AI continues to improve its presentations of my work.
The title refers to a Log24 search that was suggested
by . . .
"When you come to a fork in the road . . ." — Yogi Berra
The lockscreen as I sat down at my computer tonight . . .
The Death Valley photo suggested, indirectly, a check of a TikTok repost . . .
The text photo in the repost, in turn, suggested . . .
THE SOURCE
"Possibilities may be greater than they seem." For both sides, as
Perlstein noted. (Authors do not, usually, write articles' headlines.)
That oracular saying of course applies to individuals as well as sides.
Background reading: Transcribed paper journal posts from April 2001.
Emigrating Upward.
From yesterday's post "Imago Review" . . .
For a natural group of 322,560 transformations
acting on this figure, see the diamond theorem.
"What remains fixed (globally, not pointwise)
under these transformations is the system of
points and hyperplanes from the diamond theorem."
For an example of a subset of points remaining fixed
pointwise under this group, embed the diamond
theorem's underlying four-by-four array of points in a
four-by-six (4 rows, six columns) array . . . as in the
R. T. Curtis Miracle Octad Generator. The 322,560
transformations of the diamond theorem are then
called by some the "octad group." It is more properly
called the "octad stabilizer group" because, within the
full group of automorphisms of the 4×6 array —
the Mathieu group M24 — it leaves an 8-point octad
fixed locally within the 4×6 array, while permuting (or not)
the eight points within the octad. Sixteen of the octad
stabilizer transformations, the translations, leave the octad
fixed pointwise. See (for instance) octad.us.
Zip! I was reading Schopenhauer last night.
Zip! And I think that Schopenhauer was right.
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
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A 7:10 AM obituary in the online New York Times this morning, along with
the "efficient packing" phrase in a previous (6:57 AM) post, suggests a
review . . .
Id est, Octad.us.
Groucho as commencement speaker —
♫ "Douthat to me one more time . . . ."
Note that the number 8, a cube, may be represented as
either a literal "eightfold cube" — a 2x2x2 array — or as,
in the manner of R. T. Curtis, a 4-row 2-column "brick."
Related art . . .
Some will prefer a more dramatic approach to uniting three cubes . . .
"I look at the name first. The manner of the crime betrayed the touch of
Professor Moriarty to Sherlock Holmes; in chess problems, on the contrary,
the composer's identity tells us, more or less, what to expect."
— Brian Harley, Mate in Two Moves: The Two-Move Chess Problem Made Easy,
1931, commentary on problem 162
This is from a webpage of March 20, 2001.
For a video vignette that may or may not serve to illustrate the Harley remark,
see http://log24.com/log/pix25/250423-Miapensa-black-dog-vignette.jpg.
From this journal on Harry Anderson's dies natalis . . .
Happy birthday to Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI. |
From a Log24 post of August 27, 2015 . . .
The personal pronoun "I" may also be read as the Roman numeral I.
Related art — The "planks" of Venice Beach artist John McCracken and . . .
Steve Martin on Marshall Brickman
in The New Yorker on April 13, 2025 —
During his long, prolific career, Brickman co-wrote
movies with Woody Allen, including “Annie Hall”;
later, he co-wrote the books for Broadway’s “Jersey Boys”
and “The Addams Family.” When he died, last year, I
learned that he was the originator of Johnny Carson’s
eternally fresh routine “Carnac the Magnificent.”
Consider this a friendly, and even cheerful, salute to
Marshall Brickman. ♦
Related art —
Related entertainment —
At about 37:28 — Okay. What's the operating system? Um…
Is there a logo, an extension? Anything?
( breathes heavily )
I know that system, but it's US government only.
Read more at: https://tvshowtranscripts.ourboard.org/
|
A book by Katherine Neville I first encountered at a Quality Markets
paperback rack in the last century —
And for Optimus Prime . . .
The following is a detail from the New Yorker
short film "A.I. vs. M.E." . . .
Sound effect for the new tech giant MetaData.global,
the merger of Meta and Data . . .
Accompanying drama . . .
Fans of the novel The Eight by Katherine Neville may recall
that the date April 4 plays a significant role in that fiction.
Related material from log24.com/log/pix25/ …
250420-Harrowing-of-Hell-post-on-April_4_2015.jpg —
250420-Cameron-post-on-April_4_2015-Holy_Saturday.jpg —
"All politics is local"
— Legendary Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives
Thomas “Tip” O'Neill (D-MA).
And theology?
At Russell, PA, an aerial view of Pine Grove Cemetery —
Note that the road running next to Pine Grove Cemetery —
Russell's Liberty St. — transforms just west of US Route 62
into Pennsylvania Route 957.
For fans of stories by Christian writer C. S. Lewis, who presented a theory
that over the first Easter weekend, Death started "working backwards,"
there is the fact that 957 backwards is 759. That number has special
meaning in the theory of R. T. Curtis's "Miracle Octad Generator."
And then there is the Tolkien phrase "Into the West" . . . .
For fans of "Meet Joe Black" …
Friday, April 11, 2025
|
That April 11, 2025, post suggests . . .
An image reproduced here on December 11, 2018
("Carried Away") —
The new American Mathematical Society logo suggests |
. . . A Sequel to "Unknown" . . .
The above date from September 2019 suggests a review of that month.
“There are dark comedies. There are screwball comedies.
But there aren’t many dark screwball comedies.
And if Nora Ephron’s Lucky Numbers is any indication,
there’s a good reason for that.”
— Todd Anthony, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
From tonight's NY Times obituaries for musician Nino Tempo
and for illustrator Robert E. McGinnis . . .
Tempo appeared, uncredited, in a Breakfast at Tiffany's bar scene
(above, cropped to emphasize Hepburn).
Q — "Is the Eightfold Way the same as the Yellow Brick Road?"
A — "No. The former is the Klein Quartic, the latter the Klein Quadric."
From the previous post . . . HAL describes a permutation group . . .
From this journal on that date . . . Three posts now tagged Code-X.
An American Mathematical Society article-in-press
on card shuffling suggests . . .
The deep blue thumb-up is for impartial coverage, not strict accuracy.
For a transformation of these four diamonds and four squares to the
four columns and four rows of a square array, see a March 24 post.
"Ah, when she moved, she moved more ways than one." — Roethke
Tuesday, February 6, 2018
|
Related drama — Holland Tale, Odious Evening Colors,
The Blue Monkey Diamond, and . . .
"At the point of convergence by Octavio Paz, translated by Helen Lane
|
♪ "So you wanna play with magic?" ♪ — Katy Perry
Song …
(Marlene Dietrich – "Lili Marlene" …
Dietrich as "The Naked Muse.")
Unsere beiden Schatten
Sah'n wie einer aus.
Das wir so lieb uns hatten,
Das sah man gleich daraus.
See posts tagged Narrow Window.
A rather different Isle of Dogs, more like the Island of Dr. Moreau,
plays a cryptic role in the more recent film "Kinds of Kindness" . . .
The Falcone Schoolgirl Problem . . .
"Searching for a definitive indication that The Penguin is charting its own course in the long history of Batman stories? Well, look no further than episode 5, when Sofia Falcone (Cristin Milioti) takes over her crime family under a new name: Sofia Gigante. Spurned by her father’s betrayal, she assumes her late mother’s name and plans to create a new legacy." |
The following is a detail from the New Yorker
short film "A.I. vs. M.E." . . .
THE SOURCE:
Related art — JosefineLyche.com.
Related date — Cervantes in SoHo.
For a rather more rapid evolution of language,
see "Large Language Model" in Wikipedia, and . . .
Delum venit. Ibi ex fano Apollinis religiosissimo noctu clam sustulit signa pulcherrima atque anti- quissima, eaque in onerariam navem suam conicienda curavit. Postridie cum fanum spoliatum viderent ii
Remember him to Herald Square.
… And from Holland's Dies Natalis,
vide "A Tale for Holland."
Related art from a search in this journal for Goya —
Saint Francis Borgia at the Deathbed of an Impenitent,
by Francisco Goya (1746-1828) in 1788
The above title is derived from a 2001 mathematics article —
Pierre Cartier, "A mad day’s work: from Grothendieck to Connes and Kontsevich
the evolution of concepts of space and symmetry."
Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 38 (2003), no. 4, 389–408. Published online July 12, 2001.
" Cristin Milioti on the ‘Black Mirror’ Sequel
‘USS Callister: Into Infinity’ " —
From the post "Well Plaid" of February 8, 2024 —
… and from "Moss on the Wall," a post of September 10, 2013 —
Related material:
Jena Malone as the young Eleanor Arroway in "Contact" (1997) —
* See Jon Hamm as Fairfax in the previous post.
Possible material . . .
Pizza Geometry: The Fourth Quarter —
Pizza photo credit: Marcela Nowak on Instagram
* https://www.nbc.com/nbc-insider/
snl-tonight-host-musical-guest-new-april-12-2025
The title refers to a DeLillo phrase, "isolating the stray thought," in
the previous two posts.
Some context for both stray and nonstray thoughts . . .
A Google AI Mode search today for "i ching geometry" (click to enlarge) —
The title phrase (by DeLillo, in the previous post) suggests . . .
Aspiring thought-detectives may surmise which stray thought
is being isolated here.
Vide https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/11/us/
joseph-boskin-dead-april-fools.html and
related posts tagged Bluefield.
A search in this journal for "Merton College" yields . . .
"Speaking of artificial intelligence, it seems as if the creators of 'Mrs. Davis' have ironically chosen to utilize A.I. in the show's production. During a panel at the film festival South by Southwest, Lindelof mentioned how they used artificial intelligence and said, 'We thought it would be fun to build an A.I. that would title our episodes, and that we just basically said that whatever it comes up with, we have to stick to as long as it is appropriate for whatever barometers of appropriateness exist.' Damon Lindelof continued and explained that in the process of creating the A.I. that would title episodes for the upcoming 'Mrs. Davis,' the artificial intelligence struggled to understand what a title actually was, despite the information that was filtered through the program. Lindelof then said that the entire production crew learned a great deal about algorithms and how A.I. works while attempting to get it to generate episode titles. In the end, Lindelof and the rest of the crew were quite happy with the results, noting that Episode 7 is titled 'Great Gatsby: 2001: A Space Odyssey.' " |
Elsewhere, in the art room . . .
![]() |
"A banana in the hand is worth two in the box." — Plato
Now —
… and in 2014 —
* "Brick" is a term coined by R. T. Curtis that denotes any of the three
4-row 2-column arrays that form his 4-row 6-column Miracle Octad Generator.
The shape of the church in today's "But Seriously" post
is not unlike the 1988 rocket shape below . . .
https://www.atariuptodate.de/img/kidshapes.png —
"Here's to efficient packing."
The rocket and chess images are from a post of November 23. 2024.
The date of a Facebook photo in the previous post —
February 17, 2017 — suggests a review . . .
The "For Whom the Bell" post of March 8, 2025, suggests
a search for "Spelman" in this journal . . .
Related fantasy architecture . . .
The title is that of a Log24 post on September 16, 2015.
See as well "strip joints" in this journal.
For more about Faustian offers, see other Royal Holloway posts .
"In another world, Rick would be fetching Chelsea doughnuts
off hotel breakfast buffets forever."
— Vulture review of White Lotus Season 3 finale (spoiler warning).
When worlds of fiction and so-called* reality collide, some may prefer
the world of Platonic reality . . . See the toroidal embedding images
shown and linked to in this morning's post Shrikhande Graph.
* Vide . . .
"Horsey Horsey!" — Elizabeth Taylor
"Wakey Wakey!" — Doctor Sleep
An image from the Web suggested
by Peter J. Cameron's post today
on the Shrikhande graph . . .
See also a similar figure by Jonathan Gerhard
and a Wikipedia image of the toroidal embedding.
Related art . . .
This post was suggested in part by the phrase "animation player"
in this morning's post "Sneak Preview."
Related meditation — this journal on July 18, 2021.
Scholium on today's "Winner's Circle" post —
The above cube is at https://3dthis.com/player.htm?h=LTc5Mzg2NTk .
See as well the related diamond theorem unit cube from yesterday.
The previous post suggests a review of what might,
fancifully, be called the Indiana Langdon version
of the classic "duplication of the cube" problem.
In this version, the problem is to duplicate the static image
above as a rotatable 3D "diamond theorem unit cube" that
illustrates a design from 1984.
View rotatable cube at https://3dthis.com/player.htm?h=LTk5ODY3NzQ .
I discovered the 3dthis site only yesterday. If I use it again, the results will
be at https://3dthis.com/profile.htm?owner=Cullinane.
For other such "photo cube" results at the site, see
https://3dthis.com/overview.htm?app=photocube&cat=all&order=date&start=0 .
To create such a cube at 3dthis, see https://3dthis.com/photocube.htm .
There is a "Resources for developers" page at
https://3dthis.com/developers.htm .
For some background on the Diamond Theorem Unit Cube, see
http://m759.net/wordpress/?s="Diamonds+and+Whirls".
Update of 2:30 PM EDT April 5 —
See also the previous post and the lawyer's
reported dies natalis, March 12.
See that word in this journal —
http://m759.net/wordpress/?s=Pivot.
Related art: four squares, four diamonds.
… and for White Lotus fans … "Meditate in my direction" —
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