The “Side-Principal” Rule And Unrestricted Warfare In Chinese Military Doctrine

china2

In 1999, two colonels in the Chinese Army, Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui, published a treatise that would heavily influence Chinese military planning for the following decades.  The book was called Unrestricted Warfare.  Its central theses were these:

Continue reading

“I’m Facing A Crisis Of Doubt” (Podcast)

 

A reader writes that he is beginning to doubt some of the tenets of the religion he grew up with. He is dealing with doubt, and is not sure how to handle it.  He wonders of masculist doctrines can serve as a substitute for religion.

Continue reading

Blaise Pascal On The Universe And Man

pas

Some statements of philosophers are so transcendent, and so soaring in imaginative power, that they require little or no comment.  I found one such passage today in a book that in recent years has come to be one of my favorites:  Pascal’s Pensées.  I love Pascal because I can open his book at random, any time I feel the need, and feel his spiritual fingers gripping my throat with every sentence.  He is not only a philosopher, but a saint.

Continue reading

Petrarch Reflects On Ignorance And Happiness

ignorance1

The great humanist Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch) had opportunity to reflect on the fact that the more he gained in knowledge and experience, the less and less certain he became of his own judgments.  These thoughts were recorded in an essay called On His Own Ignorance And That Of Many Others (De sui ipsius et multorum ignorantia).  Some of these observations are incredibly frank.

Continue reading

Jan Scruggs And The Vietnam Veterans’ Memorial

I was recently watching the film Maya Lin:  A Strong Clear Vision.  It is a 1994 documentary about the architectural work of Maya Lin, the designer of the Vietnam Veterans’ Memorial on the Mall in Washington D.C.  One of the key figures interviewed in the film was an honest-faced, frank man named Jan Scruggs.

Continue reading

The Need For A Fighting Ideology

fight3

There is a scene at the end of the film Apocalypse Now where Colonel Kurtz delivers a monologue on the ruthless tactics of the Viet Cong guerrillas.  He relates how the Viet Cong had come and “hacked off” the arms of child villagers that the Americans had inoculated as part of an effort to win their hearts and minds.

Continue reading

A Tasmanian Travel Experience (Podcast)

 

I interview Ace Johnson, the co-founder of the knife manufacturing company Delta2Alpha, about his recent extended trip to Tasmania. Great experiences and adventure…with a 18 mile march to the airport thrown in for good measure.

Continue reading

Xenophon On Cyrus’s Leadership Qualities

lead2

Xenophon’s Anabasis is one of the primary classics of ancient Greek literature.  For students of ancient Greek, it has served much the same function as has Caesar’s De Bello Gallico has for Latin; that is, it has been used as a foundational text in the study of the language.

Continue reading

“I Don’t Feel Challenged By My Job” (Podcast)

 

I comment on an article written by a junior officer who doesn’t feel challenged by his job and is disillusioned with it.  This is the article I’m referring to:

We’re Getting Out Of The Marines

I respond with some thoughts of my own.

Continue reading

John Locke’s Theory On The Education Of The Young

dorks

In my Thirty-Seven, I wrote at length (Ch. 7, “A Program of Education”) on the educational views of the Renaissance humanist Paolo Vergerio.  His ideas stressed the importance of character and discipline as the foundations and prerequisites for intellectual study; not to master one’s desires, he knew, was fatal to any meaningful progress in education.

Continue reading