"This is quite a pivotal artwork for me . . . ."
"I heard the mission bell" — Eagles lyric
"This is quite a pivotal artwork for me . . . ."
"I heard the mission bell" — Eagles lyric
"This form was created inside of Fable Tree Bookshop."
Personally, I like the space between and Napoleon's "little black forest."
260422-Beach-rite-video.jpg
Scholium for Katherine Neville . . .

|
Tonight’s site music is for Stephen Dedalus
|

Related material . . .
260421-Mystery-shape-shopping.jpg

260421-Miapensa-studio-work-assuming-the-lotus-position-metadata.jpg
… and for White Lotus fans … "Meditate in my direction" —

* Star of "The Accountant" and "Hypnotic" . . .
** Vide other posts so tagged . . .
A midrash for Damon . . .

Mapping the Infinite: A Visual Guide
|
|
Primary Transformation Rule |
Description |
|
Permutations of Rows |
Any of the four rows may be swapped or rearranged in any of the 4! possible ways. |
|
Permutations of Columns |
Any of the four columns may be swapped or rearranged in any of the 4! possible ways. |
|
Permutations of Quadrants |
The grid's four 2×2 blocks (quadrants) can be swapped or permuted as independent units. |
The "So What?" of the Diamond Theorem The revelation of Steven Cullinane’s theorem is its absolute Symmetry Invariance. No matter which of the 322,560 scrambles you apply, the resulting image always retains a discernible structure. It is never a random mess. Specifically, every G-image of D exhibits either:
These 2D shuffles are actually the "shadows" of a higher-dimensional origin, acting as a flat projection of a four-dimensional world.
——————————————————————————–
To truly "grok" the Diamond Theorem, we must view the 16 cells of the grid as witnesses to 4-dimensional symmetry. The 4×4 grid is a "dimensional collapse" of a tesseract (a 4D hypercube) onto a flat surface.
The Steps of Dimensional Mapping:
The Parallelogram Rule of Vector Addition In this 4×4 space, geometry and algebra become one through the Parallelogram Rule. In a standard 3D space, if you have two vectors u and v, their sum w = u + v forms the diagonal of a parallelogram. On our 4×4 grid, this manifests visually: picking any two "direction" vectors automatically defines a third vertex. This means that vector addition in 4D space is performed directly on the grid; the "sum" of two cells is always another specific cell, maintaining a perfect triangular closure within the array.
This mapping turns a difficult-to-visualize 4D space into a visual "calculator" where geometric intuition replaces complex calculation.
——————————————————————————–
The grid functions as a map of the finite field GF(16). Operations here utilize "Binary Addition," better known to computer scientists as the XOR operation (where 1 + 1 = 0).
The Zero-Sum Property and Closure Every pattern in this system can be decomposed into three "line diagrams." When these diagrams (D_1, D_2, D_3) are combined, they follow a strict "Zero-Sum" rule: D_1 + D_2 + D_3 = 0. In finite geometry, this represents the : if you have two points of a line, the third point is "forced" into existence to complete the set. The symmetry of the final pattern is inevitable because the algebra is perfectly balanced.
This visual language reveals the structure of the projective space PG(3,2):
These abstract "lines" are not straight paths but families of symmetry, representing physical alignment and orthogonality in a finite world.
——————————————————————————–
One of the most revolutionary aspects of the Diamond Theorem is how it bridges combinatorial puzzles and abstract geometry. Specifically, it provides a dictionary for "seeing" algebraic independence.
Within the 35 families of patterns, we find that exactly six special order-4 Latin squares have orthogonal mates. The theorem shows that the combinatorial "orthogonality" of these squares is actually a geometric property in disguise.
|
Combinatorial Term Orthogonal Latin Squares Superimposed grids showing every ordered pair of symbols exactly once. |
Geometric Translation Skew Lines in PG(3,2) |
The Visual Outcome
Disjoint sets of line |
When a student sees that two patterns are "orthogonal," they are literally looking at skew lines—lines that exist in the same 3D projective space but never meet. Algebraic independence has never been more visible.
——————————————————————————–
The Cullinane Diamond Theorem proves that symmetry is not a decorative choice, but a mathematical inevitability found in everything from folk art to the stars.
——————————————————————————–
As you gaze upon the next 4×4 pattern you encounter, use this checklist to verify your understanding of the secrets "hidden in plain sight":
Keep your eyes open, for the infinite is often mapped onto the smallest of canvases.
"Do we fight to control our narrative or give it away to others
who may get it wrong and make a damaging misinterpretation . . . ?"
Good question.
260418-Timestamp…Ethnic-Ruska_Roma-version.jpg
Related cultural artifacts . . .
Friday, March 29, 2019
|
Update from another songwriter . . .
If you know me, you'll understand
I'm worn-out blues over straight lace
A little more messed up Mary than Plain Jane.
Powered by WordPress