Monday, August 31, 2015

Discovered Attack

A discovered attack is one that takes place by the removal of a piece blocking an attacker.  For instance, if the black bishop is between the black rook and the white queen, once the black bishop is moved, an attack is 'discovered' against the queen.  The bishop may place the white king in check forcing the exchange or loss of the queen for a lesser piece, it may take a white pawn or piece without retaliation because of the attack on the queen, or it may simply take up a strategic location on the board.  The discovered attack is also very effective when it is against the king (discovered check), and it is involved in the double check which is perhaps a topic for another day. 

In life, as in chess, a discovered attack (or check) is a result of being caught unaware or unprepared.  Perhaps, you took note of the threat earlier as positional play developed, but at some point whether through the opponent's strategic play or through your own error, your pieces were left exposed.  A discovered attack may come in the form of a late night party causing you to want to sleep in or call in sick instead of waking up for your early class or going to work.

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Unborn into Slavery

I am a modern-day abolitionist. 

I have considered authoring a dystopian society book in which various social issues are resolved (human trafficking, abortion, and some situations of poverty) by marking babies to be delivered as abortees and then upon exit from the womb selling these living, non-humans into various forms of slavery. 

The institution of slavery in our history has marred the human past most notably in the pre-Revolutionary War to Civil War period in the present United States of America.  While slavery officially ended, we still struggle with the definition of humanity and rights.  These questions of equality were not resolved with the Civil War nor with the Civil Rights Movement.

When I entertain the notion that there is no God and that we are the result of random, evolutionary events, I have to question the very core of humanity.  What does it really mean to be human?  Why do we have rules of etiquette?  What institutions are critical to our existence and which are trivial?  Why is it that slavery is wrong?

The founders of our nation struggled with some of these questions since society at that time accepted slavery.  They wrestled with their consciences and finally succumbed to societal peer pressure.  Many of our founding fathers admitted, in dying, their regret for this decision.

With recent videos being released depicting leaders of Planned Parenthood describing the intentional alteration of the abortion process to protect and harvest certain organs from the unborn fetuses, similar to the dystopian society slavery I've imagined in my atheist/evolution-driven thinking, the unborn are clearly our slaves.  The question that remain for us today is clear.  Will we succumb to the societal peer pressure that encourages us to enslave the unborn or will we have the courage to defend and free the slaves?

Friday, January 23, 2015

My Hurting Heart Still Believes

a tear for hurt 
a tear for pain
my heart cries out 
there is no joy
there's only shame
my heart cries out 
 
where is my hope
when things go wrong 
my heart cries out 
i still believe 
that is my song 
my heart cries out
 
help me believe
my heart cries out
help me believe
my heart cries out

Thursday, October 2, 2014

A Sense of Death

Food is bland, and my drink has no flavor;
The taste of death has come to me.
“Ask not for whom the bell tolls,” said John Donne;
The sound of death has come to me.
I dread the wrinkled face in my mirror;
The look of death has come to me.
I smell the odor of my aging flesh;
The smell of death has come to me.
The pain in my bones, my back, and my head,
The touch of death has come to me.

Saturday, July 5, 2014

Tempi - Specific Theory of Relativity of Chess

That title is perhaps ambitious. Tempi is the term in chess that defines the efficiency of moves.  It takes into account the number of moves made, which is equivalent to a measure of time, as well as the placement or quality of moves made, which is associated with position on the board or space.

In the game of chess, you may make moves that lose or gain tempi.  It's easy to lose tempi, but to gain it, you must take advantage of your opponent's weaknesses or error.

In life, there is nothing more important than timing.  Esther became queen because she was born for "such a time as this".  Being in the 'right place at the right time' is a common phrase to describe a situation when an otherwise average person stands out from peers in accomplishing an extraordinary task.

As in chess, gaining tempi in life can only be accomplished through careful attention to circumstances.  Having a big vision is not enough; you must also act on the vision.

In spiritual life, following God's plan requires you to know your mission and stay on task.  Jesus began His ministry by identifying His purpose when He showed up to the temple and read from Isaiah, "The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor.  He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor."

If you want to gain tempi in life by being in the right place at the right time, you only need to find the purpose and plan God has for you, and do it.
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Sunday, February 9, 2014

The Seen and Unseen

I've seen the man behind the curtain;
He looks a lot like me.
I've never seen the man upstairs;
Is he the same as we?
The things we see can be defined
And they can be believed.
Things unseen cannot be trusted
Unless we be deceived.

Why was the curtain there at first?
Was it to hide the seen?
I do not understand this mask.
What can this knowledge mean?
If the seen is to be hidden,
How can it be embraced?
Why is hidden knowledge better
Than that which is not faced?

I've seen the man behind the curtain;
He looks a lot like me.
I've never seen the man upstairs;
Is he the same as we?
The things we see can be defined
But should they be believed?
Things unseen cannot be trusted
Or are we all deceived?

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Society-Defined Morality = Group Think

Imagine if I attempted to impose Chess rules on a game of Checkers.  Even though these games share the same playing board, they have different pieces, tactics, and objectives.  Now imagine governing a game of Mancala using Chess rules.  These 2 games don't even share the same board!

Society-defined morality suggests that whatever society deems to be moral is moral.  Whatever society believes to be good (subjective as there is no objective measure) is good. 

This is a popular philosophy of those attempting to eradicate conservative, Christian values.  Many times, these are people who consider themselves intellectuals.  For a moment, let me put aside my Christian views on topics, and explore this topic logically.

If society defines morality, then if there is some future society that esteems cannibalism to be good, then cannibalism is good in that society as their morals are defined by their society.  Furthermore, if a current society in a foreign place determines that cannibalism is good, then cannibalism is good in that society.  One step further, if a previous society of Americans had determined that cannibalism were okay, then cannibalism was good at that time until American society changed its opinion.

Much like governing the Checkers and Mancala games by Chess rules, as long as we subscribe to the society-defined morality, one society cannot judge another society.  Americans cannot judge future or past American societies or any foreign societies based on our current morality because it is completely defined by our society.

In other words, to believe in society-defined morality, I must agree that slavery was good while society approved of it and homosexuality was wrong until society approved of it.  Americans should not meddle in the affairs of other nations (including the World Wars), nor should we attempt to influence other nations.  When Martin Luther King, Jr. stated, "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere," who defined injustice and justice?

To disagree and say that a former society was wrong about their assessment is to trade one oppressive set of norms (those of the conservative Christian) for our current society's as well as completely reject the originally professed position that society defines morality. 

When one thinks this through logically, it is easy to see that one of the following must be true:
A) society-defined morality is correct; no closed society can ever be wrong in its actions, but interactions between societies are messy (say when one society imposes its standards on another).
B) society-defined morality is incorrect; humanity is constantly evolving into a more perfect society with some abstract and undefinable yet absolute morality that we cannot understand until infinite time has passed.
C) society-defined morality is incorrect; there is an absolute standard set by some outside entity (consistent with the conservative Christian view).
D) there is no spoon.

Society-defined morality is the epitome of group think by its very definition.  Let the intellectuals cringe at their colleagues who profess such mindless submission to society-defined morality.  True, rules of conduct must be established by someone.  If there is no outside entity to set objective standards, then we are indeed all to be governed by this mindless group think where we can rise to the level of our collective incompetence.  Consider the "wave" at a sporting event... it is clear evidence that a committee will make a decision that is dumber than the sum of its members.