Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Justice and Revenge: A Vicious Cycle

     Justice and revenge are two of the strongest ideals that any human being could aspire to. This is why works of literature and film with these ideas in them can be compelling and speak to the human psyche. For example, in the Greek tragedy Eumenides, the Furies practice chaotic justice that demands blood for blood. This is balanced by Athena's democratic justice, which is also in the punishments in Dante's Inferno. However, in the film V for Vendetta, chaotic justice is espoused by the protagonist.

The main theme of Eumenides, the third play in Aeschylus' Oresteia trilogy, is justice. The premise of the play is that Orestes has killed his mother (who killed his father Agamemnon) and flees from the Furies to Athens where Athena's court will decide his fate. But the Furies and Athena have vastly different ideas of justice. The Furies are ancient Earth spirits, who believe in the law of equal retaliation (lex taliones) requiring death in exchange for death. This form of justice was practiced by the pre-classical Greeks and allowed each individual to take the law into his own hands and kill a murderer without a fair trial. In contrast, Athena is a younger Olympian deity who believes in the system of democratic justice, which is when a group of people administer justice as a community, not as individuals. The conflict between the two forms of justice is shown during the trial where Apollo, god of rationality, defends Orestes, and the Furies defend themselves with their principle of blood for blood. The new form justice triumphs when Athena herself breaks the tie vote of the court and acquits Orestes. Because individual revenge has no place in this new democratic society, the Furies become the Eumenides (Kindly Ones) and act as guardians of Athens' future prosperity as the principles of orderly, communal justice triumph over the older form.
The idea of orderly justice continued long after the fall of the Greek city-states through the Roman Republic and Empire and into the Middle Ages. One such work that illustrates this principle of justice is Dante's Inferno. In the poem, Dante is a struggling pilgrim who travels through the nine circles of Hell in order to get on the road to salvation. He sees souls punished in a variety of ways (E.g. Gluttons eat each other, the lustful are blown away) but with the same underlying principle: symbolic retribution. Symbolic retribution means that sinners receive a punishment that corresponds to their sin. For example, because the lustful were “blown away” and consumed by their desires in life; they are blown around by the wind in Hell. This may seem like the Furies' “blood for blood” justice, but there are two big differences: Hell is orderly and has a form of due process. Dante's Hell is organized into nine circles that descend in order from lesser greater sin beginning with the virtuous pagans in Limbo and concluding with the betrayers in Cocytus (ninth circle). Therefore, unlike the Furies' endless revenge killings, the punishments in Hell are uniform, infallible, and only apply to the actual guilty party. Finally, Hell was created by God as a prison for Satan and the fallen angels and even has a sub-judge Minos “who stands, hideous and growling/Examining the sins of each newcomer:/With coiling tail he judges and dispatches” (Dante V.3-5). In obedience to God's authority, Minos uses his tail to direct sinners to the circle of Hell that corresponds to their sin in an orderly manner. But this trend of orderly justice does not last long in the arts.


In the latter half of the 21st century, films containing forms of individual revenge espoused by the Furies in Eumenides became popular. One such film was 2005's V for Vendetta based on the legendary graphic novel by Alan Moore and David Lloyd. Beneath its lofty premise of premise of one man (V) leading a one man revolution versus the future tyrannical government of Britain, there is a basic revenge story at its core. As a youth, V had been experimented on by the government which gave him “super abilities” but destroyed his appearance and life. Therefore, he wants to take revenge on the people (government) that made him this way and eventually sacrifices his life to blow up the Houses of Parliament and Big Ben in order to motivate the people to overthrow the government. Like the Furies, who demanded a life for every life taken, V kills many leaders and foot soldiers and eventually takes his own life to satiate his need for vengeance. Instead of attempting to set up any kind of new government, V decides to take manners in his own hands by killing many government officials including Peter Creedy, the head of the Finger (secret police) and Lewis Prothero, the “Voice of London” who spreads pro-government propaganda to the people. V displays his relish for anarchy and equal retaliation when he tells his lover Evey that “there is no court in this country for men like Prothero” (V for Vendetta).

It is very interesting to find the chaotic, revenge based justice of the Furies in antiquity in the dangerous, anarchic actions of V. Why do you think that revenge stories remain popular in the past 20 years? (The Crow, Kill Bill, Taken, even Magneto in X-Men: First Class) Do you watch revenge films to live vicariously and escape our “boring” justice system, or do you think that these violent avengers might have a point? Does the idea of blood for blood vengeance attract you? Why or why not?


Monday, December 26, 2011

Rise

Stalking his prey in the shady jungle
This hunter is skilled and cunning.
As he sits alone in a cloak of shadow,
His mind burns with rage and sadness.

But he continues to fight daily,
Evil cannot hide from his dark wrath.
Once dead and broken,
Now reborn and wearing a token
Of justice grim and powerful
He rises

Monday, November 21, 2011

New Poem: Room 105

I got the inspiration for this poem by watching  Angel Season 3 Episode 6 "Billy". The first part of the poem is from Fred's perspective, the second is from Wesley's.

Room 105
Raised voices, shrieking sounds
A faint figure hits the ground.
Bloodied axe glistens grim.
She flees from the ever-present him.
Without conscience, without remorse
Racing through the hotel concourse;
Hiding, scampering, whimpering,
Poor Winifred hides.

My soul is an abode
Where hellspawn breeds.
Heart beats, but my pulse slows
As I feel my new form grow.
Alas, my icy heart shatters:
Billy ripped it to tatters.
But lo! a primal urge lingers.
As terror streaks down my fingers


Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Five Positions on the Integration of Theology and Science (Pgs. 7-11)

At medieval universities, theology was often called "queen of the sciences." However, in recent times, these two disciplines have rubbed shoulders together often, usually in a negative way.

In their introduction to Three Views on Creation and Evolution, J.P. Moreland and John Mark Reynolds state that Christians should be interested in science because God created us with a mind that can be used to explore the world around it and see how and why it works. However, they have different views of how to fit science into a Christian life.

Some Christians use science to prove the theological ideas that the universe was designed and didn't evolve from chance or a process of natural selection. Others think that science and Christian theology can't mix because of the "evolution problem". A third school states that science has superseded Christianity because it relies on empirical faith whereas Christianity relies on blind faith. For example, the late American philosopher Wilfred Sellars stated, "In the dimension of describing and explaining the world, science is the measure of all things, of what is that it is, and of what is not that is not" (Science, Perception, and Reality 173). In summary, science is the only thing that can explain the existence and origin of the universe. It may even explain the meaning of life...

However, Christians must be prepared to defend their beliefs against modern science and see how their beliefs fit in with the beliefs of the zeitgeist. They can't be afraid to engage in dialogue with modern intellectuals. The purpose of Three Views is to show the beliefs of the three different schools of origins theories: Young Earth (YE), Old Earth (OE), and Theistic Evolution (TE). But before diving into this, Moreland and Reynolds briefly discuss five models for integrating theology and other academic disciplines, especially science.

The first view is Two Realms. This view states that theology is completely separate from every other discipline. For example, infant baptism doesn't matter in quantum physics.

The second is Complementarity View. Science and theology can work together, but they answer different questions. For example, science can deal with the particular (how an eye works?) whereas theology deals with the universal (who or what created an eye?). If one takes this view to its logical conclusion, it can mean that theology and science are both useful, but they must never interact. Some theistic evolutionists use this view to integrate evolution and creation

The third view is Direct Interaction. Science and theology can work together and can either support or go against the other. The theory of evolution can hurt a literal reading of Genesis 1, but the Big Bang theory can also support the Biblical view that the universe had a clear first cause. Many Old Earth and Young Earth creationists hold to this view.

The fourth is the Presuppositional View. Theology can support the presuppositions of science and vice versa. For example, some presuppositions of science (an ordered world with laws) support Christian theology, and some presuppositions of Christian theology (an imperfect world) support presuppositions of science (thermodynamic property of entropy).

The final view is Practical Application.  Theology can help an understanding of other subjects and apply principles of that subject. For example, in psychology, the principle of not provoking children to anger (Eph. 6:4) can help aid psychological principles of family structures and the root causes of anger.

Which view do you hold to or it is a mixture of a few? Next post: It gets controversial... creation vs. evolution!

"For centuries, theologians have been explaining the unknowable in terms of the not-worth-knowing."- Henry L. Mencken

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Introduction to New Book Blog: Three Views on Creation and Evolution

Sorry people, but I haven't done much blogging except for the mad man's rant a couple weeks ago. At my college, there has been much debate over which theory of creation is correct and what impact does that have on one's theology as a whole. My Old Testament professor, along with a majority of students at my college, hold to the young Earth view that the world was created in six literal days. I am in a minority and hold to the view that the world was created in six "epochs" (day age theory) because the word yom doesn't always mean literal day in Genesis 1-2, no young Earth creationists have been able to answer how starlight can scientifically travel to the Earth in one 24 hour period, and that there were no "markers" for days and seasons until day four. My girlfriend Kendall once held to the theistic evolution model, but she has since switched over to the young Earth camp, and there are no theistic evolutionists (that I know of) at my college.

The purpose of this blog will be my personal journey through Three Views on Creation and Evolution written by Paul Nelson (Young Earth), John Mark Reynolds (YE), Robert C. Newman (Old Earth/OE), and Howard J. Van Till (Theistic Evolution/TE) with responses from other theologians. I will flesh out the points and arguments made by each theologian and add a short response at the end.

Enjoy! Soli Deo Gloria! Comment down below with your view of the origin of the universe.

"Two things fill the mind with ever new and increasing admiration and awe- the starry heavens above and the moral law within."- Immanuel Kant




Sunday, October 9, 2011

Random thoughts

I couldn't get any bleeding rest on the last day of Outreach Week, so here's a blog. Sorry, for the stream of consciousness style. So, life's all about identity right? We wear tons of different caps. I'm a Christian first and foremost, saved by grace through faith. Going through trials, like losing my Grandpa, my dad's affairs, and switching schools, have really solidified this faith.

Another identity I wear is geek or nerd or otaku. OK, scratch that last one. I'm not that much into anime. (Do have a couple shows like Blood+ and Gun X on my Netflix Instant Queue though and enjoyed the Wolverine Anime and the random, yet hilarious comedic stylings of Bobboobo or however you spell his name). For example, I would rather have a 12 hour LOTR marathon in my dorm room with a small, select group of people than go out to the beach with a BUNCH of people, like two whole dorms combined. Hobbits and pizza> sand, surf, loud Jesus pop . This is why a RiffTrax Thor/ Super Smash Bros. party appeals to me more than an all night kegger. Maybe, the kegger would be cool if Felicia Day, Joss Whedon, Brian Michael Bendis, and an undead  Steve Jobs were there...

Quick follow up: You know you're a geek if you say something completely random on the spot, and people take it as canon. Take Harry Potter for example. A dude at a post-Outreach Week dinner plucked out three of my dainty ginger hairs. After doing that, I said, "If you mix those hairs with eye of newt and toad broth, you can become invisible." The norms bought it hook line and sinker even though I basically ad-libbed my quip off Macbeth. (Good old Will Shakes)

But how do I mix my faith, geekdom, love for more highbrow culture (mythology, history, literature, dabblings in philosophy), and identity as a citizen of a polis (United States) into one cohesive brew? Right now, I have no idea. Faith, geekdom, and academia are easy. As long as glorify God through my passion for comics, film, gaming, TV, fandom etc. and thirst for knowledge, everything works out in the end. (I really think there were be scholars in Heaven...) However, being a citizen is different. I like to stay reasonably politically informed through BBC, Huffington Post etc, but I think I'm falling into the same partisan trap that I point out in other people.

Despite my heart to help the poor in society through homeless ministries in my college, I feel distracted by a need for identity. I know I'm a Christian, but at the Christian college I go to, my debates aren't about the big stuff (was Jesus God?, is the Bible inerrant, does the gospel really save?), but about the small stuff (Old Earth vs. Young Earth, can a Democrat be a Christian (shoot me) ). I haven't even mentioned that I think that Hell is an emotional state after death, not a literal hot pit. How can fire and complete darkness coexist, literally and logically speaking?

But, despite my struggles, I've decided to weather the small storms and carry on. I really love the diverse ethnic environment at my college, especially coming from WASP-y Roanoke, Virginia. Hopefully, I can build some strong relationships with the professors in my department. Extremely pumped to hang out with Dr. Horner next Friday, which could have been Wednesday if it wasn't for my general ed Math mandatory money lecture.

That comes to my final rant. Money. Money really ticks me off because you can't live with it or live without it. Money can help you satisfy your basic needs (food and water) and complex wants ($40 philosophy books, weekly comic book run), but it can also lead men and women to sell their souls to profit. It would be cool if the ideal of pure socialism could actually work, and people didn't care about how much private property they had and their salary size and concentrated on being creative and improving culture and civilization, but that will never happen until Heaven or the millennial kingdom, depending on your eschatological view which I don't have currently. Sorry, back up preacher guy at PCB who tried to sell me on pre-millenialism. I must study Revelation personally and try not to hold dogmatic views on that book like a guy named Calvin who didn't write a commentary on it and didn't let his preachers preach on it. Since I moved to CA, I literally have heard three sermons on the Book of Revelation, probably more than in my entire life time.

So, really sorry about this mostly incoherent post about money, identity, faith, school, being a geek, politics etc., and I'll leave you with this quote from Plato. (whose theory of Forms does really float my boat, but the boat is beginning to sink)

"Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle."


Nota bene: Plato probably didn't say this, but he is a boss...

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

What is Conservative?

In contemporary  news media, it seems there is a huge divide. This divide may or may not be an illusion. It sometimes reminds me of Star Wars and the dark/light side of the force. Both sides have strong, almost impenetrable arguments for the rightness of their cause. The Jedi are selfless and protect the galaxy while sacrificing their own pleasure and comfort. The Sith are aggressive and passionate and gain great power for themselves alone. A major problem in contemporary politics is dividing people into "Sith" and "Jedi" and not learning and understanding why someone believes something.

There are many dichotomies in 21st century politics and its reporting. The biggest one is the dichotomy between conservatives and liberals. Statements are made everywhere about this division. Fox News is conservative; MSNBC is liberal. Republicans are conservatives; Democrats are liberals. Drudge Report is conservative; Huffington Post is liberal. Then, the division becomes almost like hyperbole. So-called liberals call so-called conservatives "backwards", "fundamentalists", and "fascists". On the other hand, so-called conservatives call so-called liberals "socialists", "communists", and "politically correct." Reporting news of current events often gets lost in these epithets. My goal is as objectively as is humanly possible to define conservatism and liberalism and show how their meanings have changed throughout. Positive and negative criticism is accepted.

What is a conservative? Dictionary.com, one of the five fountains of knowledge (along with Google, Wikipedia, Bing, and Spark Notes) defines conservative as "disposed to preserve existing conditions, institutions etc., and to limit change". This is why many "conservatives" are against new taxes and are big fans of the Constitution and Founding Fathers. A second definition is "cautiously moderate or purposefully low." This seems to be an apolitical definition, having to do with estimating costs or placing bets. The final definition is "traditional in style and manner; avoiding showiness or novelty." This definition could be applied to politics like supporting "family values", but in my opinion, it mostly applies to personal things, like fashion choices. For example, someone who wears a turtleneck instead of a V-neck.

So, you now know what conservatism is, but where did it come from? Some argue that Plato was an early conservative.(See this helpful blog) He hated democracy and thought it would lead to mob rule. Plato also thought that society should be ruled by "guardians" who received the best in training and education and protected the people from chaos, like a doctor protects his patients from disease The guardians will make sure the people revere the city's gods and protect them from "new" poetry and music. Plato's respect for religion is shared by some modern conservatives like possible GOP presidential nominee Michelle Bachmann, who won the endorsement of the Faith and Freedom Coalition and is supported by some Evangelical Christians. However, many modern conservatives would be appalled at Plato's idea of a big government to protect the people.

An important, early conservative thinker was Edmund Burke, who is also seen as an early classic liberal. He was a Whig member of the House of Commons and supported the colonists in the American Revolution, wanting them to choose their own taxes. He saw a common kinship in the the freedoms of England and the colonies, calling both countries "the sanctuary of liberty." However, Burke was against the French Revolution, saying that it was based on ideas alone unlike the earlier Glorious Revolution of 1688 which "was made to preserve our antient indisputable laws and liberties." Burke didn't believe in the divine right of kings, but he did want to hold onto English traditions like the Magna Charta and was wary of the Enlightenment.

But what did Karl Marx, who some call the father of communism, say about Burke? In a footnote to Das Kapital, he calls Burke, " the sycophant who in the pay of the English oligarchy played the romantic laudator temporis acti (praiser of acts for time) against the French Revolution just as, in the pay of the North American troubles, he had played the liberal against the  English oligarchy- was an all out vulgar bourgeois."

The English oligarchy that Marx speaks of is the Tory dominated British Parliament of the 1770s that would not allow the colonies to tax themselves and have self-representation in Parliament. Burke was a classic liberal in this since and believed that states had the right of revolution, if they had proper reasons. The French Revolution, in his opinion, was not a valid revolution because it was based mainly on Enlightenment ideals and not on what the people needed. Marx considered Burke " a vulgar bourgeois" because he only believed in revolution for the middle class, not the workers which made up the core of Marx's political philosophy.

In conclusion, Edmund Burke was a mixture of classic liberalism and conservatism. He was liberal because he supported the American Revolution and conservative because he wanted to preserve the traditional Protestant values and political structures, like the House of Lords and Commons and was suspicious of the "new" thinking of the Enlightenment and the more radical and violent French Revolution. Burke is an example that people are complex and can't be pigeon-holed into conservative and liberal molds.

Who would Plato and Edmund Burke vote for 2012? Do you consider yourself a conservative? Why or why not?

Monday, June 20, 2011

Fantasy Fiction and the Importance of Companionship and Self-Sacrificing Love

This past Sunday my pastor preached a sermon on Genesis 2:18-25 on how marriage should be, using the example of Adam and Eve, the first marriage. He talked about that humans are incomplete without relationships, and marriage is the deepest and strongest of all relationships. A quote by Michael Williams, a theology professor at Covenant Seminary, summarizes this, " God intends that we be social creatures...". The Biblical reason for marriage is to have companions along the journey and co-laborers in the gospel. This principle also applies to platonic relationships. True Christian relationships are built on community and self-sacrifice, not a pragmatic "what can I get out of it" mentality.

OK, nice sermonette, you're probably saying. But because God created humans in his image, they can create works of art, including fantasy fiction that bear his stamp even if the book/TV show/movie isn't written for a "religious" reason. The book Exile by R.A. Salvatore, TV show Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and film trilogy Lord of the Rings show the good of self-sacrificing relationships like in Genesis 2.

Drizzt Do'Urden  is the protagonist of R.A. Salvatore's Dark Elf trilogy written in the early 1990s. It is set in the Forgotten Realms, which is a popular Dungeon and Dragons campaign setting. Drizzt is a dark elf who is trained to be a powerful warrior for his clan Do'Urden, which is dedicated to becoming the most powerful clan no matter the cost and observes pagan rites, like human sacrifice. However, Drizzt is taught by his mentor Zaknafein to respect life and not slaughter innocent creatures, like light elves or deep gnomes. He leaves the house of Do'Urden after refusing to kill a light elf child and becomes an exile in the dark pits of the Underdark.

While in the Underdark, Drizzt battles within himself. He has two personalities: the hunter, a character that seeks only to survive in his dark environment. This personality allows him to subsist in the Underdark and defeat monsters like a basilisk. The other personality is Drizzt, a creature of conscience and character who wants to live a moral life. The creature of conscience overcomes when Drizzt surrenders to the deep gnomes. However, he's spared from execution by Belwar, who Drizzt let live after a dark elf raid.

Belwar lost his hands in that battle, but the deep gnome reaction to this shows the self-sacrificial nature of their society. Instead of casting him out like a beggar, the gnomes build Belwar two special hands: one shaped like a hammer and one like a battleaxe. This allows Belwar to continue in his role as miner and fighter. Drizzt falls in love with the companionship and selflessness of the gnome society. He even reenacts his battle with the basilisk for the young gnomes and goes on patrol with the gnomes when an evil dark elf is spotted... The dark elves' "friendship is born out of mutual profit" whereas the gnomes' relationship are "based on the strengths of community" and are great examples for Christian community.

Another example of self-sacrifice is found in the famous cult TV show  Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997-2003). Buffy Summers is appointed the Slayer, a young girl whose task is to defend the world from vampires and other supernatural entities. She lives in Sunnydale, CA as a normal high school student and is helped by Rupert Giles, the Watcher, whose job is to help and protect the Slayer.

But before Buffy, there were other slayers. Spike, a violent vampire with a heart of gold, has killed two slayers in the past century and arrives in Sunnydale during the second season episode "School Hard" ready to find and kill the new Slayer. He has easily defeated the previous Slayers because they worked alone. However, Buffy has friends who support her despite her dangerous lifestyle.

For example, in the season one finale, Buffy's friends Xander Harris (the school loser/goofball/virgin) and Angel (a 241 year old "good" vampire that struggles with his blood lust) revive her when the Master (vampire leader) kills her. Xander and Angel both have feelings for Bufffy, and Xander makes many jokes at Angel's expense. Also, while walking in the graveyard, Angel tells Buffy that he is jealous that Xander gets to be with her during the day because he's human. However, when  Buffy flatlines, Angel fights off the vampires while Xander does mouth to mouth CPR to revive her. (What movie does this remind you of?) To fight evil, Xander and Angel put aside their problems to protect Buffy even though Angel is a vampire and Xander is on the bottom of the totem pole in popularity.

Buffy's other "companions" include Willow Rosenberg (the school nerd and computer whiz) and Cordelia Chase (popular, rich cheerleader). Many students take advantage of Willow as a tutor in their classes, and she humbly helps them. Willow's only friend is the goofball Xander, renowned for his horrendous pickup lines. Instead of shunning Willow, Buffy befriends her even though it means she moves down the "social ladder." Buffy trusts Willow and relies on her computer abilities to help research "mysterious deaths." Cordelia is the most popular girl in school, but she feels like she's alone in a crowd. But after Buffy, Xander, and Willow save her life from vampires, she joins their group even joining them at the graveyard  after cheerleader camp and making stakes for Buffy. Throughout the series, Cordelia understands that to be a true friend, one can't expect anything in return, and she hangs out with Buffy, Xander, and Willow even though they are unpopular. The vampire Spike sums up the value of self-sacrificing companionship with this one-liner, " A slayer with friends and family. That as sure as hell wasn't on the brochure." Buffy succeeds where other Slayers have failed because she has a close community of friends and mentors to help her fight evil.

A final example of self-sacrificing friendship is Gandalf the Grey in Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring. Gandalf is a Maia (basically an angel), has an Elf ring, and is one of the most powerful wizards in Middle Earth. But he decides to allow Frodo Baggins, a small, weak hobbit, wield the One Ring. He gives Frodo guidance and urges him to not go alone but pick trustworthy companions. In the book, he recommends Aragorn, who is Frodo's guide to Rivendell and defends him from the Black Riders.

But in the Mines of Moria he gives the greatest gift any true friend can give: his life. Gandalf alone holds off the Balrog, so that the Fellowship (including Frodo) can escape and continue in their quest to destroy the Ring. He breaks the bridge underneath to defeat the Balrog and falls into the abyss. Even though Frodo is much weaker than him, Gandalf befriends him, instructs him, and sacrifices his own life for Frodo. This is true agape love, and Gandalf can be seen as a Christ figure, sacrificing himself for the salvation of the many and rising again stronger and more powerful (Gandalf the White).

"We know love by this, that He laid down His life for us; and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren." 1 John 3:16 (NASB)

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Marvel Superhero Island

Marvel Superhero Island (MSI) is a great little nook in Islands of Adventures, but it seems overcrowded. Something tells me that the builders tried to fit most of the Marvel Universe on two streets in New York. And where are the Avengers and Xavier mansions?

A cool, random thing about MSI is that there are characters everywhere! This fact hit me immediately upon entering, and I took tons of pictures/tons of pictures were taken of me. (They will be on Facebook soon) For example, when you walk in, there's a small replica of the Baxter Building, disguised as a cafe. I got a picture with the Fantastic Four sign and "driving" the Fantasticar (an obvious publicity tie-in to the 2007 possible blockbuster Fantastic Four: The Rise of the Silver Surfer).

Walking down Stan Lee Boulevard (winning), I bumped into the Green Goblin. How many times in your life have you walked down a street named after a famous comic book creator and ran into an uber-famous comic book villain. Actually, in a former life, I have walked down Bob Kane Court and met the Joker and Catwoman (not Halle Berry). Being the knowledgeable comics fan that I am, I asked Gobby if he was Norman or Harry Osborn. OK, so what self-respecting supervillain would give away his secret identity to some random ginger kid. But he was totally in-character and in a sneering voice, answered, " I'm the Green Goblin." I got a picture and partially redeemed myself by telling him to "Go kick Spider-Man's butt for me" ironically before getting on Spider-Man's ride.

Speaking of Spidey, the first and sadly the last ride I went on at Islands of Adventure, was the Amazing Adventures of Spider-Man. The pre-ride area goes through the back rooms of the Daily Bugle. There, you see that J. Jonah Jameson (JJJ) has files on every person or thing in the Marvel Universe, and that Aunt May and Mary Jane have left voicemails for Peter Parker (who is the webmaster for the Daily Bugle like in the Ultimate Spider-Man comics). This ride is the personification of awesome.

You're strapped into special "Scoop" cars by some random guy that reminds me of The Man in Black in X-Men: First Class, given 3D glasses, and told "not screw this up" by JJJ. Immediately, Spider-Man pops into your sight and tells you things are dangerous. You see the Statue of Liberty down and Hobgoblin and Dr. Octopus cackling away. Electro is definitely the scariest baddie, and his electric generator "spins" your car around. Scream (a Venom/Spider-Woman hybrid) looks really good in 3D, and Hydroman gets you wet but not soaking. Hobgoblin and Doc Ock stretch the limits of the 3D projector and do some great fire effects, but the best part of the ride is when you drop to your impending doom...

After going on this stunning motion simulator ride, I rode Dr. Doom's Fearfall alone. The pre-ride loading zone is nothing to write home about, but you pass Fogwell's Gym and Murdoch and Nelson's Law Offices on the way (obvious Daredevil references). I actually had literal fear before riding because a wasp was buzzing on my harness but thankfully moved on to another rider. Dr. Doom starts out with a bang after a ton of build-up and features a 300 ft. drop, but then it transforms into a Tower of Terror ripoff. Great view though.

While exiting through Kingpin's Arcade (no X-Men vs. Street Fighter or Marvel vs. Capcom in sight), I saw several X-Men characters. I ran up to Rogue, started chatting and realized there was an actual line for her. Embarrassed, I walked over to the Incredible Hulk coaster which is probably the best ride in MSI. The pre-ride area is big and green, like the Hulk. The coaster itself starts out slow and then boom! 0-40 in two seconds is no lie. This is a wonderfully engineered steel coaster that belongs at Six Flags or Cedar Point. I really felt like I was Wolverine holding on for dear life while battling Hulk and Wendigo in Canada (Incredible Hulk 181). The ride dips, turns, and goes upside down several times. I've never been a huge fan of Hulk's comics, but I'm definitely a huge fan of his ride.

So, I finally got in with the X-Men. Rogue looked like she was 50 and didn't have a Southern accent, but Storm was great. She giggled when I asked her if she was going to bring the mohawk back and really carried herself regally. Wolverine had the longest line and shortest attention span, but what do you expect. I got to touch his adamantium claws and call him "bub." But Cyclops was the best. He made me repent of all my Cyclops jokes that I sometimes use on straight-laced people. It also made me feel sorry that Toad beat him in X-Men, he was stuffed in a fridge in X2, and was killed off in X-Men: The Last Stand. He thought my red-tinted sunglasses were cool, and we had a nice " bro chat" about Jean Grey and shared a hug. My picture with him will be my profile pic on Facebook.

It's not every day that you meet four X-Men. However, in MSI, there was some definite anti-mutant bias. Storm gets stuck with a tea cup ride lamer than Disney's with an implausible story to match. The epicness of MSI meant that I spent some $$$ at the "Comics Shop." Having recently read Civil War on Marvel Digital Comics, I picked up the first graphic novel of the "Death of Captain America" arc. I also bought a Loki action figure from the Thor movie because he's my favorite Marvel villain.

"I'm the best at what I do, and what I do isn't very nice."- Wolverine

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

First Impressions: Universal Orlando

When I first saw the spires of Universal, my heart fluttered. Colored posters with characters like Shrek, ET, and Spider-Man (the Ultimate version) warmly welcomed me in. I passed several vendors from restaurants like Moe's and Bubba Gump's to a dinky, little cart that had an uncanny X-Men shirt that said "The future is here" and had a wonderfully rendered image of the real "X-Men: First Class."

After passing the large Billabong and Universal Studios stores, I caught a glimpse of Hard Rock Cafe. It looked like a crumbling Roman coliseum with high its high spires separated from me by a dark gulf of water. Mick Jagger would be proud...

Right now (three days ago), I'm lounging and writing in a leather backed chair at the Royal Pacific Hotel. It's a weird mixture of Polynesian and Southeast Asian architectural motifs. Two handsome Buddhas flank the entranceway that is the personification of nirvana. The covers on my bed evoke bamboo reeds, and the window in my room looks out on a beautifully manicured garden.

This is just a teaser for my upcoming blog series on my trip to Universal Studios and Islands of Adventure. Here's the schedule:
Part 1: Marvel Superhero Island
Part 2: Islands of Adventure
Part 3: Wizarding World of Harry Potter
Part 4: Universal Studios
Part 5: Food

"Excelsior!"- Stan Lee

Friday, June 3, 2011

Dawn and Dusk (Original Poem)

A stream of silvery light
Trails in the gloomy night.
I fought for truth, fought for right,
But struggle has sapped all my might.
Morning star burning in the sky like coal,
Burrow through the heavens like a mole
My celestial journey has just begun.
Until I'm consumed by the sun...
Burned by heat, doused in flame
Apollo's rays sting my brain.
I long for rocky mountains,
Snowcapped peaks, bubbling fountains.
I bask in the light of the virgin moon.
Her glow fades in the dark tomb.
Specters of night haunt my soul,
Apparitionsof silver and gold
My dreaming mind is lost in love.
Then sleep came over me like a drug.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

The Pilgrim's Matrix: Two Viewpoints Create One Hero


                (This is an early concept paper for my senior thesis on the military hero)
The military hero is one of the most enduring archetypes in fiction, stretching from the early
epics of Gilgamesh and Homer to modern films like Avatar and Iron Man. There are many kinds of heroes from the one-man army (e.g. Achilles, Wolverine) to the war leader (e.g. Aeneas, Maximus, Benjamin Martin from The Patriot). Another type of military hero that fights his or her personal “war” against crime or corruption is the masked vigilante, like Batman or Rorschach from Watchmen.

But not all military heroes do battle in the physical realm. Spiritual warriors are wracked by temptations and inner struggles. They may seem only like a pawn in the scheme of a greater narrative, but their journey to enlightenment and freedom transcend the whole conflict. Two examples of this kind of hero are Christian from John Bunyan’s religious allegory Pilgrim’s Progress and Neo from the Matrix trilogy, which was written, directed, and produced by the Wachowskis (one of them might be a woman now).

 Pilgrim’s Progress records the journey of Christian from the City of Destruction to the Celestial City, and how he grows spiritually despite many dangers. The Matrix films tell the story of Neo, a computer hacker, who learns the true nature of reality from mysterious crew of the Nebuchadnezzar and travels through the Matrix and the real world, learning about himself and the reality he lives in as the series progresses.

The Matrix films and Pilgrim’s Progress share a common hero archetype, but their author and directors, respectively, have very different influences and life experiences.

               John Bunyan was born to an Anglican tinker in 1628 but abandoned his faith while fighting for Oliver Cromwell in the English Civil War. His experiences during the war and the beauty of the Bedfordshire countryside were major influences on Pilgrim’s Progress, which Bunyan wrote in jail and published in 1678 (Jokinen 2). Bunyan’s conversion to Christianity (recorded in his autobiography Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners) inspired him to write Pilgrim’s Progress as a vivid allegory of the gospel, drawing from the Bible and his own personal experiences.


                On the other hand, Larry (sometimes Lana) and Andy Wachowski are sibling directors who are famous for directing, writing, and producing the Matrix trilogy. In addition to these films, they wrote and produced the film adaptation of Alan Moore’s legendary graphic novel V for Vendetta and are currently writing, producing, and directing Cloud Atlas, an adaptation of the award winning sci fi novel (IMDB). The Wachowskis are big fans of kung fu movies and reality-bending anime like Ghost in the Shell and Akira (Wachowskis 1). This is where much of the action scenes in The Matrix come from.

                According to a fan interview, the Wachowskis’ religion is “non-denominational”,  and the Matrix movies contains hints of many faiths, both Eastern and Western. For example, the war between humans and machines is like Gnosticism’s dualist body/soul conflict. Also, Trinity and Zion are Biblical references, and Neo’s status as the One parallels Gautama Siddharta’s status as the “Enlightened Buddha” in Buddhism (Henry 1).
                Therefore, in contrast with Bunyan’s fairly straightforward  Protestant allegory, the Matrix saga is a smorgasbord of world religions, kung fu, and dystopia á la Blade Runner or the 1982 arcade game Robotron 2084. But the Christian allegory and the cyberpunk flick share the common archetype of the spiritual warrior
.
                Both Christian and Neo come from desolate places. After Neo is unplugged from the Matrix, he sees the reality of planet Earth, which is the barren Desert of the Real, governed by insatiable machines. Christian’s life is no different, and his home is the “wilderness of the world”, the aptly named city of Destruction (Bunyan 10). However, Christian is told the truth about his condition about his condition by Evangelist, who commands him to “run far from his own door” (18). Likewise, Neo is given commands on a computer and telephone by the unseen Morpheus to learn about the reality of his condition.

                Christian trusts Evangelist, even when his neighbors Obstinate and Pliable try to dissuade. Also, Neo trusts Morpheus and follows the “white rabbit” even though it leads him to a loud night club and causes him to be late the next day for work.  Neo continues to be harried and tempted by Agent Smith, who offers him a normal life in the Matrix for information about Morpheus. Finally, Neo is told the truth of his condition as a slave to the machine and swallows the red pill “to see how far the rabbit trail leads” (The Matrix). This is similar to Pilgrim’s Progress when Evangelist tells Christian that Mr. Worldly Wise’s promise of easy burden removal and a normal life is a lie (Bunyan 57). Also, the Interpreter shows Christian a man in a cage, symbolizing a slave to Satan, which is like Morpheus revealing the human condition of slavery to the machines to Neo in the “real world.”
*SPOILER ALERT* (If you haven’t seen The Matrix, you might not want to read this)


                But the clearest parallel between Neo and Christian is their respective salvations. When he is supposedly “killed” by Agent Smith, Neo is revived by Trinity’s kiss and realizes his true potential as the One by moving faster than Smith and going directly into Smith’s programming. He can also fly and move freely between the Matrix and “real world.” Christian also experiences salvation when he “dies” as Graceless and becomes Christian. He is given clean white clothes (like Neo’s clean black trench coat and sunglasses) and his burden is removed, freeing him. For example, Christian climbs the Hill of Difficulty without a problem.

                Neo and Christian endure similar struggles in their respective movies and book, and both have salvation experiences. Therefore, in this case, the archetype of a spiritual warrior has not changed much at base level in 300 years, despite divergent worldviews of authors and modern technology and fighting techniques.
                “I know kung fu”- Neo (The Matrix)

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Summer Blog Ideas and Philosophy

Because of *cough* high school, I've been unable to post any blog posts this past month. However, one of my goals this summer is to put in fresh, varied content daily. So I've made a system of different types of articles that will be posted this summer and hopefully into posterity.

Quotable- I will post a quote from a famous person, book, movie, TV show, or video game and analyze it. The meaning will be expounded but also placed in context for its larger meaning to society at large. Feel free to disagree or flame, but no trolling please ;)

Archive- I will go into the Microsoft Word database on my computer or old notebooks, journals etc. and publish a paper, story, or poem. This is mostly a selfish endeavor because I need RAM for college, but you might enjoy some of my older stuff...

TV Themes- This summer, my goal is to watch Dr. Who (new series), Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Guild,  and Star Trek: The New Generation from start to finish. These posts will consist of my reflections and reactions to these shows and characters and will be followed by a "season recap" post about the deeper themes in the shows. When I catch up on Dr. Who and Guild, there will be new episode reviews up regularly.

Comic Corner- Because there's no school, I will indulge my love for the "funnies." Books read and analyzed will include Watchmen, The Dark Knight Returns, Chris Claremont's run on Uncanny X-Men and the original Wolverine miniseries by Claremont and Frank Miller. I may also focus in on specific characters' appearances, so if there's a comic series, creator, or character you want on the blog, fire me a comment. The goal of these posts will be to show that comics aren't just for kids and are the mythology for Americans in the 20th/21st century.

Book Nook (Kindle)- Another type of blog post will be about the book(s) I'm currently reading. When it comes to literature, I have major attention span issues and bounce around from books of different genres too much. I'm currently finishing a Civil War non-fiction book and will kick off the summer with the quadruple threat of C.S. Lewis' Abolition of Man, Bulfinch's Mythology, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, and Tale of Two Cities (for my book club).

These are just some of the many types of content on my blog with cheesy rhyming or alliterative names. Others will include Film Fantasies, Poetry Garden, and various posts on items of personal interest like my trip to...

Friday, April 22, 2011

The Cave (and a short rant with a happy Easter ending)

Darkness fills the room,
Like death in the tomb.
Ignorance and despair
Laying my soul bare
A prison for mind,
 Truth is a crime,
A dungeon for my reason,
Enlightenment is treason.

Billy Corgan of the Smashing Pumpkins was right when he said, "Despite all my rage, I'm still just a rat in a cage." People around me tell me what to do and think about so many things without asking why I do these things. Questions are more powerful than imperative statements. Just a thought, if I'm allowed...

Instead of working together to formulate opinions about the world around us, websites and news outlets that claim to be "fair and balanced" really just pick a side and stick to that part of a story. One must have some kind of foundation of  truth, but that should not stop them from reading about the "other side." I'm a Christian, but I also read books, watch films, and listen to music by Jews, agnostics, Marxists, and even worshipers of the Roman snake god Glycon.

Many Christians disparage postmodernism. True, postmodernism rejects objective truth and with it all religious dogma. However, postmodernism widened the rigid narrow canon that used to only consist of books written by dead white Anglo-Saxon Protestants. But with the advent of postmodernism and the "hermeneutics of suspicion", books by women, minorities, and persons who went against the grain of their culture can be included in the ranks of great writers. Also, postmodernism isn't snobbish and doesn't try to find an objective idea of a "great book", which a centuries old debate. It gets half the story right: the human race is desperately flawed and cannot be "cured" by cured by modern science and technology.

But it's missing one thing: a Savior.

"And as the women were terrified and bowed their faces to the ground, the men said to them, "Why do you seek the living One among the dead? He is not here, but he has risen. Remember how he spoke to you while he was still in Galilee, saying that the Son of Man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and the third day rise again." Luke 24:5-7 (NASB)

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Psalm of Thanksgiving

The world is stained with dark shades of grey,
I have a debt I could never pay.
My car is stuck in the Slough of Despond;
My actions are right, but my motives are wrong.
Complaining and chafing 'til my face turns red.
Complaining and chafing 'til my soul is dead.
The Earth is rotating, so I give thanks.
Heaven is golden, so I  give thanks.
My life is predetermined, so I give thanks.
The dead walk; Humans are saved;
The phoenix-like Messiah rises from the grave,
And I've finally found my way.
So I give thanks...








Friday, April 15, 2011

Does Civil Disobedience Work in a Democratic Republic? by Sam Cordle (edited by me:)


Today on Undisclosed Desires, we have our first guest blogger. Sam Cordle is a homeschooled junior who goes to my youth group. I enjoy board games, playing basketball and soccer, and having political debates with him and his brothers. Sam wants to major in political science or pre-law and is considering a bevy of Christian liberal art schools. Sam's favorite Bible passages are Romans 3:24-26 and Colossians 4:5-6. He enjoys books by Jonathan Edwards, C.S. Lewis, Charles Dickens, and Mark Twain and is currently reading Walden by Henry David Thoreau and Animal Farm by George Orwell.
In making a cutting indictment of government injustices, Henry David Thoreau’s tract “Resistance to Civil 
Government” highly criticizes government as a whole. As part of his outline of civil disobedience, he calls for citizens to separate themselves from government by taking actions like disobeying laws that connect them to the state. Such opinions raise the important question of the compatibility of these ideas with the American republican form of government. When used as a means to express discontent or protest over government actions, Thoreau’s methodology of civil disobedience can coexist with republicanism, but if taken to an extreme, his political philosophies would undermine any such government. With its focus on representing the people, the republican form of government allows for dissent, but not anarchy.

At its root, the republican form of government in the United States recognizes the supremacy of the people as the source of its power. Throughout his essay, Thoreau strongly emphasizes the opinion of the individual and his or her right to separate from the government. He calls for the state “to recognize the individual as a higher and independent power, from which all its own power and authority are derived” (1872). American republican government does recognize the people in this way. As James Madison describes in The Federalist Papers, representation of the people lies at the heart of a republican form of government. Agreeing with the words of the Declaration of Independence, Madison defines a republic as “a government which derives all its powers directly or indirectly from the great body of the people,” and he proceeds to illustrate how the United States meets this criterion under the Constitution. Because the foundation of both Thoreau’s belief in civil disobedience and American republicanism lies on the opinion and will of individual people, the two can coexist to some extent.

Furthermore, with its focus on representing the people, republicanism fundamentally allows for dissent. In his disobedience to the government, Thoreau purposes to convey disapproval of injustices in the government. He implies that he “[breaks] the law” to “[let] [his] life be a counter friction to stop the machine” of government injustice, instead of “[lending] [himself] to the wrong which [he] [condemns]” (1863). Again in The Federalist Papers, Madison explains how republicanism preserves liberty by not suppressing factions, but only by balancing and controlling their effects, so that destructive anarchy does not reign. Therefore, Thoreau’s basic concept of civil disobedience exhibits compatibility with the republican form of government.

While civil disobedience as protest generally fits with the principle of republicanism, some of Thoreau’s philosophical backing and application of his idea causes conflicts with the republican form of government. Thoreau bases his idea of civil disobedience on the idea of individualism and the principle “[that] government is best which governs least,” which he extrapolates to mean that no government ideally should exist at all, and the government should at least allow people to remain completely aloof from it (1857). If many people widely adopted and applied these ideas, they would likely begin to disobey the government based on whatever standard they wished to hold. When people do whatever they want, with no regard for laws, anarchy can result. Such a situation with no government, and in which each individual person makes his or her laws, obviously opposes any form of republican government.

Thoreau does not immediately call for the abolition of all government, but his ideas can certainly lead to anarchy. Despite his views of the state as an expedient in some areas, he generally perceives the government as a hindrance to justice, as an entity that can be abandoned in protest. However, Thoreau does provide a powerful argument for people to seek right and justice without regard to the cost. If seeking justice requires breaking laws, Thoreau urges this course of action as a means of nonviolent protest consistent with the republican form of government that allows dissent as part of its attempts to represent the people. Later social reformers, such as Martin Luther King Jr., found inspiration for their peaceful protests in Thoreau’s concept of civil disobedience as they challenged the actions but not the form of the government. Despite inconsistencies between the application of Thoreau’s ideas and republicanism, his basic concept of civil disobedience can certainly coexist with the republican form of government in the United States.