@KitaSaturnye
It's more complex than that... less math, more implied headspace.
The starchild and the Reapers have three main philosophies:
1. It is acceptable to commit mass murder and genocide for the "greater good."
2. We are right and know better than you (Hubris)
3. Synthetics and Organics cannot live in peace
For me, the ending like/dislike is all about what a Shepard making that choice could reasonably be thinking, and what the action implicitly affirms if completely separated from the Starchild's rhetoric. In every single one other than synthesis, Shepard must explicitly internally condone one of these three philosophies.
It is illogical for Shepard to pick destroy without thinking "in some situations, genocide is acceptable." (Unless they don't believe synthetics are life, or the geth are dead and they're ignorant of the existence of any other synthetic lifeforms.) If Shepard thought that genocide was fundamentally unacceptable, she'd just bleed out or pick one of the other options.
It is illogical for Shepard to pick Control without thinking "well, this will work for me, because I'm [SOMETHING]." If Shepard believes that there's a substantial chance that the control option will indoctrinate her or make her eventually agree with the Reapers, she'd pick one of the other options or bleed out.
It is entirely rational, logical, and reasonable for Shepard to pick Synthesis
without agreeing with the philosophy that homogeneity is an improvement. There's no logical contradiction in Shepard saying "I believe that the homogeneity thing will make the universe worse, yeah, but not as much worse as the other options, including bleeding out and leaving the universe to get reaped."
To make either of the other two choices, Shepard must explicitly agree with one of the Reaper philosophies. Shepard could disagree with the idea that homogeneity will improve the universe and still choose synthesis, if she merely believed that homogeneity was a really bad stupid thing, but not worse than genocide.
I'm not sure if I'm making this clear enough. It's a very fine line...
If you're forced to make the decision about whether or not to commit genocide, and you do it, that action conveys that in this circumstance you considered it acceptable.
If you're forced to make the decision about whether or not to make everyone slightly more homogenous, and you do it, that action conveys that in this circumstance you believe homogeneity is acceptable. It does not in any way, shape, or form indicate that you think homogeneity is better, or a solution, it only implies that you think it's an acceptable loss in this situation.
For me, the belief that a slight increase in homogeneity is preferable to galactic extinction is less abominable than the belief that commission of genocide is preferable to galactic extinction.
Or, to pare down further, you must believe that reducing diversity by committing genocide is preferable to reducing diversity through transformative inexplicable magic that doens't kill anyone.
The hubris angle is a different one altogether. If it weren't for the hubris thing, control would be the "obvious" choice... nobody has to die, Shepard pilots the Reapers into the sun, Reapers dead, no geth genocide, everyone is happy. I just have a really weird mental relationship with that kind of hubris, so I fear it beyond reason.
But to sum up, it is easy to create an in-character, rational headspace where Shepard explicitly rejects all three of the Reaper conceits, but still chooses Synthesis.
A similar headspace cannot be constructed for destroy, except for in cases where there are no living AIs, or if the player feverently believes that no AIs will die, (which represents another form of unreasonable hubris.)
Modifié par CulturalGeekGirl, 15 juin 2012 - 10:01 .