tasks.
Also I just don't feel like investing time and mana into butterflies.
I prefer having two specialized creatures rather than a single jack-of-all-trades-master-of-none.
Why do you think soldiers and engineers are two distinct jobs, like, everywhere?
Agreed.
Also, gman, do not judge by the
color of their skin form of their flesh, but the content of their character.
Thing I found.
Gasp. That's copyrighted material. You monster.