Someone has said that we live in a finite world as humans with infinite wants. That presents a problem. The problem is further compounded when we realize that the wants we have can be broken down into smaller components, called needs. The prompt asks for a decision on the process of scarce resource allocation in “a hospital setting where there are limited resources available to treat patients who are seriously ill. There are short supplies of medicine, doctors, nurses, and very expensive, highly-sophisticated, diagnostic equipment.”
I do not think that there is a set-in-stone procedure that will work for this entire setting. I think each resource has to be dealt with individually and allocated accordingly. For example, I do not think you can spread the nurses and equipment over exactly identical areas because nurses are far more numerous. Therefore, the resources cannot be distributed by formulas because neither three patients to one resource nor two of resource A to one of resource B is a functional equation. There has to be another standard.
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Monday, October 22, 2012
The Fourth Commandment (Ethics of Leadership Reflective Paper)
I am a Christian. The word Christian derives from the Koine Greek word Χριστός (Christόs). Essentially, to be a Christian is to be a little Christ. Christ, when He descended to the earth as God Incarnate, fully God and yet inexplicably and simultaneously fully human, fulfilled all the biblical law as per Matthew 5:17, “Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them” (emphasis added). Now that the law has been fulfilled in Christ, the elect saints receive the benefits. Romans 8:1-4 says, “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. For the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death. For God has done what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do. By sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, he condemned sin in the flesh, in order that the righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not according to the flesh but according to the Spirit” (emphasis added). Although Christ has fulfilled the law and I am no longer condemned because I cannot, I have been regenerated and made alive by the power of the Holy Spirit and so now, it is my desire, in addition to my duty, to obey God’s moral law.
The fourth moral law is to honor the Sabbath day (now Sunday) and keep it holy by refraining from common labor on that day. Because I am under obligation to keep the God’s law, I am under obligation to refrain from labor on Sundays. Every Sunday I have to make a decision about what I am going to do with my time. Because, as a Christian, I hold the commandment of God supreme over any instruction of man, I choose to neither work nor study on the Lord’s day. I have six other days of the week to pour into academia, and it is enough. I also have those same six days to arrange a work schedule within; that is enough. I am convinced of this truth to the point that I do not fear to lose my job over it. Because I hold the moral law of God to be the highest standard in my life and the measurement by which I distinguish right from wrong, every week I choose to keep every Sunday holy to my God. I do so by refusing to allow common weekly labor to encroach on the one day each week I can devote to delighting in Him through worship, in Scripture (preached, taught, read, and studied), prayer, singing, fellowship, and the ordinances (baptism and communion).
The fourth moral law is to honor the Sabbath day (now Sunday) and keep it holy by refraining from common labor on that day. Because I am under obligation to keep the God’s law, I am under obligation to refrain from labor on Sundays. Every Sunday I have to make a decision about what I am going to do with my time. Because, as a Christian, I hold the commandment of God supreme over any instruction of man, I choose to neither work nor study on the Lord’s day. I have six other days of the week to pour into academia, and it is enough. I also have those same six days to arrange a work schedule within; that is enough. I am convinced of this truth to the point that I do not fear to lose my job over it. Because I hold the moral law of God to be the highest standard in my life and the measurement by which I distinguish right from wrong, every week I choose to keep every Sunday holy to my God. I do so by refusing to allow common weekly labor to encroach on the one day each week I can devote to delighting in Him through worship, in Scripture (preached, taught, read, and studied), prayer, singing, fellowship, and the ordinances (baptism and communion).
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Pastor (Paper #3, ENGL 1101)
What Makes A Pastor?
The pastor is a man who prizes his relationship with the Lord before and above all else. Victor Harris, assistant professor and extension specialist in the Department of Family, Youth and Community Sciences at the University of Florida, states, “Effective communication is critical to successful relationships.” It is imperative that the pastor lead his congregation by modeling for them a worthy example of dedication to communion with God through consistent prayer and Scripture reading. Pastor Tim McGehee has said, “The best kinds of pastors are those who lead by example.” Because his relationship with the Lord sets the tone for his congregation, a true pastor must live as a pastor by growing in his knowledge of God and not merely preach as a pastor.
Homeschoolers (Paper #2, ENGL 1101)
Dear Homeschoolers,
Congratulations on your acceptance to Middle Georgia State College! Is it not an amazing feeling finally to be finished with the admissions process? My name is Josiah Chin-A-Young, and I am writing this as a freshman in my first semester English Composition I class. I have not been at MGSC for very long, but I have been busy. Life has been crazy, especially during the first few weeks of school. Everything was so new and unfamiliar. I would like to explain several things I have found that might be a help toward finding the way in college. Let us look at the Academic Resource Center, note-taking skills, Club Rush and intramural sports, and the Counseling Center.
The Academic Resource Center is a fantastic service available to students at Middle Georgia State College. Amy Carter, our Student Life Program Coordinator, recommended the ARC as “the best place to start” and commented, “Those people know what they are talking about.” Group study rooms, provided by the ARC, are a great way for homeschooled students to adjust to the collaborative college community. “The rooms all have whiteboards and some have computer terminals for group work. The rooms are available on a first-come, first-served basis for study groups of two or more” (MSC “ARC Services”). The ARC also provides students with peer tutors who can work with them one-on-one in a wide variety of subject areas including, but not limited to, Math, English, History, Economics, Communication, and Public Service (MSC “ARC Staff”).
Congratulations on your acceptance to Middle Georgia State College! Is it not an amazing feeling finally to be finished with the admissions process? My name is Josiah Chin-A-Young, and I am writing this as a freshman in my first semester English Composition I class. I have not been at MGSC for very long, but I have been busy. Life has been crazy, especially during the first few weeks of school. Everything was so new and unfamiliar. I would like to explain several things I have found that might be a help toward finding the way in college. Let us look at the Academic Resource Center, note-taking skills, Club Rush and intramural sports, and the Counseling Center.
The Academic Resource Center is a fantastic service available to students at Middle Georgia State College. Amy Carter, our Student Life Program Coordinator, recommended the ARC as “the best place to start” and commented, “Those people know what they are talking about.” Group study rooms, provided by the ARC, are a great way for homeschooled students to adjust to the collaborative college community. “The rooms all have whiteboards and some have computer terminals for group work. The rooms are available on a first-come, first-served basis for study groups of two or more” (MSC “ARC Services”). The ARC also provides students with peer tutors who can work with them one-on-one in a wide variety of subject areas including, but not limited to, Math, English, History, Economics, Communication, and Public Service (MSC “ARC Staff”).
Monday, October 1, 2012
Conflict Over Conflict (Ethics of Leadership Reflective Paper)
This past Friday evening, I went over to a friend’s house to play a group board game, Settlers of Catan. After playing the game, most of the people packed up and left. I, however, stayed after for several hours and talked with the hosting couple, ... and .... Over the course of the conversation, we discussed relationships extensively. I made the comment that it is not possible to have a deep, healthy relationship without conflict. ... disagreed, saying that his parents never had any conflicts in all the time he was at home.
After a couple shots back and forth about the conflicting views, we realized that we were defining the term conflict differently. I meant conflict to have a general definition, meaning a simple difference of opinions, no matter how small. Any discrepancy between perspectives equated to a conflict; a conflict was just the area in which A did not exactly match B. ...'s premise for disagreement, on the other hand, was an assumption that conflict only meant a resolute decision not to acquiesce to the wishes, intents, or opinions of another: a stubbornness that would strain, or perhaps debilitate, the relationship.
After a couple shots back and forth about the conflicting views, we realized that we were defining the term conflict differently. I meant conflict to have a general definition, meaning a simple difference of opinions, no matter how small. Any discrepancy between perspectives equated to a conflict; a conflict was just the area in which A did not exactly match B. ...'s premise for disagreement, on the other hand, was an assumption that conflict only meant a resolute decision not to acquiesce to the wishes, intents, or opinions of another: a stubbornness that would strain, or perhaps debilitate, the relationship.
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