Michael Kennedy's Blog
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Comment
My depression caused by receiving no comments is only matched by my emotional despotism in any inter-personal relationships. It is not a good feeling to think that you are a lonely wanderer rambling into the cold unforgiving cyber landscape, and your pain and hardships are all for nothing because nobody cares. It is for this reason that I will be putting up commonly Googled terms as titles in order to receive more views in the hopes that someone will eventually take the infinitesimally small amount of effort it takes to type up a comment. If you enjoy having suicides on your conscience, don't comment; if you seek to be a ray of unrivaled hope and joy to one aspiring writer and philosopher then do.
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Forge of Dwair
I intend to publish a book called the Forge of Dwair, an epic fantasy of fantastic proportions. I can't divulge many of the details at this moment,but as the publication day comes nearer I will give more details. Seekers of originality and sci-fi fans will love the tons of creatures I have created, and the elements of science fictions that I love using. This book has no connection to any previously posted material on my blog. I hope you look out for it in the future.
Sunday, June 2, 2013
Myth War
Too often these days we see card games that cost hundreds of dollars to adequately play against others, but now I give unto you a new game. A game that is free. Below you can see the format for proposed cards. The name type and summoning cost is presented on the top of each creature card. Below that is a picture that you may copy from Google images. Below the picture are the stats and summoning requirements. Structures like the one next to the Dryad are placed on one of the 12 spaces on the board. The board is 3 by 4 with the sides bearing three facing the opponents. The six spaces nearest you are yours at the beginning of the game. On your first turn you may build a citadel, like the Forest's Heart below, on your back row. After that is built you may build one structure. Each player can only have one citadel. You then have four summoning points to spend on your first creatures. You cannot summon and sacrifice a creature on the same turn. Each turn after your first turn consists of three parts. Building, Summoning/Sacrificing, and Attacking. At the beginning of each turn you receive two more summoning points. Saving summoning points is legal but you can only have six points saved at one time or you don't get anymore. You can place a structure on any spot you own, and if a creature requires to be summoned on that structure then it must be summoned to that space. Creatures can move one space and attack on the Attack part of your turn, except Territorial creatures who cannot leave the space they are summoned on. A health point is lost whenever a creature with more power attacks it. Creatures can attack or defend together adding together their attack points, but you may only move and attack with two creatures at a time. Unlimited numbers of creatures can defend together, though only the target of the attack loses health. All structures have zero power, so they lose a health point each time they are attacked, but they cannot be attacked while a friendly creature is on them. When your citadel is destroyed you lose. This is an informal game, but make sure any freinds that play it with you are okay with the creatures you make. That is the final rule, you make the creatures. Stick to the templates below and use your imagination.
Dryad 1$ Faeling Enchanted Forest Nature Structure


Requires Enchanted Forest
to Summon 4 health
35 Power 3 Health
-15 against fire
Fae Summoner 2$ Caster
Fae Forest’s
Heart Nature Citadel


Requires Forest ’s
Heart to Summon 6 Health
30 Power 3 Health +20 against
Faeling
Controls any adjacent
unspelled Faeling
Fae Sanctuary Nature Structure Troll 3$ Fae


4 Health Requires Fae Sanctuary to Summon
Sacrifice a Faeling to Summon
65 Power 5
Health Territorial
Sprite Knight 1$ Faeling
Confusing Fog Spell


Requires Fae Sanctuary to Summon Requires a Caster.
30 Power 4 health Can be
Summoned from Cast on a possessed
land space.
any nature structure once
Sanctuary is down Entering enemies are
trapped for a turn.
Steam Powered Giraffe
Moral Relativism
Michael Kennedy
1 April 2013
Moral Relativity
Imagine a world
where the evil of Hitler, the slaughters under Stalin, and the terror of Saddam
Hussein went unpunished. What idea would
justify this horror of a world? Some truly
believe that these actions were acceptable, in that no actions are unacceptable. This is the idea of moral relativity, and the
dangers of this ideology are too horrible and too numerous to ignore. Moral relativity has no place in our world
and should be opposed. We will discuss
what this idea is, individual relativity, and cultural relativity.
So what is moral
relativity? It is a complex idea which
has gained popularity among scholarly circles in the past couple of years. It is the idea that a person’s belief of right
and wrong is correct, but so is someone else’s to them even if these ideas
disagree with one another. Basically
everyone is right. This also means that
there is no true right and wrong, because ethical convictions are merely
personal opinions. Paul Boghossian said
it best in his article in The New York Times, “If there are no absolute facts
about morality, ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ would have to join ‘witch’ in the dustbin
of failed concepts.”(Boghossian) Moral relativity also stipulates that there
are no absolute truths. For instance
some people believe in “Hell” others don’t.
Moral Relativity states that both of these people are right. There are two types of moral relativity. There is individual relativity and cultural
relativity. We will discuss both of
these.
Individual
relativity is the idea that any singular person’s moral views are correct, and
that there are no over arching moral guidelines. This idea arose from a cultural
conflict. Matt K. Lewis in his article
in The Week summed it up, “Liberty is murdering
virtue.”(Lewis) He goes on to say that America ’s promise of liberty, has
overwhelmed traditional senses of virtue.
People want to do what they want to do and individual moral relativity
provides the justification. Under this
idea nothing can be judged. We couldn’t
punish murder, rape, or anything else as long as the accused said that he
believed what he did was right. Another
idea which works into individual relativity is the idea of relative truth. We discussed that idea previously and there
is a major problem in this logic. Simply
because someone may not believe in hell doesn’t mean that it doesn’t
exist. You can’t see air, but it is
there. The more accepted idea is the
idea of cultural relativity that makes some new propositions while still
working under the premise that there is no true right or wrong.
This
is the more convoluted of the two. The
idea is that different cultures have different opinions on right and wrong, and
therefore there is no overarching moral code.
Peter Kreeft, in his online book about relativism, says it best, “The
claim is that anthropologists and sociologists have discovered moral relativism
to be not a theory but an empirical fact. Different cultures and societies,
like different individuals, simply do, in fact, have very different moral
values. In Eskimo culture, and in Holland ,
killing old people is right. In America ,
east of Oregon ,
it's wrong. In contemporary culture, fornication is right; in Christian
cultures, it's wrong, and so forth.” (Kreeft)
This brings up some practical problems,
for instance the Holocaust would be considered okay, because anti-Semitism was
prominent in German culture. Obviously
killing thousands of people for no reason, but their religion and race, is
wrong under any culture. In some Arabic
countries terrorism is considered acceptable, but crashing a plane into the
twin towers, and killing so many people, is certainly wrong. There is a flaw in this logic, as well as an
outright horror at that kind of actions this would justify. Remember that cultural relativity still
postulates that there is no true right or wrong, yet this form basically states
that it is always right to abide by your cultures morality(Kreeft) as Mr. Kreeft also says in his
book. Kreeft also later makes a very
good point, “Try to imagine a society where justice, honesty, courage, wisdom,
hope, and self-control were deemed morally evil. And unrestricted selfishness,
cowardice, lying, betrayal, addiction, and despair were deemed morally good.
Such a society is never found on Earth.
There are indeed important disagreements about values between cultures.
But beneath all disagreements about lesser values, there always lies an
agreement about more basic ones. “ (Kreeft) He states the argument quite well. While lots of countries do have different
moralities there has never been one that has totally reversed morality. This shows that cultural relativity is not a
fact, and that the world is more absolutist than those scholars think.
We have discussed
the meaning of moral relativity, individual relativity, and cultural
relativity. There are serious flaws in
the idea of moral relativity; it is not acceptable in our world. You don’t have to be a Christian or even
religious to be an absolutist. You just
have to believe in a line that shouldn’t be crossed no matter what you believe
in, or where you’re from. You just have
to have a couple rules that can’t be broken, to avoid the flawed logic and
horrible consequences of moral relativity.
As long as we have right and wrong we can keep the order and stability
of our society, and we can make the world a better place.
PAUL BOGHOSSIAN
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/07/24/the-maze-of-moral-relativism/
The New York
Times July 24, 2011
“If there are no absolute facts about morality, “right” and “wrong” would
have to join “witch” in the dustbin of failed concepts.” QBy Matt K. Lewis http://theweek.com/bullpen/column/241871/the-culture-war-was-never-a-fair-fight The Week March 27, 2013
“Liberty is murdering virtue.” Q
“Of course, there
has always been a tension between virtue and liberty. But at some point, America
ceased emphasizing community values and began valuing extreme individualism.
More and more, Americans — including many conservatives — now believe that
individuals should do whatever they want so long as it isn't hurting anybody
else.” S
Peter Kreeft http://www.peterkreeft.com/audio/05_relativism/relativism_transcription.htm#2 March 12, 2013 10:37 AM
“The claim is that anthropologists and sociologists
have discovered moral relativism to be not a theory but an empirical fact.
Different cultures and societies, like different individuals, simply do, in
fact, have very different moral values. In Eskimo culture, and in Holland ,
killing old people is right. In America ,
east of Oregon ,
it's wrong. In contemporary culture, fornication is right; in Christian
cultures, it's wrong, and so forth.” P
“Just imagine what that would be like. Try to
imagine a society where justice, honesty, courage, wisdom, hope, and
self-control were deemed morally evil. And unrestricted selfishness, cowardice,
lying, betrayal, addiction, and despair were deemed morally good. Such a
society is never found on Earth. If it exists anywhere, it is only in Hell and
its colonies. Only Satan and his worshippers say "evil be thou my
good." There are indeed important disagreements about values between
cultures. But beneath all disagreements about lesser values, there always lies
an agreement about more basic ones.” P
“To
see the logical fallacy in this apparently impregnable argument, we need to
look at its unspoken assumption—which is that moral rightness is a matter of
obedience to cultural values. That it is right to obey your culture's values.
Always. Only if we combine that hidden premise with the stated premise—that
values differ with cultures—can we get to the conclusion that moral rightness
differs with cultures. That what is wrong in one culture is right in another.
But surely, this hidden premise begs the question. It presupposes the very
moral relativism it is supposed to prove. The absolutist denies that it is
always right to obey your culture's values. He has a trans-cultural standard by
which he can criticize a whole culture's values. That is why he could be a
progressive and a radical, while the relativist can only be a status-quo
conservative, having no higher standard than his culture. My country, right or
wrong. Only massive, media, big-lie propaganda could so confuse people's minds
that they spontaneously think the opposite. But in fact it is only the believer
in the old-fashioned natural moral law who could be a social radical and a
progressive. He alone can say to a Hitler, or a Saddam Hussein, "You and
your whole social order are wrong and wicked and deserve to be destroyed."
The relativist could only say, "Different strokes for different folks, and
I happen to hate your strokes and prefer mine, that's all." P
The Man and the Beast
The Man and the Beast
The wicked snickering of the Imps seemed to
come from all around him. He slung his
hatchet at the shifting shadows, and the cruel laughter increased with each
missed attack. The peasant could see
their eyes in the corner of his own, and he felt their delight at his struggle. He ran through the thick wood, and the
laughing Imps followed easily. He saw
some kind of gate in the shadow of the night, and he rushed through it. He heard the laughter stop abruptly, and
silence reigned over the night. His hand
still gripped the fence, and looking down he discovered the cause of their
quiet. The fence was made of bone.
He pulled his hand away, and turned to see the
great rotting candy house of the long dead witch. He began to wonder if the Imps would over
come their fear of the witch if he simply stood outside the house, so
swallowing his own terror, he entered the house. The Peasant was from a village outside the Dark Forest ,
and he and his mother, and father lived in a small house on the edge of the
dreaded wood. A great lord lived in a
castle near the village, and one day the lord’s daughter came out. He only got a glance at her, but he knew that
this was the only woman he could ever love.
As soon as she had come, so did she leave with
a trail of noble suitors behind her. Her
father, aware of how many desired his daughter’s hand, commanded a tournament
to test the strength, of any man who would dare seek his daughter. Any one who was victorious in the tournament
would win the lady’s hand.
He walked through the witch’s house past the
kitchen were the witch herself was merely a skeleton in her oven. She had been burned to death within, many
years ago. Famine still rested upon the
land, and the Peasant was not well fed.
There was no way he could win in a tournament against so many well fed,
well armed, and strong nobles. Desperate
for the fair lady’s hand, the Peasant had only one choice. He would go to the Fae and wish for strength.
The sun had begun to come up so the Peasant
left the candy house, and journeyed further.
He came to a great golden gate, that opened before he could touch
it. Inside the Fae sat proud in their
circle of chairs, and gazed at him through eyes as old as time, yet as vibrant
as the spring.
The Fae were mischievous, blue-skinned
immortals, who presided over the entire Dark Forest
and their estranged cousins the Imps.
They knew little of mortal matters, but took great pleasure in toying
with them. The Fae would grant any wish
for a price that they set, and that is usually not discovered till after their
service is rendered. Oberon, high king
of the council, stood and walked over to the Peasant.
“Mortals do not usually survive the trek here,
and those that do arte driven by madness, or this thing you mortals call
‘need.’ Are you mad, mortal, or in
need?”
The peasant said, “I am in great need and I am
willing to pay any price.”
“Do not be worried, child. All deals with the Fae are fair, it is our
nature. Tell us your need, young one.”
The peasant thought on his wording then said,
“I wish to be stronger than any of my kind.”
Oberon laughed and the place rang with this
unearthly music. He too had a love, and
he wanted to impress her with a gift.
This mortal would provide it, “Food is a common request, as is shelter,
but this is new. The price of such change is two fold, you must pay the price
that change always brings, and the price I desire for causing it. Are you truly willing?”
The Peasant nodded and Oberon cast his
spell. Instantly the man grew to an astounding
height, and he was given claws and fur.
This new beast stood were the peasant once did.
“Bring me the most beautiful thing you have
ever seen.” Oberon said, and compelled
by Fae magic the new beast trundled off towards the village. Inside the true man screamed, for he knew
exactly what the beast was to retrieve.
His love, the lady fair, would be Oberon’s gift, and the beast would
most certainly bring her back lifeless and limp.
Hello
As you can see my name is Michael Kennedy, an aspiring Author and Philosopher, and I am working on a book write now. I apologize for the pun, but I couldn't resist. I will be posting some of my work here to show you what my book might be like. I intend to publish this novel as soon as I am able. For now enjoy some of my old work.
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