In which the middle-aged Peacenik mouths off about War Drones--and all the other things that make him cranky.

Mr Mahatma--who is a Mr in real life--lives in the valleys of Southern California with his wife, a herd of Dears, and an impressive collection of books. Pnorny!
He is reachable at:
littlemrmahatma@yahoo.com

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Little Mr Mahatma
 
Thursday, June 10, 2004  
Classic Chinese Literature
A long, long, long time ago I played a game for the Apple computer called "Romance of Three Kingdoms" by Koei. The game had you attempt to "unite" China by conquest. The game was fun and started me on a mild hobby of learning more about the history under the game. (By the way, the game turned into a series and is up to its ninth incarnation though for the Playstation 2 now.) I had wanted to read the Three Kingdoms series for the longest time but copies just weren't available in the U.S.


A couple years ago I took a vacation in Amsterdam and in my wanderings I came across a Chinese bookstore on Damrak. Went in and there to my amazement was "Three Kingdoms" in a nice boxed set (not for sale in the U.S. - wonder why?). Bought it, read it, loved it - all 2,300 plus pages of it. It got a little tedious in the last 100 pages or so but a good read if the topic remotely interests you. And now it's available in the U.S.. Check out the zshop of the fine seller zhihongx. I recommend this cheap, cheap version. If you'd like to download the book in ebook format or just read it online, this www.threekingdoms.com is unsurpassed.


Recently I got an urge to play "Three Kingdoms" and while snooping for reviews of the latest PS2 incarnation I ended up on Yellow Bridge that talked about the other great classics of Chinese Literature. My interest was piqued. I didn't buy "The Scholars" but I did order the others sets (cheap!) from Zhihongx. Eventually in the mail I got a nice heavy package - thousands of pages to lose myself in. My eyesight would pay heavily and Xena would have to wait.


First up was Journey To The West, over 2,300 pages. I lasted 350 pages. The story is eventually about a Monk and three companions travelling to the "West" in retrieve some Buddhist sutras. The beginning sections - the part I read - tell of the rise of Monkey to a near God and his downfall, followed by the beginnings of the Monk and the start of the quest. My problem with the story and what caused me to put the book down was the lack of empathy I felt for the main characters. Monkey, simply put, was an obnoxious self-centered ass. The Monk was a whiny coward. They may have become heroic by the end of the tale but the slow build-up killed the enjoyment. Plus, the tale is very heavily laced with Buddhism - not a bad thing - but if you're not into the religion and mythology, it gets quickly dull. Not recommended for the impatient.


A Dream Of Red Mansions was the second book I tackled and, honestly, I couldn't get past 100 pages (out of 2,556 pages). It's a romance story but it spends so much time on relationships and class differences that the plot if any disappeared. Sadly, another not recommended (at least for guys).


I'm currently reading Outlaws Of The Marsh (AKA Water Margin) and enjoying it very much. Easily as much as "Three Kingdoms". It's 2,149 pages of action and intrigue, honor, corruption, heroes, and villains and that's in the couple of hundred pages I've read so far. The story (from the cover blurbs) is about a group of people forced to become outlaws because of Governmental corruption and other circumstances, essentially when good people have to become "bad". Highly recommended!


Bush, G-8 Leaders, and Iraq
"President Bush appealed to his big-power allies Thursday to do more to guide Iraq's transformation into a stable democracy, saying the "Iraqi people need help" to defend themselves, rebuild their country and hold elections." Translation: We've screwed up the country even further. We've no idea what to do. My popularity is plummeting. Help!!! (And send money!)


Psychology, Statistics, and Critical Thinking
Psychology is one of "those" classes that you take in High School or College: sleep through class, take the final, get the "A". Yet, I believe that Psychology (the study of behavior) should be a required class, more so than Geometry or Trigonometry. It could be a cornerstone of a program to teach kids how to live in a world of consumers by focusing on Marketing, Advertising, and human behavior. It could teach Statistics and the abuse thereof ("4 out of 5 dentists..."). And it could focus on critical thinking, how to separate the cow from the cow patties. It could touch upon Persuasion and propaganda, how words can sound so important in the mouths of politicians but really stand empty of substance.


If I taught the class (and I've been tempted but it's a money thing) I would gloss over much of the history but still emphasis the roots and ties of Psychology to Philosophy. I would teach the difference between Science and Junk Science and let no topic be sacred, let no student be unchallenged. The students would learn a lot about themselves, about their belief systems and how it affects their behavior.


It would be the most useful and dangerous "Required" class ever taught. Students sleep at their own risk. (sigh!)


10:53 AM

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