07-16-2015, 02:59 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-17-2015, 04:39 PM by Adriano Neres Rodrigues.)
Credits: Thanks izzy and Elkhound. Your posts in the other thread gave the idea for this one.
@izzy wrote in another thread that he would enjoy Nick starting to ponder his lawlessness and sitting down with the captain discussing the matter.
There are many posts arguing that Nick is not as good as he should be since most of the time he doesn’t follow the police procedures. He acts more as a vigilante than as a police officer.
@Elkhound argued in the same thread that Nick constantly face a dilemma: "To Be Lawful or Good", and that Nick sometimes falls on one side or the other, and that lately, he's fallen on the 'good' side rather than the 'lawful' more often than not.
This opened some questions for me:
Does Nick lawlessness mean he is not a good person?
Does he have the right to choose between "To Be Lawful or Good" as he is "a man of the law", as a way to speak?
How does it work inside the show?
@izzy wrote in another thread that he would enjoy Nick starting to ponder his lawlessness and sitting down with the captain discussing the matter.
There are many posts arguing that Nick is not as good as he should be since most of the time he doesn’t follow the police procedures. He acts more as a vigilante than as a police officer.
@Elkhound argued in the same thread that Nick constantly face a dilemma: "To Be Lawful or Good", and that Nick sometimes falls on one side or the other, and that lately, he's fallen on the 'good' side rather than the 'lawful' more often than not.
This opened some questions for me:
Does Nick lawlessness mean he is not a good person?
Does he have the right to choose between "To Be Lawful or Good" as he is "a man of the law", as a way to speak?
How does it work inside the show?