>>19599245I think that the dragon's chosen trainer is not supposed to represent that their words are either absolute truth or pure ideal, but rather, upon attaining their respective dragon, they reach the truth or ideal that they have been looking for. N found the truth that humans can coexist with pokemon and decided afterwords to expand his small wordveiw, which seems more fitting to someone who devotes himself more to truth than ideals. Meanwhile, the protagonist is questioned about his ideology throughout the game, and is able to find it in fighting N. the ideal of pokemon should be unified with people, is exactly that, an ideal, and the final battles support this, While N represents the good in humanity that can be unified with pokemon, Ghestisis represents all that makes humans repellent to pokemon, and after fighting both, the protagonist is able to accept that while N does have a valid point, the ideal world is not one of segregation, but of unity, in spite of the fact that humanity can be ugly and selfish, which is what makes him attain his ideal so firmly.
Keep and mind that these pokemon are also supposed to represent the yin and yang symbols, which each have a portion of the other inside of it, which is why N is an idealistic person in spite of his journey being that of finding truth, and the hero is one who is expected to already hold the current state of the world (pokemon living with humans) to be a truth and needs no change, to an ideal that should be striven for.
that's how I see it at least.