Remarks by John Baez today suggest a flashback…
Sunday, July 9, 2023
Saturday, July 8, 2023
Dead on the Third of July
Update at 9:06 PM ET . . .
Windows lockscreen this evening —
Related material in this journal: Weaveworld.
Blacklist Quote from S10 E20, “Arthur Hudson”
"I am what I am. You made a devil's bargain.
Did you really expect me to stop being the devil?"
Read more at: https://tvshowtranscripts.ourboard.org/
viewtopic.php?f=194&t=64076
See as well yesterday's post CORE and Faustus in this journal.
Hat Tip to Hemingway
"Isn't it pretty to think so?"
— The Sun Also Rises
This post was suggested by the following passage of prose:
Friday, July 7, 2023
CORE
The "CORE" reference in the previous post yields, via a search . . .
Within this thesis there are 19 references to the name "Cullinane"
and to my own work, cited as . . .
Cullinane, Steven H., ‘The Diamond Theorem’ (1979)
<http://diamondtheorem.com>
[accessed 6 May 2019]
––– ‘Geometry of the I Ching’ (1989)
<http://finitegeometry.org/sc/64/iching.html>
[accessed 6 May 2019].
Corpus
A check of the Springer publication date —November 15, 2006 — of the
above 1981 conference proceedings yields, in this journal — Stone 588 :
Thursday, July 6, 2023
Pictures at 11
A search for material related to this citation yields the name
"Stephen Obelisk" in a short story from the same website.
In this website, a search for "Obelisk" yields . . .
Among fictional Stephens, I prefer Dedalus.
Wednesday, July 5, 2023
The Dial of Destiny
From the end of a story by Vladimir Nabokov in
The New Yorker of May 15, 1948:
"You have the incorrect number. I will
tell you what you are doing: you are
turning the letter O instead of the zero."
Pickman
The previous post featured Anya Taylor-Joy playing chess.
A search for the name "Pickman" in this journal yields a
more entertaining view of Taylor-Joy.
Tuesday, July 4, 2023
Dies Natalis
June 27, 2016, in YouTube and in life —
Today's date, July 4, was also, in 1826, the dies natalis of
former U.S. presidents Thomas Jefferson and John Adams.
Dark Star
Background from this morning's news:
Suggested by two June 13 deaths — those of
Cormac McCarthy (89) and Edward Fredkin (88) —
excerpts from this journal on the night of June 13-14:
We Hold . . .
See also Frindle at the author's
website and in this journal.
Monday, July 3, 2023
Latin Squares
This is the first colored version of
the Diamond Theory cover
that I have done since 1976.
Sunday, July 2, 2023
Meditation on a Song Lyric
" Video killed the radio star . . ."
This tune concludes "Take This Waltz,"
a 2011 film starring Michelle Williams.
Related material —
A New York Times obituary from this afternoon
and a video from the 2011 Williams film.
The Times report is of a "radio star" death on Tuesday, June 27.
Related philosophy from Sarah Silverman . . .
Bob Dylan — “You Don’t Need a Weatherman…”
Badlands Philosophy
This afternoon's Windows lockscreen is Badlands National Park —
From this morning's post, a phrase from Schopenhauer —
"Apparent Design in the Fate of the Individual."
An apparent design in the philosophy of Optimus Prime —
"Before time began, there was the Cube" —
Click the image for further remarks.
Thomas Mann of Zurich vs. Walter Tevis of Lexington
"Denn um zu wiederholen, was ich anfangs sagte:
in dem Geheimnis der Einheit von Ich und Welt,
Sein und Geschehen, in der Durchschauung des
scheinbar Objectiven und Akzidentellen als
Veranstaltung der Seele glaube ich den innersten Kern
der analytischen Lehre zu erkennen." (GW IX 488)
Thomas Mann died in Zurich on 12 Aug., 1955.
"The author left his works in his will
to the Thomas Mann archive at the ETH Zurich."
Related meditation from Lexington, Kentucky, on
the date of Mann's death —
Or not.
Related literature —
Saturday, July 1, 2023
Dates*
"On 14 November 2019 Polaris announced their second full length
titled The Death of Me , released on 21 February 2020 . . . ."
See also Log24 on the former and latter dates.
* See a check.
Mechanical Plaything (Hinged) vs. Conceptual Art (Unhinged)
"Infinity Cube" … hinged plaything, for sale —
"Eightfold Cube" … un hinged concept, not for sale—
See as well yesterday's Trickster Fuge ,
and a 1906 discussion of the eightfold cube:
Friday, June 30, 2023
Hey, Mister Tally-Man
Trickster Fuge (German for Joint)
Margaret Atwood on Lewis Hyde's "Trickster is among other things the gatekeeper who opens the door into the next world; those who mistake him for a psychopath never even know such a door exists." (159) What is "the next world"? It might be the Underworld…. The pleasures of fabulation, the charming and playful lie– this line of thought leads Hyde to the last link in his subtitle, the connection of the trickster to art. Hyde reminds us that the wall between the artist and that American favourite son, the con-artist, can be a thin one indeed; that craft and crafty rub shoulders; and that the words artifice, artifact, articulation and art all come from the same ancient root, a word meaning "to join," "to fit," and "to make." (254) If it’s a seamless whole you want, pray to Apollo, who sets the limits within which such a work can exist. Tricksters, however, stand where the door swings open on its hinges and the horizon expands: they operate where things are joined together, and thus can also come apart. |
"Drop me a line" — Request attributed to Emma Stone
Indiana Jones and S/Z
"Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
had its world premiere at Cannes
on May 18, 2023, and is scheduled to
be released in the United States on
June 30, 2023." — Data from Wikipedia
From this journal on May 18, 2023 —
In memory of Mr. Zell, some notes suggested by his initials . . .
S/Z in Wikipedia and . . .
Related amusements from the above publication date —
August 1, 2017 — "Biff's Pleasure Detailing."
Thursday, June 29, 2023
Die Kunst der Fuge
English translation of 'Fuge ' [ˈfuːɡə]
FEMININE NOUN Word forms: Fuge genitive, Fugen plural
Tomb Raider of Geometry
Wednesday, June 28, 2023
Pilgrimage Progress… Continues.
See also earlier Pilgrim posts.
“Fail Again. Fail Better.” — Samuel Beckett
Tuesday, June 27, 2023
Die-Hard Flack-Catcher
" 'We caught lots of flack from the die-hard bluegrass fans,'
Mr. Osborne said of the group’s sometimes fraught relationship
with bluegrass purists in a 2011 interview with the online publication
Mandolin Café." — New York Times report of a June 27 death
Perhaps the Times meant "flak" . . .
"Flak is a contraction of German Flugabwehrkanone …." — Wikipedia
Or perhaps the Times meant Roberta Flack . . . "Killing me softly…."
The Whitelaw Tune* Lingers On
A death from last Thursday reported today by
The New York Times suggests . . .
* See yesterday's post A Tune for Whitelaw.
The Representation of Minus One…
Continued from February 6, 2014.
This flashback to 2014 was prompted by the following search history —
Related logic —
Related material — "Boolean Functions" in this journal.
256 Shades
"Could you elaborate on the specificity of 'Blackness' here?"
— Dialogue about a 2022 book from Yale University Press.
Voilà —
256 Shades of Lincoln
Monday, June 26, 2023
Date Link
The YouTube upload date — Aug. 30, 2019 — of "Schism," by Tool,
suggests a review . . .
The Go Set link leads to Plan 9 material.
Party Lines
Jena Malone as the young Eleanor Arroway in "Contact" (1997) —
Jena Malone in "The Neon Demon" (2016) —
Jena Malone in "Lorelei" (2020) —
Lines from the above "Lorelei" scene —
Wayland — "You've been busy."
Dolores — "Yep."
Sunday, June 25, 2023
Silent Backup from Cold Mountain: Quilt Blocks
The New York Times reports this evening that McReynolds died
on Friday, June 23, 2023.
See also Cold Mountain in this journal.
From Cold Mountain, by Charles Frazier, 367-368:
"They consulted and twisted the pegs again
to make the dead man’s tuning…."
“… were it not that I have bad dreams” — Hamlet
High Concept: The Dreaming Gemstones
Saturday, June 24, 2023
For the ACME Corporation: “e” is for “einheit ”
Friday, June 23, 2023
Intersectionality Studies
"… the timeless / With time … ." — T. S. Eliot
A Little Drama
The broken pencil in a Dial illustration of June 20 —
"I could a tale unfold . . ." — Hamlet's father's ghost
"Thus the entire little drama, from crystallized carbon
and felled pine to this humble implement, to this
transparent thing, unfolds in a twinkle."
— Vladimir Nabokov, Transparent Things
"… a cardboard tube, more or less the same length as
the inner core of a toilet roll, but thicker. He frowned,
took the roll out, laid it on the desk and poked up it
with the butt end of a pencil. Something slid out.
It looked like a rolled-up black plastic dustbin liner;
but when he unfolded it, he recognised it as the funny
sheet thing he’d found in the strongroom and briefly
described as an Acme Portable Door, before losing
his nerve and changing it to something less facetious."
— Holt, Tom. The Portable Door . Orbit. Kindle Edition.
According to goodreads.com, the Holt book was
"first published March 6, 2003."
See also this journal on March 6, 2003, in a search for
Michelangelo Geometry.
Punchline of the above little drama —
"Try the other end of the pencil, Liz."
Ashes to Ashes, Dustbin to Dustbin
In memory of Broadway lyricist Sheldon Harnick,
who reportedly died today at 99:
Related legal notice from Princeton —
The above copyright notice is from The Symbolic Quest,
by one Edward C. Whitmont (birth name: Weissberg).
Thursday, June 22, 2023
Square Inch Lore
See a search in this journal
for the following image —
Dustbin Notes
Found today at Language Log:
Translated from the Russian —
Also from Language Log, an earlier use of the phrase —
F. C. Burnand's novel My Time and What I've Done with It , Chapter 27,
in Old and New, Volume 8, 1873:
It is thus that ignorant prejudices are fostered ;
and how few of us in afterlife have the time or the will
to sift the rubbish of the dust-bin of history
on the chance of discovering the diamond of truth.
Unfolded Drama
"I could a tale unfold . . ." — Hamlet's father's ghost
"Thus the entire little drama, from crystallized carbon
and felled pine to this humble implement, to this
transparent thing, unfolds in a twinkle."
— Vladimir Nabokov, Transparent Things
"… a cardboard tube, more or less the same length as
the inner core of a toilet roll, but thicker. He frowned,
took the roll out, laid it on the desk and poked up it
with the butt end of a pencil. Something slid out.
It looked like a rolled-up black plastic dustbin liner;
but when he unfolded it, he recognised it as the funny
sheet thing he’d found in the strongroom and briefly
described as an Acme Portable Door, before losing
his nerve and changing it to something less facetious."
— Holt, Tom. The Portable Door . Orbit. Kindle Edition.
According to goodreads.com, the Holt book was
"first published March 6, 2003."
Wednesday, June 21, 2023
Snark in the Park: Stock Car Number 34
Annals of Magical Thinking: The Rushmore Embedding
The Artist: Yuki Murayama
The June 14 book review from the previous post —
See the artist's page giving variations on the above image.
Tuesday, June 20, 2023
Emma Watson, Symmetry Surfer
See also . . . .
-
A June 14 review of
Psychonauts: Drugs and the Making of the Modern Mind
by Mike Jay. Yale University Press, 376 pages. April 18, 2023 - Psychonauts in this journal
- Symmetry Surfing in this journal
- Spider Tale posts in this journal . . .
… And of Evolution
(Continued from the previous post, Annals of Devolution)
The above seems an improved version of the
beach romp in the 2023 film of "The Portable Door."
Annals of Devolution
The War to End All Wars (2018)
|
Monday, June 19, 2023
New Career Paths
"Experience the magic of Mexico." — Delta vacations ad.
See also Midnight in the Garden (March 15, 2011)
and New Day Nina (September 22, 2011).
The Original Portable Door
"… a cardboard tube, more or less the same length as
the inner core of a toilet roll, but thicker. He frowned,
took the roll out, laid it on the desk and poked up it
with the butt end of a pencil. Something slid out.
It looked like a rolled-up black plastic dustbin liner;
but when he unfolded it, he recognised it as the funny
sheet thing he’d found in the strongroom and briefly
described as an Acme Portable Door, before losing
his nerve and changing it to something less facetious."
— Holt, Tom. The Portable Door . Orbit. Kindle Edition.
According to goodreads.com, the Holt book was
"first published March 6, 2003."
Compare and contrast the "portable door" as a literary device
with the "tesseract" in A Wrinkle in Time (1962).
See also this journal on March 6, 2003.
The Date
On finite geometries . . .
"Although many of these structures are studied for
their geometrical importance, they are also of great
interest in other, more applied domains of mathematics."
— Remark from the metadata of a mathematical article
dated September 22, 2021
More applied domains . . .
"Sex Show at a Brothel" — This journal on September 22, 2021.
A scene from the "Badass Song" film mentioned in that post —
Another cinematic towel scene —
Sunday, June 18, 2023
“Four Is a Door” — Mnemonic Rhyme*
Earlier posts have mentioned a British version of my work.
It currently appears among many other images at . . .
https://www.bsswebsite.me.uk/Puzzlewebsite/for-puzzlers.html —
Related cinema for Hogwarts fans —
* The late John Nash might prefer the version "For Isadore."
Saturday, June 17, 2023
Restless Dreams
Abigail Spencer in the "Timeless" Watergate episode
Less alone . . .
See also posts now tagged Crary Corner, and
The Nutshell Code
Maureen Dowd today in The New York Times on The Trump Papers —
"It bespeaks a frailty, a need to be bolstered by talismanic items."
[Link added.]
" During his presidency, The Times reported, 'his aides began to refer to
the boxes full of papers and odds and ends he carted around with him
almost everywhere as the "beautiful mind" material. It was a reference to
the title of a book and movie depicting the life of John F. Nash Jr., the
mathematician with schizophrenia played in the film by Russell Crowe,
who covered his office with newspaper clippings, believing they held
a Russian code he needed to crack.' "
Friday, June 16, 2023
Papers
"He earned a doctorate at Harvard, joined the RAND Corporation
and began studying game theory as applied to crisis situations
and nuclear warfare. In the 1960s, he conferred on Washington’s
responses to the Cuban missile crisis and North Vietnamese
attacks on American ships in the Gulf of Tonkin.
By 1964, Mr. Ellsberg was an adviser to Defense Secretary
Robert S. McNamara."
— Robert D. McFadden in The New York Times this afternoon.
For McNamara in this journal, see (for instance) Groundhog Day 2006.
Opening on Bloomsday (in LA and NY)*
Jigs* and Fixtures
Thursday, June 15, 2023
Study in Red and Grey*
For the blue-black frame, a hat tip to Willard Motley.
See also the above date — 6 Nov 2021 — in this journal.
* See as well a Log24 search for Red and Gray .
Stardust Memory
Michaelmas 2019
Transcribed from a PDF:
Received September 29, 2019, accepted October 15, 2019, Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/ACCESS.2019.2949310
A Method for Determining
ZIYU WANG1 , XIAO ZENG1 , JINZHAO WU2,3, AND
1Big Data Research Center, School of Computer Science
2Guangxi Key Laboratory of Hybrid Computation and
3School of Computer and Electronic Information,
Corresponding authors:
This work was supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation
ABSTRACT
INDEX TERMS Logic synthesis, Boolean functions, |
Meanwhile . . .
Wednesday, June 14, 2023
Cheesecake for Princeton
From the previous post . . .
A color analogy — The orange and black (Princeton colors) in the above
conference schedule suggest a recent screengeek image . . .
Related geek lore —
From Mysticism to Mathematics…
Continued from October 6, 2022 —
A paper from an August 2017 Melbourne conference
on artificial intelligence —
See as well a Log24 search for Boolean functions.
A check on the date of the above paper's presentation —
From this journal on that date —
Happy 10th birthday to the hashtag.
Tuesday, June 13, 2023
Pretty Horses
In memory of Cormac McCarthy, who reportedly
died today, here is a phrase by John Jeremiah Sullivan
in a NY Times review of McCarthy's 2022 novel
The Passenger —
"a reminder (just in time) of the elegance and force
of good McCarthy."
Sullivan also writes well. For instance, see the "pretty horses"
of this post's title.
Old Man Gone
Inquisitive Minds Want to Know
"Does the expression 'generative pre-trained transformer'
mean anything to you?"
Monday, June 12, 2023
Plot Logic
Follow the Writer Who Follows a Dream
Sunday, June 11, 2023
Interrobang for Lucinda
"If it’s possible to be two things at once,
I was both pathologically insecure and
intoxicated by the power that my newly
discovered desirability to men seemed
to have conferred on me."
Possible ‽
The Dreaming*
Ask Mark Wahlberg.
* See as well the September 1982 Kate Bush album.
Addendum of 10:50 AM June 11 —
My own concerns in September 1982 were
rather different —
Saturday, June 10, 2023
Tiling Note
A review by Robert Ghrist of a paper on aperiodic
Wang tilings suggests a search in this journal for Wang tiles.
A resulting image seems appropriate for today's posts,
which include a reference to a renowned Prada-wearer.
"She's like the wind." — Song lyric. See as well Hexagram 57.
News for Prescott Street
See also Prescott Street in this journal.
Green Mountain, Red Mountain
Tom Wolfe on art theorists in The Painted Word (1975) :
"It is important to repeat that Greenberg and Rosenberg
did not create their theories in a vacuum or simply turn up
with them one day like tablets brought down from atop
Green Mountain or Red Mountain (as B. H. Friedman once
called the two men). As tout le monde understood, they
were not only theories but … hot news,
straight from the studios, from the scene."
Anthony Lane in The New Yorker on June 2, 2023 —
"The album cover was a minor but deliriously popular art form
that was limited not just by shape—a neat fit, incidentally, for
the square format favored by many modish photographers of
the sixties—but also by the prospect of its own inevitable death.
Technology gave, and technology hath taken away."
See as well a mountain along with red and green album covers
in this journal on June 8.
Some will prefer the green and red crystal from Melencolia I
(adapted from the uncolored original) on the cover of the
1948 edition of Doctor Faustus.
Green, Orange, Black
The colors surrounding Watson's body in the above
"bandeau" photo suggest a review. A search in this journal
for Green+Orange+Black yields . . .
In the above image, the "hard core of objectivity" is represented
by the green-and-white eightfold cube. The orange and black are,
of course, the Princeton colors.
Friday, June 9, 2023
Frame Tale …
"The quad gospellers may own the targum
but any of the Zingari shoolerim may pick a peck
of kindlings yet from the sack of auld hensyne."
Thursday, June 8, 2023
“On the Route” Continues: Newman Sauce
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/08/movies/
barry-newman-dead.html
An Actor Prepares . . .
See the previous post.
See also the film "Vanishing Point" discussed
in the above New York Times obituary.
Barry Newman's dies natalis is reportedly May 11.
See "On the Route" from that date in this journal.
Interpellation by Media:
Report from Clouded Mountain
Report from Clouded Mountain
Arizona Highways: “The Southwest Furthers”
An Artist’s Legacy
A check of today's New Yorker penbots yields
an entertaining piece on pop culture by Sarah Larson:
Perhaps, in death's dream kingdom, there is some guidance from
the illustrator who reportedly did the book cover in the previous post —
one Hector Garrido.
"Operation Childlike Innocence, Phase One."
— Sarah Larson, quoted here on Sept. 5, 2015.
Garrido's dies natalis was reportedly 19 April, 2020.
Synchronology check — Log24 search: "Wittgenstein Easter."
Wednesday, June 7, 2023
Links for Wednesday (and Nevermore Academy)
1. A New York Times obituary from today
2. The name Caputo in this journal
3. Death and Venice: The Flyin' Lion
Exploring Color Space . . . Continues.
Tuesday, June 6, 2023
The Usual Suspects
For further details, see a Log24 post from October 2002 and . . .
See as well today's previous post.
Monday, June 5, 2023
Coordination: The View from Academia
More-recent reading on different modalities:
"Microsoft believes a multimodal approach
paves the way for human-level AI."
As for "pattern simultaneity in the real world," note the March 1 date
of the above Ars Technica article, and some remarks here on March 1.
Annals of Set Design
Related dramatic dialogue from FUBAR —
Hero — I guess I'll take the pill, and get it over with. (Dramatic music playing.)
Villain — This will be fun. (Music intensifies.) Cheers … Nothing's happening.
Hero — Come to think of it, I might have taken the antidote.
Read more at: https://tvshowtranscripts.ourboard.org/… .
Related synchronology check —
Vienna Requiem
"You put the lime in the coconut . . ."
Art is magic delivered from
the lie of being truth.
— Theodor Adorno, Minima moralia,
London, New Left Books, 1974, p. 222
(First published in German in 1951.)
The director, Carol Reed, makes…
impeccable use of the beauty of black….
— V. B. Daniel on The Third Man
I see your ironical smile.
— Hans Reichenbach
Adorno, The Third Man, and Reichenbach
are illustrated below (l. to r.) above the names of
cities with which they are associated.
Sunday, June 4, 2023
The Galois Core
“Design is how it works.” — Steve Jobs
Saturday, June 3, 2023
Space Drama
"It seems fitting that a handsome, professional and future-minded
space drama in fine color, like 'Marooned,' should open a new
jewel box of a theater, the Ziegfeld."
— Howard Thompson in The New York Times , Dec. 19, 1969
A related film tells of a real-life April 1970 sequel
to the 1969 film "Marooned."
Then there is my own "jewel box" picture with three horses . . .