Why Warrior’s Machete?
Ockham’s Razor is a principle attributed to the 14th-century English logician and Franciscan friar William of Ockham. In Latin this principle is expressed various ways: “ex parsimoniae” (law of succinctness); “entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem” (entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity); “numquam ponenda est pluralitas sine necessitate” (never posit pluralities without necessity).
The term Razor refers to the act of “shaving away unnecessary assumptions” when explaining any phenomenon so to get at and then use the simplest explanation. All things being equal, the simplest explanation tends to be the best one, and also the one most likely to be true; one should embrace the less complicated explanation.
Taking mild (parsimonious?!) creative liberty here, the beliefs, inspiration, ideas, thoughts, critiques and opinions on this blog are delivered with the chunk-removing force of a Machete swung by a male who believes, to chop off the unnecessary and get the job done right, the swing must be carried out with a mighty follow-through.
My Creator endowed me with naturally high testosterone levels and a very low tolerance for hypocrites, liars, enablers, piecemeal practice of principle, emascualted males, political correctness, and any other kind of highfalutin, oppressive (Statist) caca that doesn’t work in the private backyard of my own individual life. I am a Being Created with the ability to judge, so I do. I am a male also inspired by men who have held greater ideals and have done much greater things than any of us have who are living today, most notably Classical Heroes and America’s Principled and Brilliant Founding Fathers.
Warrior’s Machete provides lean, muscular wisdom without fat or wiggle(room) and holds today’s intellectuals and their ideas to a times-past standard of responsibility, integrity and commonsense, and brave, bold, stout manliness.
(To know more about the human being behind this blog, the man named Warrior, you’ll have to go to Warrior Web, his web presence. The link is on the Main “Warrior’s Machete” page, on the right sidebar under “Notable Links.”)