Wednesday, October 26, 2005

The Most Brilliant Military Strategy Ever

I ran across the most brilliant military strategy ever. To understand the new strategy, first take a look at soon to be archaic militaristic strategies that countries are ashamedly still using today. Consider a war fought between party A and party B, where A is making very good progress and accomplishing their goals as party B is making desperation attacks because they are losing. Traditional military philosophy would be for A to push harder and continue to strengthen party C who is now an ally with party A, but who before had supported party B. Because when party C is self-supporting and can defend themselves from party B, then the war ends. Party A is victorious along with party C.

The brilliant militaristic strategy goes like this. Consider the same example war as discussed above. Instead of continuing to strengthen party C, and pushing harder to defeat party B while they have them on their heels, party A should start to withdraw from the war and start decreasing troop levels dramatically until in a short while, all of party A's troops will have been withdrawn from the battle zones. Yes, this seems so stupid at first, but it is really brilliant, I promise. By doing this, party B begins to think that they must be winning because party A is retreating. So party B continues to do what they have been doing until party A is completely gone. Meanwhile, since party C was still too weak to defend themselves when party A left the scene, they will have to surrender to party B. Then, after party B is in control, they think that they completely won. But party A knows that they didn't win and that party B just thinks they did. When party B finally figures out that they actually didn't win, party A was just tricking them psychologically and playing with their emotions, they will be so devastated that they will surely just forfeit. I told you, absolutely brilliant isn't it?

This strategy is so brilliant I am sure you won't be surprised to find out who engendered it. John F. Kerry said (as reported here),
It will be hard for this administration, but it is essential to acknowledge that the insurgency will not be defeated unless our troop levels are drawn down...
Kerry has brilliantly decided that we should start with 20,000. I don't know how he came up with that number of troops, but I am sure it comes from the same place as his genius intellect. We should just trust him.

See, it is the newest and greatest militaristic strategy ever, and such a new concept to actually bring troop levels down in the most critical stages of the war. For tens of thousands of years humans have not been able to come up with this. I sure am glad I am living in this day and age, when the human mind and human thinking has evolved into unfathomable brilliancy. This strategy will surely play psychological mind games with the opponent. And because of this, surely, emotionally and physically, the enemy must implode.

Sunday, October 23, 2005

Dilemma

The Astros are in the World Series and I have to write my thesis. It is a terrible thing. I don't think that will stop me from watching the world Series though. How can I miss watching when my favorite player, Craig Biggio, has finally made it to the World Series after 18 years! Also, this is the first trip the Astros have ever made in franchise history.

The Astros have been my favorite team ever since I watched one of the most versatile and classic baseball players play... Biggio. Biggio: No steriods, no bad attitude, no stuck-up pride, just Baseball. Biggio made his major leaque debut in 1987 and since then has played Catcher, 2nd Base, and outfield, but spending the majority of his time at 2nd. Another interesting fact: Biggio has been beaned more times in the major leagues than any other player ever.

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Everybody Believes In Free Will

After reading this blog post today on the Catholic's view of Pre-destination, I was struck by a very subtle comment made therein...

Catholic theology teaches that not only are the elect predestined to heaven, but also that mankind has a freedom of the will–a striking difference with Calvinism.

By the title of this post, I don't mean to suggest literally that actually "everbody" in existence believes in Free Will (whatever that means), because I am sure that I could soon find somebody who is completely fatalistic in their thinking. However, I am simply speaking about the on-going, common and sometimes controversial debate between Arminism and Calvinism (accepting the recent titles given to two different schools of thought) and that both sides on the issue believe in Free Will. Actually, the lines between Arminists (a.k.a. Pelagians) and Calvinists are not clearly defined at all, but even the categories that fall within the two extremes profess to believe in Free Will. I have never ran into anybody within this debate that said they don't believe in Free Will. So why do pelagian-leaning schools of thought always say that Calvinists do not believe in Free Will? I don't think the answer is as simple as saying that the logical fallacy of equivocation has been committed.

Calvinists believe that it is BECAUSE of our free will that we (humans) are bound in our present state of falleness (sin) without any hope of salavation apart from the saving, gracious act of regeneration by God through the Holy Spirit. That's right, I said "BECAUSE of our free will". I think primarily there are two issues that come into play here: Free Will and the Doctrine of Original Sin. And it is our understanding of these two issues that form the dividing lines between the pelagians, semi-pelagians, and the calvinists.

I believe that since we have a "Free Will", we have the ability to do whatever we as humans want. Well, at least within reason, I can't bench press 800 lbs., but I sure would like to! That is to say, our actions are not limited in any sense by a restriction in our own freedom of choosing, but it may be physically limited or limited by outside force or coercion. Taking it a step further, I think the essence of "Free Will" is that we MUST do whatever we want. That is, because we are free and have a free will, we absolutely and positively have to do what we want (doesn't sound very "free" to me). We cannot not do what we do not want to, we have to do it BECAUSE we want to and we have a free will. I don't believe there was ever a time when you did something that you did not want to do. I am writing this blog because I want to. You are reading this blog because you want to. If you think you are just reading this blog just to be nice to a friend but you really don't want to because it is boring and written poorly. Then I would say to you, at the outset of reading this blog, that you made a conscious decision to read for my sake and be nice to me. Puting it another way, you read because you WANTED to please me, or because you WANTED to read further because of the interesting title, or etc... But the bottom line is, you proceeded because you WANTED to and because you have a Free Will. The more you fight against this concept of Free Will, the more it will fight against you.

Combined with the Doctrine of Original Sin that states that man in his sinfulness is dead in sin, we are bound by our desires which are desperately wicked and want to sin. We as fallen human beings are a slave to sin. And therefore now it means, to be human is to sin. Mankind still has his free will that he had before the fall, but now it is a fallen free will in the sense that it is bound by a different set of desires than before the fall. Without the regenerating work of God to awaken us and make us alive, we remain dead and all of our actions, desires, and thoughts remain bound by our fallen sinfulness (Ephesians 2:1-9). God wakes us up and gives us the ability and desire to choose good things, and we place our faith in Christ for our salvation. For the wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23).

Therefore, after all, both the Pelagians and Calvinists and anywhere in between all claim to believe in Free will (to my knowledge anyways). But the Calvinists don't believe that our free will gives us the ability to choose righteousness in our fallen state. That would be analogous to me having the ability to bench press 800 lbs. I think maybe somewhere or sometime ago Calvinists conceded to not believing humans have Free Will because of the concept of Free Will that their opponent possessed. So maybe sometimes Calvinists these days do say humans don't have Free Will, but I would argue that they only do so because of the majority of evangelical Christians today have a semi-pelagian concept of Free Will. And so they are trying to debate with definitions of the terms of their opponent to establish a level playing field, and to avoid the fallacy of equivocation. I guess by the opposeing concept of Free Will (opposeing the Calvinists), I mean any view that does not only admit we still have Free Will in the current state of sinfulness, but that are Free Will is completely bound by our sinful desires. And by completely, I mean utterley, absolutely, can't fight against it, complete.

To avoid the contention that almost always comes up with this topic, I would like to say that I welcome anybody's critiquing on my thoughts. As a side note, I really don't know when I am supposed to capitalize "Free Will" And when i Am not, or weTher it is supposed to be consistently capItalized or NoN-capitalized. You have proBably noticed that I Actually don't know anything about the ruLes OF capitalization. But please don't let that steal any credibility from me :)