News:

Why yes, yes it is still online!
-Balaso

sK's RvS Server

Started by SK_CROW, February 18, 2005, 02:34:24 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

Torch

yes it is and thanks to sassy that got a whole lot of crap done and its klicking ass...was in there for a few hours playing with some other clans...

woot!!!

btw...i booted myself.. :( :lol:  

redneck

Well will be there fri night to own sassy's ass again.....lol. Good job Sassy keep it up.
Been looking forever and found.............

ROC_Medic

WOOT, I made it!  No idea what the problem was, but seems to work today.  Always a pleasure to help.  Kudos to Sassy, Crow et al for all their hard work.  Looking foward to many ggz :D  

Torch

Thanks to you too Medic, I know working with sassy aint a piece of cake!!!:D

redneck

Ya got that right torch. Takes a special or crazy person to put up with her.
Been looking forever and found.............

Sassy

Hey now damnit....I'm not that bad!!!!  :rolleyes:  

E.J.FUDD

*cough*.......


id would say something here but for the propensity of violence ring high and true...

*cough*
yea though i walk through the valley of death i shall fear no evil for i tread upon the bones of its forefathers

sK_Cookie

all I have to say is wu wei

SK_CROW

Wu Wei?

These two words, which taken literally mean "not doing," form a distinctive term in Taoist philosophy. It should be stated, at once, that the literal meaning is not the true meaning. This is clearly stated in the 19th essay. The writer of that essay says, "Some maintain that the person who acts in the spirit of wu wei is one who spends his time in serenity and meditation, doing nothing: he will not come when called nor be driven by any force. I never heard such an explanation from any sage." And he goes on to say that the men who act in the wu wei method are the most laborious men in the world. They are hard workers in every field.

  I think it also means more than the mere influence of personality. The late Dr. Edkins once wrote, "The principle of wu wei, non-action, is also Confucian. Confucius says that Shun ruled the empire by non-action. By this he meant that people obeyed him, from admiration of his virtue." This is quite true; but the influence of personality or a good life is not quite the same as wu wei. It is said that Lord Grey dominated the House of Commons. He had but to rise to his feet in order to command rapt attention. Yet he was not a great speaker and did not often speak. And Lord Northcliffe said of Charles Hind: "When he spoke, everybody listened; but to Charles nothing seemed to matter. He had an effortless superiority." Professor Driesch calls attention to what M. Baudouin calls "the law of reversed effort." I resolve to make a suggestion, and herein lies the volition. For the rest, the formula is now: "It will happen, and it does happen." In effect, "I do nothing; but the thing is done. That is something like the activity of inaction."  The language is similar to the Taoist; yet there is no resemblance in the doctrine. Taoism is not a mere matter of willing. It is a principle of life.


  The difficulty is that wu is always looked upon as a negative and nothing else: Just only the opposite of yu, has or "is." This narrow definition forgets the possibility of language: and wu, the negative, may become a term of positive quality. The vast empty spaces of the universe are looked upon as purely negative quality, but they may become to be looked on from another point of view, as the immense abode of ether or some other fluid, and, thus, have a positive significance. From being looked on as a vast invisible space, containing nothing, it may be looked on as the great expanse full of vital fluid. So the vast empty spaces that were looked upon as the abode of the non-existent may come to be looked on as the source of all existence. The existent is begotten of the non-existent. So we have the statement "what is" comes from that "which is not"; "form" comes from the "formless": the "material" comes from the "immaterial". It is something in this way that we can find the true meaning of wu wei. It is not negative, but something positive.

  To go a step further, it is said, "Wu and tao are equally the mother of all things." Thus wu and tao are the same. So it may be said that wu wei, no action is tao wei, action by the spirit. It is in this sense that the phrase, wu wei erh wu pu wei, "there is no doing, but there is nothing undone" is to be understood. Of course, wu wei must be rendered by "spirit action," which makes the meaning full of force. Lao Tzû says: "Heaven and earth and all things were begotten of what is; and what is is begotten of wu, the non-existent, physically, i.e. tao, the spirit.

  A further help to the understanding of this much-misunderstood term may be had from the frequent references made to the simplicity of a pristine people, a people of an earlier age, an age that was free from the entanglements of a later civilization which had been corrupted by desire. This people is given as an example of a mode of life that was governed by the spontaneity of an uncorrupted nature. This people had no recognition of things, so as to desire p. xxxviii them. Did this mean that the sight of a pile of gold, for example, did not arouse the feelings of cupidity? or could it refer to a time of innocency,—a state of innocency before a fall? Sincerity was natural, without any affirmation in speech, a condition that Jesus tried to lay as a command on his followers. "Let your nay be nay," etc. But there happened to come a gradual deterioration of nature. Somehow this pristine people passed into the region of carnality and desire. The rise of desire was the beginning of ruin. Lao Tan tried to get men restored to the state of pristine nature. And most of his sententious sayings convey this meaning. Was it possible to recognise the existence of things without creating desire? In this case wu refers to the non-recognition of things and, therefore, has the negative sense. Things were looked on as non-existent. But the difficulty involved is great. It meant a people without increase of knowledge through travel, and without increase of learning and work on the field of experiment. This difficulty was felt and is shown in the 19th essay, the 8th Dissertation. Here the writer pleads for education and the advancement of knowledge. Possibly the difficulty was solved by turning this negativity of the absence of desire into a positivity of great value. This positivity is seen in their two superior men, the chen jen, true man, and the chih jen, the perfect man. And how did they attain to these positions of unworldliness and perfection of character, with desire suppressed or eliminated? They rose to this by identity with the tao. The secret lay not in perpetual struggle with a corrupt heart, but in the realisation of an identity with the Cosmic Spirit. Here, then, the Taoist idea has much in common with the Christian ideal of the Saint. Both are under the command of the inward spirit.

  It may now be possible to mention the last and final idea underlying the meaning of wu wei. Generally speaking it is that no dependence can be or should be placed in mere human strength. "Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord of hosts." The time-server and the person who seeks to get on by human skill: the opportunist who watches chances for gaining an advantage and pushing his way to the front: the clever demagogue who wins applause by insinuating speeches are all contemned and disesteemed by the Taoist. The intellect must be kept in abeyance and not allowed to get the mastery. It is to be supposed that the description given, often, of the Taoist sage comes from this conception. He is ashen grey in colour: he looks as though he were incompetent to deal with affairs: he appears as though not interested in any subject. We are to understand by these descriptions that the individual is not under the sway of the senses but is governed by the spirit.

If anyone gets that, let me know....lol. :blink:

redneck

Damn Crow i need some of your drugs or maybe just your free time lol
Been looking forever and found.............

E.J.FUDD

did some one say wu tang clan is here????



the wu of it...


the personal of will delegated to others will bring about the desired affect.
yea though i walk through the valley of death i shall fear no evil for i tread upon the bones of its forefathers

Torch

March 16, 2005, 12:51:40 PM #26 Last Edit: March 16, 2005, 12:52:20 PM by sK_Torch
Wu Wei is great for what I can take of it. Ive been preaching all my life that doing nothing rules and this proves it damnit!!
Naw, pretty deep stuff Crow. I love phylosophy and theory, takes me back to my college days.
But I had to read this a couple of times still left me thinking. :blink:


ps. what are the sources??? those quotations from other essays?

Sassy

We now have moded maps up and running on our server all the time. All of the INI files have them except the COOP.ini, I will have those up as soon as I can so they are on the server at all times.

I would like to thank Mav for helping me with the INI's and Fallen and PTY_Medic for helping me with finding the maps. Thanks guys!!  :D

If anyone else (whether your sK or not) knows of any maps of any game type (adver, coop, or pistols) let me know and we will check them out. You can even post the name of the map here or a link to where we can get it.

redneck

Great job Sassy will check it out tonite since we finally have High speed Wireless and maybe can play on 2 different servers without the damn 800 pings...lol so look out fallen time to own ya lol
Been looking forever and found.............

Fallen

Quote...lol so look out fallen time to own ya lol

that would be the day i would kill myself