The Darth Vader/Dr. Doom Builder Book List

  • Thread starter Thread starter Khatti
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Book List
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the creation of villains in storytelling, emphasizing the importance of understanding their psychology and motivations. Eric Hoffer's "The True Believer" is highlighted as a valuable resource for exploring extremist motivations and the emotional underpinnings of villainy. Participants suggest that villains should be complex characters with relatable traits rather than one-dimensional figures, and that their actions often stem from conflicting goals with protagonists. The conversation also touches on the distinction between villains and antagonists, noting that not all adversaries are villains in the traditional sense. Overall, the thread advocates for deeper character development to create compelling and believable antagonists in narratives.
Khatti
Messages
281
Reaction score
35
This idea came to me while jotting down some notes to get a handle on my villains. There is a thread here dedicated to what some of our favorite science fiction novels are. If I needed to study some form of physics, astronomy, or cosmology I could put out a call and you nice folks would provide me with a list of resources to study. There is no list of books or resources to study when it comes to the creation of villains. Seeing as how villains (or at least antagonists) are part of almost all stories it occurred to me that suggestions on things to study for the creation of bad-guys might be a good idea. Does anyone out there have a book or other resource that deals with the psychology of villains that might be of use to writers in the forum?

Let me start the list with one of the best books on extremist motivation I have ever read: The True Believer by Eric Hoffer. It is a great contemplation on how people might be motivated to join groups such as ISIS. The central thought that Hoffer offers to the reader is that the world is spoiled to such people in a way that simply cannot be fixed. The world as we know it must be destroyed and replaced by something less corrupt (as defined by the destroyer).

Anyone else got anything to add
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
Villains are not really any different than any other character. Their motives and goals simply tend to conflict with the protagonist's. For characters in general, I recommend "Characters and Viewpoint", by Orson Scott Card.
 
I have a female dictator, at first i saw her entirely negative, but now i see she will be a better character, if she isn't a simply psycho, but for example really cares about her family and people on her own way, she simply thinks that freedom isn't something valuable (unlike something material), and everything is allowed against those who oppose her.
 
For my purposes I try to play a bit with socio-dynamics. Not what's the personality of the head of the state (or ruling group), but why anyway there are legions of quite loyal followers.
-Is it the leader able to show his followers that is successful? (not necessary propaganda, maybe a few genuine victories)
-Is it able to offer proper carrot and stick?
-is there any ideology that would make his people support him for greater goal? (nationalism, fundamentalist religion, or something in this line like communism)
-can he show himself to his people as lesser evil? (both national socialism and communism needed the other to claim being good in comparison) Or maybe a thuggish law and order is preferable to anarchy and permanent civil war? (Before mocking that if you had to live in Iraq - would you prefer to live under Saddam Hussein (after end of Iraq-Iranian war) or after toppling him by American invasion?)

For my story (black-grey morality) conflict, the "good" guys:
-consider freedom of speech as something which sometimes is useful because it let a mismanagement be discovered, but generally value more social harmony
-consider rules of war as binding only when the other side follows them. When their ally civilians were taken as hostages, they simply started raiding the other side villages for civilians to have someone for exchange. When part of hostages were executed, their retaliation took form of indiscriminate fire bombing and using anthrax. (they would object a genocide against a honourable enemy, but in such case it's OK)
-because of disliking violating their own laws, they officially suspended human rights for part of their enemies, while made them only being protected by animal welfare regulations
-don't mind using mass surveillance techniques, prefer punishing criminals with electroshocks because is swift, inexpensive and let such person return to society next day
-put heavy taxes on all, use that on big investments programs
-use effective social engineering (and really heavy taxes in not followed)
-weed out defective genetic traits through eugenics
-consider letter of marque as an example of Public Private Partnership

The ruling group is meritocratic and governance is competent, while acceptable quality bread and circuses are provided for masses.
 
Drakkith said:
Villains are not really any different than any other character. Their motives and goals simply tend to conflict with the protagonist's. For characters in general, I recommend "Characters and Viewpoint", by Orson Scott Card.

Yes and no. There are stories where there is not so much a villain as there is an antagonist--not quite the same thing. Say we're doing a story about NASA and the funding of future projects: Mary might want to use that money to build some sort of L5 settlement while Jill (notice how politically correct I am) would want to use that money to fund the settling of the Asteroid Belt. If the story we're writing is from the point of view of Jill Mary is an impediment and an adversary, but hardly a villain.

On the other hand, in the case of say Star Wars, or Jack Vance's The Demon Princes, there are people who can be quite categorized as villains, and some thought would be given as to how and why they became villains. If you've never read the Demon Princes novels much of the action involves discovering just who the heavies are, which means a great deal of those stories deal with the biographies of the bad guys, and a certain amount of time is spent seeing how the bad guys became bad guys. Koker Hekkus in The Killing Machine, and Howard Alan Treesong in The Book of Dreams are prime examples of this.

If you want to create a Star Wars you are going to have to create a Darth Vader, and if you create a Darth Vader, it usually behooves you to give some thought as to how Darth Vader became Darth Vader.
 
Czcibor said:
For my purposes I try to play a bit with socio-dynamics. Not what's the personality of the head of the state (or ruling group), but why anyway there are legions of quite loyal followers

You may want to give Eric Hoffer's The True Believer a read anyway; people are usually not as rational about their political choices as academics like to think. There really is no such thing as Economic Man, making those scrupulously rational economic choices about his life. Most of us are far more lead by our emotions than we care to admit. I'm sure you've heard the criticism that Skepticism has often taken the place of a religion to many people who practice it. What is the rational reason for these supposedly rational skeptics to do such a thing?
 
You can study popular villains if the goal is marketing. However, if the goal is to enjoy writing then pattern villains after people you don't like - or at least give them traits and mannerisms you don't like. You can even use irritating characteristics of your friends as models.

A character who is cruel to everybody comes across as a strawman. If we have a character who has friends but is stubborn or disorganized or sometimes lies, examples of such are in the realm of daily experience. It should be easy to write about them.
 
Khatti said:
There are stories where there is not so much a villain as there is an antagonist

That's true. I wasn't making a distinction between them, but a villain is not the same thing as an antagonist. Plotwise, a villain can be a protagonist or antagonist or neither.
 
Khatti said:
You may want to give Eric Hoffer's The True Believer a read anyway; people are usually not as rational about their political choices as academics like to think. There really is no such thing as Economic Man, making those scrupulously rational economic choices about his life. Most of us are far more lead by our emotions than we care to admit. I'm sure you've heard the criticism that Skepticism has often taken the place of a religion to many people who practice it. What is the rational reason for these supposedly rational skeptics to do such a thing?


As economist I treat that challenge to homo economicus as blasphemy. ;)

I'd think in line of bound rationality. With some typical biases. For example being selfrightous on its own has quite high reward. Also gathering data making one prior decision look idiotic is harder. In case of more complicated problems, we're never source of problems - that someone else fault.

Not fully rational. But for an Arab guy who is poor, has no income and chance to marry, taking chances of abducting an infidel woman might sound tempting. Add to it overoptimism concerning his skill and chances. And ethical experts around that would say it's absolutely morally noble of him to do so and he even deserves that for joining Jihad.

Book looks interesting.
 
  • #10
In Game of Thrones, Tywin Lannister is an antagonist, because he opposes Starks, but also a villain, who accepts methods too nasty for others (like assasination, burn a town to get rid of a very dangerous person) Entirely negative characters also exists, like Gregor Clegane.
In W40K the Imperium isn't a really nice place, but the lesser evil compared to Chaos. (IMHO at least the Imperium is led by competent people, not like the ones in BSG, how disgusting to kill mass produced clones - who want to exterminate us - with a virus...)
In my story, the villain can be a lesser evil, because while Earth is infested heavily by corruption, poverty and sin, her realm offers good education, college for everyone, ability to raise the allowed number of kids properly, total surveillance also creates very low rate of crime, good health care (if the one can be a good worker again, or was a stahanovist) and also mass feasts to color people's lives. While originally an agnostic, i think she will reintroduce some primitve Sun cult.
She became like that due to an abusive father, and play the game of the mighty, but i think there should a scene where the heroine is also shown to enjoy break the will of someone.
 
  • #11
Stephen Tashi said:
You can study popular villains if the goal is marketing. However, if the goal is to enjoy writing then pattern villains after people you don't like - or at least give them traits and mannerisms you don't like. You can even use irritating characteristics of your friends as models.

Create villains made up from people I loathe? Family members who annoy me? Moi ? :devil:

Actually I started this process because I was having blind spots in one of my stories; places where I just had no feel for what was going on or going to happen. It occurred to me that I really hadn't given any thought to just how my bad guys were bad guys. I started to ruminate on the subject of bad guys in general, and it occurred to me that this discussion might be of use to other writers in the forum.

While I was ruminating on the subject of bad guys I came to some thoughts I'd gleaned a long time ago from Eric Hoffer.
 
Last edited:
  • #12
Czcibor said:
Book looks interesting.

Hoffer was an interesting guy. He made his living as a laborer, finally becoming a longshoreman in San Francisco. He moved to California during the Depression, and spent what time he could in county and city libraries. He started writing down his own thoughts and got them published--I don't know how; I bet that's a story in and of itself.

He was a second-generation German-American, and spoke English with a heavy, German accent. He became fascinated with Totalitarianism and wondered why people would become involved in such movements. Some think he was just intrigued as to how his European cousins got themselves into the mess they were in. The True Believer is his rumination on the probable psychology of the sort of people who would become involved in totalitarianism.
 
  • #13
Czcibor said:
Not fully rational. But for an Arab guy who is poor, has no income and chance to marry, taking chances of abducting an infidel woman might sound tempting. Add to it overoptimism concerning his skill and chances. And ethical experts around that would say it's absolutely morally noble of him to do so and he even deserves that for joining Jihad.

Another thing about said Muslim is that it might be easier for him to imagine himself bringing about another Caliphate than it is for him to imagine himself as another Steve Jobs or Bill Gates. I wonder if one reason why so many entertainers come from the poorest of the poor is that it is no more of a reach in a young girl from Tennessee's mind to imagine being the next Dolly Parton than it is to become an upper level manager at Dupont. Indeed, being the next Dolly may seem far more manageable and conceivable; who sees people being upper level managers?
 
  • #14
I don't think that an average jihadist imagine himself so easy to be a Caliphate, i think he imagines himself a reknowned warrior, instead of a lowly no one (either dead or alive).
 
  • #15
GTOM said:
In my story, the villain can be a lesser evil, because while Earth is infested heavily by corruption, poverty and sin, her realm offers good education, college for everyone, ability to raise the allowed number of kids properly, total surveillance also creates very low rate of crime, good health care (if the one can be a good worker again, or was a stahanovist) and also mass feasts to color people's lives.

She sounds like a female version of Huey Long ( Wille Stark in "All The Kings Men").
 
  • #16
GTOM said:
I don't think that an average jihadist imagine himself so easy to be a Caliphate, i think he imagines himself a reknowned warrior, instead of a lowly no one (either dead or alive)

Well the average jihadist would not be a Caliphate, he would be a member of a Caliphate. Which is another part of the allure; the feeling that you are part of something bigger than yourself.
 
  • #17
Stephen Tashi said:
She sounds like a female version of Huey Long ( Wille Stark in "All The Kings Men").

I rather thought about ancient Egypt or Incan Empire, and Queen Freddie.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fredegund
 
  • #18
GTOM said:
I rather thought about ancient Egypt or Incan Empire, and Queen Freddie.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fredegund

I don't see an outpouring of civic benefits and public works from that lady! On one hand, we have great freedom in imagining the character of people from ancient history since evidence of personal details is non-existant On the other hand, if nothing sparks our imagination, there aren't any convenient aids to get it going. With Huey, we have a more accessible record.
 
  • #19
I don't think that a male model for a woman is just enough.
Sorry i don't expect my future to be all egalitarian, sometimes she can still feel: oh you are good, pity that you arent an alpha male.
She is also likes to be seductive (well its a great weapon in my world), wear mini skirts if too much feminity isn't a disadvantage and she rather has to show the manly traits.
 
  • #20
GTOM said:
I rather thought about ancient Egypt or Incan Empire, and Queen Freddie.

If you are interested in the ultimate bad girls who abuse power you best remember Elizabeth Báthory as well as Fredegund. In fiction there are some pretty hard tarts in the Icelandic sagas.
 
  • #21
GTOM;

You know another woman you may want to look at, if you are creating a mercantile dictatorship, is Ayn Rand. After all, the Intelligentsia play as much of a role in ruling as politicians. The question that intrigues me with public intellectuals is to what extent they are trying to create grand, social solutions to what could be wholly personal problems. As a young girl in the Soviet Union of the Revolution Bolsheviks raided the drug store of her father and threw the family out into the street. She always felt an intense sense of outrage over that, and it fueled the creation of her philosophy. I always wonder to what extent Karl Marx has a similar bio.
 
  • #22
While ruminating on the matter of intellectuals I realized that I have a question for anyone who is a part of American Academics. Viewed from the outside it would appear that academic intellectuals take the position that misanthropy is essentially an ethical stance or posture. The attitude (as it at least appears from the outside) is that we are all douches and we must atone for the sins of the world immediately--though people who are members or racial or sexual minorities, and of course academics themselves--are somewhat less douches then the unwashed masses out there. But, whether the subject is global warming, or rape on college campuses, or anything between the two, the first step is to acknowledge the unalterably base nature of humanity.

Am I on to something?
 
  • #23
Khatti said:
If you are interested in the ultimate bad girls who abuse power you best remember Elizabeth Báthory as well as Fredegund. In fiction there are some pretty hard tarts in the Icelandic sagas.


I'm convinced that Báthory's trial was a scripted one, by the way it is impossible to bath in blood.

Ayn Rand, her refusal of collectivism is rather Mars in my setting, it is a union of many communities that can do whatever they want except kill or imprison people. (Only the federal government can do the later. )

I could list the following things that formed my character :
abusive father who became a (false) believer after a head injury, coma, fear of death.
she started to envy happier kids and wanted to find a channel to release her hatred
that made her a sadist
she is the owner of the top robot manufacturer company that helped develop the feeling, that human masses should be also controlled like robots, as i said she is barely able to understand even concepts like freedom
because she is a woman, her position was threatened more than once, that made her feel insecure, and lead to conclusion, that either everything or nothing (maximalism, megalomania, total control) even speaking against her counts as an attack
masculine and feminine parts also have a conflict, whether she should be all pretty and seductive, or an anti-woman, no husband just haarem (no one to look up on, but don't threat her dominance), her girl is the result of genetic engineering
as a mother because of bad childhood, barely able to show love, expect maximal performance, although she develops in that matter
 
Last edited:
  • #24
GTOM said:
I'm convinced that Báthory's trial was a scripted one, by the way it is impossible to bath in blood.

You mean her trial was much like those of witches of the same time: "...I saw Gretl Hoffmeir having consensual relations with the Devil not once, not twice, but three times at Midnight under the dark oaks of the forbidden forest (where I had no business being at the time). Then they cooked and ate a small child for a snack and summoned forth a demon and sent it out for pizza when the munchkin didn't fill them up..." Yeah you may have a point. I'm not really an aficionado of the Báthory story, I just threw it out there as a possible reference.
 
Last edited:
  • #25
Khatti said:
Am I on to something?

I doubt it. Most scientists are not misanthropes.
 
  • #26
Khatti said:
While ruminating on the matter of intellectuals I realized that I have a question for anyone who is a part of American Academics. Viewed from the outside it would appear that academic intellectuals take the position that misanthropy is essentially an ethical stance or posture. The attitude (as it at least appears from the outside) is that we are all douches and we must atone for the sins of the world immediately--though people who are members or racial or sexual minorities, and of course academics themselves--are somewhat less douches then the unwashed masses out there. But, whether the subject is global warming, or rape on college campuses, or anything between the two, the first step is to acknowledge the unalterably base nature of humanity.

Am I on to something?


Clearly not. Any academic career that you might have would be destroyed for expressing improper views. ;)
 
  • #27
"Any academic career that you might have would be destroyed for expressing improper views."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Daly

"taught at Boston College, a Jesuit-run institution, for 33 years"

I think she said quite improper things...

If life is to survive on this planet, there must be a decontamination of the Earth. I think this will be accompanied by an evolutionary process that will result in a drastic reduction of the population of males.
 
Last edited:
  • #28
Drakkith said:
I doubt it. Most scientists are not misanthropes.

Scientists make up only a percentage of all academics. I remember paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould gave an interview some time in the past where the stupidity and immorality of his fellow human beings played a part. What I'm talking about is not so much the distasteful personal attribute of anyone scholar as it seems to be an intellectual fashion of many scholars. It may the the frame of the picture thing: it's hard to see the picture when you're standing within the frame.
 
  • #29
Czcibor said:
Clearly not. Any academic career that you might have would be destroyed for expressing improper views. ;)

Your words say one thing, but I'm not sure your emoticon says something else. :devil:

GTOM said:
"If life is to survive on this planet, there must be a decontamination of the Earth. I think this will be accompanied by an evolutionary process that will result in a drastic reduction of the population of males."

Well now I'm going to sleep better at night! :oldfrown:

 
  • #30
GTOM said:
"Any academic career that you might have would be destroyed for expressing improper views."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Daly

"taught at Boston College, a Jesuit-run institution, for 33 years"

I think she said quite improper things...

Honestly speaking I think that unfortunately that in making scientific career one of the factors is having proper ("proper" can actually be varied pending on field, my impression was that sociology related stuff attracted much more left wing people than economics) views. I think about Sokal Hoax or the way in which green establishment tried to destroy Bjorn Lomborg.

Damn... both of us deal with anecdotal evidence. What about catching a sample of fledging academics, assign them by random to pay lip service to different ideologies and see how their careers would develop? ;)

EDIT: Cute article, funny to read about her. Anyway, after a few attempts she was forced to retire.
 
Last edited:
  • #31
Czcibor said:
Damn... both of us deal with anecdotal evidence. What about catching a sample of fledging academics, assign them by random to pay lip service to different ideologies and see how their careers would develop? ;)

I'm sure that finding test volunteers won't be a problem.
 
  • #32
Czcibor said:
Honestly speaking I think that unfortunately that in making scientific career one of the factors is having proper ("proper" can actually be varied pending on field, my impression was that sociology related stuff attracted much more left wing people than economics) views. I think about Sokal Hoax or the way in which green establishment tried to destroy Bjorn Lomborg.

The reason why this unpleasant question came to me is because of something I see on C-Span/BookTV. One of the best-seller lists quoted mentioned a book called The Sixth Extinction. The heart of this book is that the author believes that there is going to be another onslaught of extinctions in the coming decades. Anyone care to guess what the author believes will be responsible for this wave of extinction?

I fret a great deal about global warming, yet I can't help but wonder how much of the activism surrounding global warming has to do with averting a crises, and how much has to do with making the bastards do the right thing for once in their ill-gotten lives.

 
  • #33
Khatti said:
The reason why this unpleasant question came to me is because of something I see on C-Span/BookTV. One of the best-seller lists quoted mentioned a book called The Sixth Extinction. The heart of this book is that the author believes that there is going to be another onslaught of extinctions in the coming decades. Anyone care to guess what the author believes will be responsible for this wave of extinction?

I fret a great deal about global warming, yet I can't help but wonder how much of the activism surrounding global warming has to do with averting a crises, and how much has to do with making the bastards do the right thing for once in their ill-gotten lives.


My English section of my secondary school library was tiny and books were generally old gifts from abroad. It caused that the first book in English that I've read was "The Limits to Growth". It was so scary to read such so respectable academics describing impending doom caused by resource scarcities. Especially that in the moment of reading there was supposed to be practically no ores nor natural gas/oil for over a decade. Doom books sell well for centuries just nowadays one have for brighter readers at least make some semblance for science, don't put the doom day too soon (it can made you a subject of mockery) and to avoid boredom change the imminent threat from time to time.
 
  • #34
Czcibor said:
Doom books sell well for centuries just nowadays one have for brighter readers at least make some semblance for science, don't put the doom day too soon (it can made you a subject of mockery) and to avoid boredom change the imminent threat from time to time.

Writing books may not be the way to go; the real money is made when you form your own religion and assure your flock that the end is nigh, but anyone who hangs out with you (being a messiah and all that) will live through the coming crises. It's also a great way to pick up chicks.
 
  • #35
Khatti said:
Scientists make up only a percentage of all academics.

Then I change my statement to "Most academics are not misanthropes".

I remember paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould gave an interview some time in the past where the stupidity and immorality of his fellow human beings played a part. What I'm talking about is not so much the distasteful personal attribute of anyone scholar as it seems to be an intellectual fashion of many scholars. It may the the frame of the picture thing: it's hard to see the picture when you're standing within the frame.

Stupidity and immorality are always more popular topics than the smart and the moral.
 
  • #36
Darth Vader is history.
 
  • #37
Back to the evil scientist trope, realistically what could help a scientist to become evil (he should be one of my characters)?
I had ideas like other people took most credits for his work, or earned more publications with lesser results because they were better comrades. Add this to his fathers strict maximalism, he always felt he is too small, until the ultimate plan to overtake Earth with the alien technology.
 
  • #38
GTOM said:
Back to the evil scientist trope, realistically what could help a scientist to become evil (he should be one of my characters)?
I had ideas like other people took most credits for his work, or earned more publications with lesser results because they were better comrades. Add this to his fathers strict maximalism, he always felt he is too small, until the ultimate plan to overtake Earth with the alien technology.

One of my heavies became what he was because of the politics of his academic parents, and because he saw said parents being shamed by a cop at a demonstration. My heavy was four or five at the time. The cop was actually threatening to take the kid away, and his parents weren't sure the cop couldn't do it. The whole experience rocked my heavy's world for the rest of his life. It filled him with a sense of outrage that could never be sated. The evil he does in the world is part of a grand, social solution for a wholly personal problem. Finally, my heavy discovers that he's a sexual sadist in the course of his adventures, and the need for gratification becomes harder and harder to give up.
 
  • #39
Khatti said:
GTOM;

You know another woman you may want to look at, if you are creating a mercantile dictatorship, is Ayn Rand. After all, the Intelligentsia play as much of a role in ruling as politicians. The question that intrigues me with public intellectuals is to what extent they are trying to create grand, social solutions to what could be wholly personal problems. As a young girl in the Soviet Union of the Revolution Bolsheviks raided the drug store of her father and threw the family out into the street. She always felt an intense sense of outrage over that, and it fueled the creation of her philosophy. I always wonder to what extent Karl Marx has a similar bio.


Reminds to me Andrew Ryan from Bioshock.
"Does man has the right to his own wealth? No! In America it belongs to the poor. In Vatican, it belongs to God. In Soviet Union, it belongs to everyone. So i choosed Rupture."

(My female governor otherwise has nothing against collectivism, and support families, poor ones, although the economy is clearly capitalist. Her main sin is fear.)
 
  • #40
Look at how real life monsters came to be who they were. Did Hitler create WWII? Or Did the treatment of Germany after WWI create Hitler? Look at how North Korea came to be what it is, or the Iranian revolution:
People turn to idiological fundamentalists when they feel as a whole that their current system is working against them.
 
  • #41
GTOM said:
Back to the evil scientist trope, realistically what could help a scientist to become evil (he should be one of my characters)?
I had ideas like other people took most credits for his work, or earned more publications with lesser results because they were better comrades. Add this to his fathers strict maximalism, he always felt he is too small, until the ultimate plan to overtake Earth with the alien technology.

Ideas:
1) Huge grant for really unethical project (hint: don't try it on this forum, don't lead us to temptation ;) )
2) Let masses forbid her reasonable pet project because of some phobia (like nowadays is being treated GMO or nuclear power). (not only revenge, one may also doubt the whole system as such...)
3) Snowballed... Did not really wanted much at start, just when some conflict were starting were winning them, and each victory was making her stronger but with more enemies, what was leading to arms race and preemtive strikes.
4) Problem with being too rational. Is shooting one innocent guy by over eager police a fair price to have more effective police and save two people from being murdered? If you say "yes", then you:
-just trashed all official ideology that we're expected to believe;
-technically speaking gave an answer which is in accordance with economic theories;
-justified having a police state.
 
  • #42
newjerseyrunner said:
Look at how real life monsters came to be who they were. Did Hitler create WWII? Or Did the treatment of Germany after WWI create Hitler? Look at how North Korea came to be what it is, or the Iranian revolution:
People turn to idiological fundamentalists when they feel as a whole that their current system is working against them.


Masses support the revolution if they feel the system takes away everything from them, but i think Hitler for example gained his ambitions from personal problems (no success, no women, what those rich jews have that i dont...)
 
  • #43
Czcibor said:
Ideas:
1) Huge grant for really unethical project (hint: don't try it on this forum, don't lead us to temptation ;) )
2) Let masses forbid her reasonable pet project because of some phobia (like nowadays is being treated GMO or nuclear power). (not only revenge, one may also doubt the whole system as such...)
3) Snowballed... Did not really wanted much at start, just when some conflict were starting were winning them, and each victory was making her stronger but with more enemies, what was leading to arms race and preemtive strikes.
4) Problem with being too rational. Is shooting one innocent guy by over eager police a fair price to have more effective police and save two people from being murdered? If you say "yes", then you:
-just trashed all official ideology that we're expected to believe;
-technically speaking gave an answer which is in accordance with economic theories;
-justified having a police state.

Thanks, although i called the scientist (G) he, the governor of other planet is the she (A). The first one (G) should really look like a good guy at start (snowballed yes, that is a good idea, it could start with killing people for achieving a strategic goal), the second one (A) should look like entirely evil, later grayed, that will be a challenge.
Too rational part is good :) However i expect the other, (probably even more) rational scientist (B) not to support the villain's (G) final plan, saying that creating a controlled hive mind of Earth's population is unethical experiment, also kills individuality, maybe Earth is corrupt, but the only place in solar system not too much collectivist.
 
  • #44
GTOM said:
Masses support the revolution if they feel the system takes away everything from them, but i think Hitler for example gained his ambitions from personal problems (no success, no women, what those rich jews have that i dont...)

But Hitler happened to have those personal problems at the right time and in the right place. If things had been going swimmingly in Germany Hitler would have been giggled into the shadows. Perhaps under those circumstances he would have become a school shooter.
 
  • #45
Czcibor said:
1) Huge grant for really unethical project (hint: don't try it on this forum, don't lead us to temptation ;)

Oh no. Tempt me Tempt me!
 
  • #46
GTOM said:
Masses support the revolution if they feel the system takes away everything from them, but i think Hitler for example gained his ambitions from personal problems (no success, no women, what those rich jews have that i dont...)
I'd recommend Charles Bracelen Flood's book on Hitler. In short, Hitler was largely motivated by love of country.
 
  • #47
I don't have any suggestions for villain how-to books. But a line from Legend of the Galactic Heroes comes to mind:

"There are few wars between good and evil; most are between one good and another good."

Hornbein said:
I'd recommend Charles Bracelen Flood's book on Hitler. In short, Hitler was largely motivated by love of country.

He was also motivated by anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. 11 million Germans served in the First World war, of which 7 million became casualties. Hitler, like many others, was radicalized in the years after, in the insanity of the German right wing as it latched onto any conspiracy theory it could find to explain the collapse of the German Empire, the most common ones involving communists and Jews.
 
Last edited:
  • #48
Artribution said:
"There are few wars between good and evil; most are between one good and another good."

"Good" being very much in the eye of the beholder.

Hornbein said:
In short, Hitler was largely motivated by love of country.

So was George Washington, but we have a very different view of Washington than we do of Hitler. Few people are as ardently Deutschephile as I am, but even I have a hard time believing that nothing was going on with Hitler but an ardent love of Germany. Hitler, incidentally, was an Austrian.
 
  • #49
Artribution said:
I don't have any suggestions for villain how-to books. But a line from Legend of the Galactic Heroes comes to mind:

"There are few wars between good and evil; most are between one good and another good."

I would say that most wars are fought in pursuit of self interest. Whether that is good or evil I will leave up to you.

According to Albert Einstein, Germans were largely motivated to fight World War I in pursuit of wealth. The previous war with France had enriched many Germans, and the new generation wanted to do the same.
 
  • #50
Khatti said:
Oh no. Tempt me Tempt me!

In my setting, masses won't stop a scientist from pursuiting even an unethical project.
Killer AIs, go to technocratic regime. Hard drug pushers/biotech megacorp would support him creating crops that deliberately destroys other crops. (Then after a new superpest destroys monoculture, they have to buy the new breed.)
 
Back
Top