SHARXTREME wrote...
Again, the "needs of the many" is completely misinterpreted.
It is a decision of individual(or small group of individuals) to sacrifice THEMSELVES for the benefit(need) of larger group of people.
Since it is used mostly in Star Trek I will use that examples:
-Spock sacrifices himself to save Enterprise(correct, that's that)
-Picard rams the Enterprise into Romulan flagship to save Earth(correct)
-some General sacrifices a battalion to save 5 battalions(sort of analogue, soldiers swore an oath to give their life for the country and to obey orders)
-Legion sacrificing himself for Geth(correct)
Now to what is absolutely NOT the "needs of the many":
-Shepard sacrificing himself in Control
-Picard surrendering to Borg, becoming Locutus of Borg to save Federation(if his crew didn't save him the Borg would assimilate everybody with the knowledge Picard provided. This is similar to Control)
-Shepard sacrificing others without their previous or present consent in destroy
-Catalyst and Shepard "sacrificing" everybody for their own goals in Synthesis
In this particular ending situation, Shepard, TIM, Saren, Reapers and Catalyst are operating under "needs of one" or "needs of the idea".
The Many play side role. Whole galaxy is filled with red-shirts.
You see, if Catalyst asked Shepard to kill not just Geth, but also Krogans, Humans, Asari, etc. let's say 49%, 59%, 69%, 79%, 89%. 99% of the advanced species, it would still be the same and some people would find excuses even for that.
Basic mistake in misinterpretation of "needs of the many.." is in numbers.
People are not numbers. So it doesn't work both ways. Just, as I said, as self-sacrifice.
Even if some General orders you to sacrifice yourself, or your squad, company, etc. It is YOUR decision if you'll do it. If the situation(greater good) requires that AND if there's no other way you CAN do it for "the needs of the many".
But it is your decision, your sacred RIGHT as a sentient, intelligent being to choose, and you must in both cases be ready to live/die with the consequences from purely individual standpoint.
That is where I think that you mostly miss the target @robertthebard. You sound like(when you're describing Paragon) you're role playing as the general of the galaxy, but Shepard is not written that way.
You somehow mix-up rights for self-determination OF OTHERS with self-righteousness of the individual that is making decisions.
He does ask you, or allow you to do that, it's called Refusal. The problem people have connecting with this, as I said, is scope. They can't wrap their heads around the idea that it can go beyond a small sample size. It's too bad that everybody looks at Star Trek's reference, even though that scene is probably one of my favorites. This scenario is covered in a dialog between Garrus and Shepard, however. It's why I would choose one over the other, of endings that I would choose, when I allow myself to get that far, so far, anyway. Maybe a Sole Survivor Renegade Shep could choose Control. My Brutal Renegade chose Destroy, and we've discussed why, previously. When that General gives that order, that's exactly what they are considering. What's more important, these lives here, or those lives there?
I am making this decision like I'm the general of the galaxy because, for all intents and purposes, I am. From Day 1 of ME 1, the responsibility of dealing with this menace has been on my head. It is all good to look at the choices in hindsight, and get all philosophical, but when I'm in game, at SC, if I can get there, I'm a soldier. I can't get myself to believe in Synthesis, or Control, as I see the latter as a trap, and the former as an abomination. I am making my choice as if I'm in charge because everybody that I've talked to about it for the entire series believes that if I can't do it, it can't be done. They put me in charge, in all but rank, even if I'm playing Brutal Renegade. You can have this discussion with Liara on the way to the Citadel for the first time.
In this thread in particular most of people don't bother with results.
The question that is mostly raised here is the question of the very situation BEFORE the decision is made.(so you don't know what will happen, you just know who your Shepard was until that point, and you know what Catalyst tells you)
Questions are : Why trust Catalyst, why abandon Shepard's convictions and actions, and why choose something(reasons why).
One cannot make argument out of results, because you don't know the results when you're making the decision.
So refuse option is not mass genocide, you're not killing anyone, you don't know that Catalyst will turn-off the Crucible.
This is a major point. If Catalyst can turn-off the Crucible it is logical to conclude that he prefers to keep it ON. For what purpose? and why the hell he would let you to choose destroy?(because you're validating everything that he is about. Synthetics-organics war. Destroy is the core problem of Catalyst. Assumption that synthetics will kill all organics, so he kills those organics that can make those synthetics that will kill all organics, so he just kills that organics. Periodically. (what the hell BioWare)
Refuse is just Shepard's inaction faced with situation that is impossible to resolve with logic and knowledge that Shepard has.
"needs of the many.." don't apply here. "Rights of the many" would be more accurate.
So, what are the rights of the Geth?
This is exactly how I make my decision. I'm not thinking about the pretty slide show, I'm role playing what my Shepard of the moment would do. It's the only way I can make myself play through "zombie with a pistol" mode. I consider the carnage I witnessed on Palaven, even if I didn't see it directly, but just from space, or maybe because it's so bad I can see it from space? I consider the carnage I witnessed on Thessia, first hand. I consider what I saw of Earth in the opening cutscene, including duct boy, although I do wax philosophical here, as it's not the boy, so much as all the people that are going to die while I, a soldier, am off playing politician to stop the Reapers, instead of being in the trenches, doing, as Garrus says in 2, what I do best. If, as it's laid out, Shepard is the only hope, and everybody, including the Geth, have placed their full faith in me, which, if I can save them they do, then the only thing that I have to believe to make my choice, where this comes into play at all, which I believe it would as a Paragon Shep, is that everyone that has pledged to follow me into hell meant it, because, at this point, I'm in hell, and forced to decide the fate of the entire galaxy.
I will not play God, so Control and to a large extent Synthesis are off the table. At this point, the "I really thought the Crucible would work differently than it does, and this is what turns me off most about the endings" comes in, but I built the Crucible, granted, not physically, but without the resources that I sent, it wouldn't get done, to destroy the Reapers. This is what I believed it would do, although how was a question, and a valid one. Being a soldier, and being entrusted with the fate of the galaxy, why would I choose to do nothing and let everyone die? I see a lot of "Why would anyone believe the SC", and yet, I see a lot of "he says it will kill the Geth and EDI". Am I supposed to believe that everything but that is a lie? Wouldn't it seem more logical to believe that, given it will destroy SC, that it would say anything if it thought you'd be adverse to destroying more than you bargained for? Of course, in hindsight, we do know it's telling the truth, but, at that time, w/out metagaming, we don't. In so far as we know, this could be the only lie it's telling us.
None of the choices are good, this is why I dislike playing to them. This is why I'd like to see the Ultimate Refusal Ending, where you can export at the beam in London. This is my preferred ending since, as I have laid out before, I can't see my personal armor being better than a cruiser's armor, or even a shuttle's. However, given that that option doesn't exist, and that the only way to get some of the achievements is that I have to actually finish the game, I choose according to what my soldier would do at that point. The 2 finishes I have, the Brutal Renegade, and a Paragon, with no particular bent, both saw Destroy as the lesser of the evils. Brutal's was, of course, extremely selfishly motivated, and with the EMS I had at the time, resulted in her death as well, no breathe scene. Paragon Shep chose it because it was everybody, or not. This was the first game where I had achieved peace between the Geth/Quarians, and it was sad, but it was that, or everybody dies. Needs of the many. The many needed the Reapers destroyed, and that's what they got. I could have chosen the needs of the One, selfishly choosing to rewrite the entire galaxy to assuage my own conscience, but that wasn't how that Shepard got there. Ultimately, I may do one that does, but it wasn't any of the ones that got there so far.