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Archive for March, 2009

Sudoku Knife-fighting

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

Some of you may have heard of the “increasingly popular” mixed sport of Chessboxing. This typically involves two contestants alternating between rounds of chess and boxing, supposedly requiring both the mental skills to play chess and the physical skills to box.

I contend that this sport is not nearly interesting enough, on the following points:

  • Chess may be mentally taxing. However it is not as mentally taxing as many other tasks. If the point of having chess in chessboxing is to demonstrate mental prowess, then you could do a lot better.
  • Boxing is a rather restrictive physical contact sport when compared to many other more brutal sports such as Tae Kwan Do. If the point of having boxing in chessboxing is for spectator appreciation, you could be a lot more bloody.
  • The combination of chess and boxing does not really highlight the true appeal of this type of sport mixing. For this we must go to extremes.

Sudoku is a numbers puzzle in which numbers 1-9 are laid out on a 9×9 grid such that any sum of any row, column, or one of the 9 component 3×3 grid squares sum to 45, with each number used once in its row, column, or component squares. The puzzle starts out lacking the majority of the numbers, with a starting set of numbers that one must, through logical deduction, reason to a complete puzzle. This, much like crosswords, is a highly mentally taxing task with the advantage of having few rules that are easily and universally understood across languages. Unlike chess, there is no historical bias with arbitrary point values nor openings to memorize. It is a standalone abstract piece of cognitive stress test.

Combine this with the bloody possibilities of knife-fighting, and you’ve got one hell of a sport.

A game would run as follows. Two opponents start out each with an identical new sudoku. There are two knives available. At the start of the round, each participant must complete the sudoku as quickly as possible. Once complete, the sudoku puzzle is checked for correctness. If it is verified to be correct, that participant is allowed to wield a knife for 20 seconds, during which he or she may attempt to inflict as much physical harm as possible in order to prevent the opponent from completing his/her own sudoku. However, the opponent is allowed to dodge while trying to complete the sudoku. Once the 20 seconds is over, the participant is given a new sudoku puzzle to solve, and cannot wield the knife until it is solved.

This places a higher pressure to perform a mentally challenging task correctly and quickly for fear of massive exsanguination at the hand of the opponent. Meanwhile, it also encourages strategic play, as being the first to wield a knife may not be the best course of action. A participant may withold from submitting a completed sudoku until the opponent has done so, dodge the opponent for a duration of time, submit the sudoku, and gain access to the knife after the opponent has lost his and is forced to contend with a new sudoku.

In addition, the loss of fingers can significantly impare the ability to physically complete a sudoku.

The Creed

Friday, March 13th, 2009

Here is an example of the Aintaertican creed in action.

Every Friday, I visit a group of friends in Long Island. As habit, I almost always bring with me a dozen Krispy Kreme donuts for them. As they eat them, I mock them on their gluttony. Then I decry that I have been hungry since before I arrived and demand to go out to dinner forthwith.

These kinds of things occur often in my life.

Saga of Henry – 3

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

The fear left Henry. Or at least, it stepped out for some fresh air while Curiosity looked around, saw no one around, and made itself comfortable. And this curiosity was leading Henry in the direction that the shadow went. At first, he stretched out. Then, he hunched back. And with each stretch and hunch, he was increasingly closer yet infinitely far from the shadow. He sniffed around a mushroom-laden tree trunk where the shadow had been, inquired at the darkness hovering above the quiltwork of leaves, twisted his ears hither and thither trying to net the elusive moving shadow.

Though he was often plagued by the question of why, he did not feel that chasing the shadow. As if in his entire life, chasing this shadow was the only natural thing for an unnatural talent. And so he ran harder and harder, hopping over gnarled branches strewn about the earth, darting through yawning bushes drowsily awakening to Spring, flitting as the shadow had flit, high and low.

And the shadow never wavered. Almost as if it were meant for Henry, it moved to the left when he turned to the left, skirted right when he had to turn for an elder tree. And the two, locked in a dance of motion, moved through the forest, through the night.

But the night was roughly pushed aside as Henry’s pattering against the grass halted. Several things happened that confused him. First, the shadow he had been dancing with suddenly melted away into daylight, yet night had only begun. Second, the springy grass became as rock. Lastly, as he took his arms off the rough black rockface, the ominous buzz of approach enveloped him.

And still he stood as he understood the oncoming eternal sunshine glowing brighter, and felt the weight of his question growing lighter. Then, with a screech, all plunged into darkness.

The Story of Our Generation

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

“Well crap, time to call the plumber” would have been the reaction of the past generation to a clogged toilet. But not for ours.

I was fortunate enough in my youth to have encountered many a toilets to have learned not only to plunge a toilet, but snake one as well. I was with the silent masses who cried against the government regulation to reduce the volume of water per flush in toilets. I had seen my share of rank and foul porcelain fixtures. But not many of my generation has shared my fortune.

Sometime during the cold months of New York when Darkness had majority vote over Light, a friend visited me. During the visit, my guest’s bowel movements had the unfortunate effect of ceasing the water flow in my humble latrine. This being rather soon after I moved into a new apartment, I hadn’t had the chance to procure the essential tools to rectify the situation. Thinking nothing of it, I left for work. As we met later in the day, my friend glowed with pride over having purchased a plunger for me and unclogged the toilet without my aid. I thought the pride was mayhaps exaggerated, but asked nonetheless how the task was accomplished.

“I looked it up on wikiHow first.”

Lo, the story of our generation.

Postscript – After the visit, I had recounted the story to another cohort of mine, however the conversation soon devolved into a comparison of how snaking a toilet might be similar in method to performing an abortion. Verily, the story of our generation.

Portrait of a Philospher as a Young Man

Monday, March 9th, 2009

From the final paper for the best Psychology class I had:

“Physical reality is nothing but an illusion, a hologram of the information that flows to us…” -Miho Iwakura

“Don’t worry, I’m still me.”
“Sometimes I wonder.”
-Lain & Yasuo Iwakura, Serial Experiments Lain

He stood there for a long time, alone and gazing down into the rising sound of rushing water. Fine droplets drizzled and drenched him, pelting weakly against his hood and slowly seeping in. Cars passed by, oblivious to his existence, illuminating him briefly before continuing along the lifestream of the city. He was lost by all meanings of the word. He had lost himself in the city, wandering dark alleys after bright boulevards till he came upon this bridge. In the middle of the bridge a light had gone out, providing the spot of darkness he thought was poetically apt. He had lost his this- and other-worldly possessions; most imporantly, he had lost himself. Where he was within that which he called himself he was not sure. He wasn’t even sure there was a self at all. Solitude he sought, and there he found it, there in an aphotic forgotten recess of the labyrinth of human complication. Rivulets of time trickled past him as he journeyed into what laid beyond, before, then back to the present.

He tried to focus on the darkness below, but there came only a mockery of absence. Every other way he looked, there was the city all about him. It must feel like something to be the city, he thought. After all, the city has similar elements to his own body. A decision making center sits centered on the city hall, shining in the dark as though it defied all darkness’s attempts to veil it. Execution of decisions sprawled throughout the city’s many veins and arteries of streets. The corporeal components of the organism known as a city are there, but where do you find the City? Try as he would, he could not think where the City was. He sought the answer by looking inside himself, but remembered he couldn’t find where he was either. Traversing all the neural pathways of his brain, he could almost sense his passage, but before he knew it, he had exited the brain and sped down his spine and out into his leg, shifting his stance.

Thinking of his passage through his brain, he could not help but remember the Buddhist story of Nagasena and King Milinda’s chariot. Nagasena, the Buddhist sage, questioned the King about what the chariot is. The chariot is not just the parts of the chariot, nor is it the arrangement of the parts. Even though the chariot was perfectly physical, what was lacking from it was the association of the physical components to the concept of the chariot itself. The self, Nagasena said, was like the chariot. Nagasena, he thought, lacked explanations. He climbed on the railing, sitting and quietly thinking to himself: the self is like the chariot? But how even then? The chariot is the same chariot second after second. But I, I am not the same self one moment to the next. My thoughts are different therefore my state must be different. I must exist as more than just relationships to my parts, since those relationships change, yet the self that I refer to remains the same.

Descartes was sure of his own existence since that was the only thing he could not doubt. Yet the senses are the only way through which I can confirm my relationship with the world and even with myself; he climbed down from the railing, now leaning over the darkness below; so if my senses could be fooled, so then could my sense of relation to myself. Then the “I” that I know, could it be other than that which I refer to when I say “I”?

If the self arises out of the relationship between the mind and the other things that the self consists of, then the self must contain more than just the corporeal body; The self must include the links between the concepts I have and the things they refer to. Then my memories of my parents, my home, the entire world, he thought, must be a part of me, for I hold them in my mind. If they are indeed a part of me, as they must for my self to make sense, then they are not real! What was real was outside his mind, and he felt easily detached, standing on a bridge in his mind. “It cannot be real,” he repeated to himself. He gripped the railing harder, till his knuckles turned white. But he was at a loss as to how he could ever reconcile the two thoughts. On the one hand, he needed to exist; on the other, the thought that his failing studies, the endless self-blame, and all that was wrong was naught but a flit of his imagination was supremely comforting. How odd it is, he wondered, that even in his existential quest, there came to be a choice between the world and I. Either there is an I created from the experiences and relationships with the world within me, or there is no I in the world without.

He blinked.

He thought about it some more and found that it made no sense. How can there be a real self if it is formed from relationships to the unreal world within him? The ghastly realization that the comfort he found also meant that he himself did not really exist surprised him. He tried to clench the railing even harder to reassure himself, but found it had gone. There was nothing he could grasp onto as the world without fell away from him. He was sickened by the feeling and tried to clench onto something, anything. But he had nothing real to stand on. Inevitably, he was dragged in by the necessities of cause and effect toward the blankness down below, an absence of the city, of the world, of himself. Invariably, he was headed toward a failure of existence. So be it, he thought. The world ends as an exercise in nihilism. Something nagged at him the entire distance as he fell into nothingness: if he was not real, what was doing the thinking then? The thought, like the noise of rushing water, grew and encompassed all of his being until all that he could see was the glaring question, if he was not real, how could there be consciousness? The noise grew ever louder until the deafening roar of his existence woke him to hear the sound of the Buddha laughing. And for an instant, he saw, or rather, felt his very existence as a self. All the billions of dimensions of himness surrounded him. He was not simply the relationship of him to everything else in the world; he was him, his relationships, and the world. Without context, he was meaningless. Yet without him, context was unreal. King Milinda’s chariot had to be more than the parts and relationships of the chariot; it must have a world in which to behave as a chariot. He was the world with him in it, and there couldn’t have been anything that wasn’t himself. In absolute solidarity he found infinite intimacy. In that instant, he glimpsed the Buddha, smiled, and reached Nirvana.