Eirikur
Arcane
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2014
- Messages
- 1,126
The way I understood that concept back when I was reading books(skill I lost), is it wasnt about staying out of choosing sides in the conflict. It was more about keeping emotions out of equation when making decision, specially hate
I think it's part of it, but a small part overall. It basically just comes from this somewhat popularized quote: "To be neutral is not to be indifferent and insensitive. You don't have to kill the emotions within you. You just have to kill your hatred." Geralt says it to Ciri in the first part of Blood of Elves, if I remember correctly. The majority of the 'neutrality-related concepts' has more to do with whether or not to choose a side, though. Just as in the games, Geralt attempts to maintain neutrality and stay out of conflicts, but he's consistently drawn into them. In the fifth book (oh I actually read five, not four), Baptism of Fire, he concludes that neutrality is contemptible. It's probably due to how he starts out as a solitary man on the Witcher path, but then eventually accepts his greater destiny, takes responsibility for Ciri, forms more relationships, etc.