Undergraduate /
Challenging the limits of my intelligence and responsibility - Philosophical Warrior [29]
Hello fellow college bounders! This is my essay for the common application. Please try to assess it on all relevant levels. The prompt reads as follows: "Please provide a statement (250 words minimum) that addresses your reasons for transferring and the objectives you hope to achieve."
Let me know if it is to melodramatic, has problems with grammar or flow, or even if it sounds too militaristic because I am not trying to pursue a career in the military. Thanks alot. (Please be brutal!)
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The career path I have chosen for my life will challenge the limits of my intelligence and responsibility. Such challenges will be tests of my knowledge and experience for which I will need to be prepared through extensive education. With the degree I will earn through transferring I will become more powerful and efficient in my ability to make quick and informed decisions on which the safety of our nation may depend. By continuing my education I hope to fight not necessarily our enemies, but rather to make myself a more effective agent of peace, diplomacy, and enlightenment in the United States' dealings with foreign powers.
My journey began as I shuffled through a group of students down an old and uneven cobble stone street. As I walked I could hear the passer-bys speaking softly, much softer than my American companions, in languages that I did not understand. I was in the streets of Cesky Krumlov in the Czech Republic on tour with my high school choir group. These sounds and images sparked a profound feeling of the great history that this place must have seen. A history that was never taught to us in school but that still had the power to captivate. I gazed up at the tall buildings that leaned and loomed over us to the balcony of an old restaurant where a man sat surveying the view. I wondered what he was taught in school and what his own life had taught him about this part of the world. I knew that one day when this was all over I would have to return to this place. What I did not know was that when I did it would not be as a tourist, but as someone who could understand the whispers that I heard on the streets and what those people saw in the cities that they lived in. I would have to dedicate my life to understanding this and many other cultures and the roles those cultures play in the modern world. I would have to major in International Relations.
While Europe gave me the hunger and passion for knowledge of different worlds, it was only my life's study of philosophy that gave me the direction in which to steer that passion. One day my philosophy professor was lecturing on Plato's Republic, comparing the different tiers of society to those of a farmland with ordinary citizens as the sheep, the government as the shepherd, and the wolves as the usurpers of the farm. The sheepdogs were those who used their knowledge of the wolves to defend the sheep and protect the fruits of the farm. It was then that I knew that I wanted to be a sheepdog. I wanted to learn the ways of the different cultures of the world and how they interact with one another to work towards conflict resolution without war. The conflicts of today's nations are fundamentally conflicts of different philosophies and my training with these philosophies would allow me to see both sides to any conflict and to apply that talent to resolve our conflicts with the wolves. This is the way of the modern warrior. Given that there are many different kinds of warriors in today's world (some wear uniforms and carry weapons and some go unnoticed while fighting with information and influence) they all share the mindset of the sheepdog. In his book entitled On Combat: The Psychology and Physiology of Deadly Conflict in War and in Peace, Lt. Col. Dave Grossman wrote, "After the attacks on September 11, 2001, most of the sheep, that is, most citizens in America said, "Thank God I wasn't on one of those planes." The sheepdogs, the warriors, said, "Dear God, I wish I could have been on one of those planes. Maybe I could have made a difference."
Mistakes that cost lives are made in ignorance and brashness. Every bit of education I gain lowers the risk of such mistakes being made. I hope that I never stop being educated because there are too many perspectives that the world has to offer for me to ever consider myself finished. However, there is only so far I can go in my current situation. By transferring I hope to open the door for newer and more powerful ideas to change and improve my own personal philosophy and my capacity to understand the nuances in culture of those nations the United States must deal with.