According to Merriam-Webster, the word "resolution" has a number of different meanings:
First, "resolution" is a noun that is defined as "the act or process of resolving," as in "the act of analyzing a complex notion into simpler ones." The word "resolve" also means "the act of finding an answer or solution to a conflict or problem."
Besides that definition, Merriam-Webster says that "resolution" also denotes someone's "firmness of resolve," their "determination."
A third definition says that a "resolution" is "a formal expression of opinion, will, or intent voted by an official body or assembled group."And "resolution" can also mean "a personal expression of will or intent, especially in pursuit of a goal."
"Resolution" can mean "the point in a literary or dramatic work at which the main conflict is worked out," and the word, "resolution" may also denote "the subsidence of a pathological state (such as inflammation)."
Finally, "resolution" is defined as "a measure of the sharpness of an image." The image at the top of this blog posting, for example, is a very "low resolution" picture - and what is it actually a picture of?
Maybe that's a holiday display in some big city, as seen by someone with cataracts. Or, maybe that's a highway, and the person who is seeing that image is on the wrong side of the road, with the headlights bearing down and with no easy way to get over to the right, and to follow the taillights, instead of taking on the cars with the headlights coming right at the person who is trying to interpret that low resolution image.
Speaking of cataracts, I just had my annual eye checkup the other day, and maybe that's why I started thinking about the word "resolution." As the sharpness of my vision has declined (and the eye doctor confirmed that it has), I find that I don't see as clearly as I used to, or as I would like to. But how does that lack of resolution - my inability to see clearly - relate to my determination to do something, or to hold fast to my principles and to a decision I have made? Is that kind of "resolution" weakening, as well?
I would like to think not!
How the rather different definitions of "resolution" do interrelate seems worth thinking about, and I have ended up with an explanation that makes sense to me.
To the degree that a person can clearly see something, it's easier for that person to be "resolved," and to be determined to react in the way that she or he believes the situation demands. When things seem "fuzzy," it's hard to maintain one's "determination" to act in a particular way. Maybe you just don't know what's going on! If that's the way to are seeing it, that could certainly make you hesitate.
Given the glut of information that assaults us all, it is pretty easy to find oneself rather "fuzzy" about what's really happening, and what it all means. And when that's true, that means that our individual and collective "determination" to act in the way that we know, or believe, to be right may also waver. In fact, we can't really "resolve" what to do about something when we can't actually see what's there, or what's happening.
Is there is a lack of decisiveness or "determination" in our political actions today - a failure of our "resolution?" If so, that may well be associated with a lack of clarity about what we're facing, or what we see happening. We need to be "clear" about what's going on in the world, so we can continue to be "resolved," and to do what we think is right. One way to test our vision, to shake off uncertainty, is to consult with others, so we get clear, from hearing those different perspectives, what's actually coming at us.
Find some friends. Talk politics (in person, please). That may help improve one's focus and understanding, and, hence, one's determination - one's resolution!
Let's not wait until next January 1st to start working on that "resolution" problem.
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