Monday, July 31, 2017
Commercial Aspect
Sunday, July 30, 2017
Sermon: MS R I
From Solomon's Cube —
"Here MSRI, an acronym for Mathematical Sciences Research Institute,
is pronounced 'Misery.' See Stephen King [and] K.C. Cole . . . ."
From a manuscript by Mikhail Gromov cited yesterday in MSRI Program —
Sunday School:
Bullshit Studies Continued
The remarks by Mikhail Gromov on neuroscience in his papers
cited in the previous post suggest some related remarks —
Saturday, July 29, 2017
MSRI Program
"The field of geometric group theory emerged from Gromov’s insight
that even mathematical objects such as groups, which are defined
completely in algebraic terms, can be profitably viewed as geometric
objects and studied with geometric techniques."
— Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, 2016:
See also some writings of Gromov from 2015-16:
- Memorandum Ergo (October 29, 2015)
- Great Circle of Mysteries (November 15, 2015)
- Quotations and Ideas (April 15, 2016)
For a simpler example than those discussed at MSRI
of both algebraic and geometric techniques applied to
the same group, see a post of May 19, 2017,
"From Algebra to Geometry." That post reviews
an earlier illustration —
For greater depth, see "Eightfold Cube" in this journal.
Science News
Friday, July 28, 2017
Prize Problem
The last page of a novel published on Sept. 2, 2014 —
Related material —
The 2017 film Gifted presents a different approach to the Navier-Stokes
problem.
The figure below perhaps represents the above novel 's Millennium Prize
winner reacting, in the afterlife, to the film 's approach in Gifted .
Bustle online magazine last April —
Gifted ’s Millennium Prize Problems
Are Real & They Will Hurt Your Brain
By JOHNNY BRAYSON Apr 11 2017
See also other news from the above Bustle date — April 11, 2017.
Compare and Contrast
From an obituary in this afternoon's online New York Times —
"Mr. Morris published his autobiography,
Get the Picture: A Personal History of Photojournalism , in 1998."
The obit suggests a review of posts mentioning the film
"The Secret Life of Walter Mitty," starring Kristen Wiig.
See as well Wiig and the Louvre Banquet Hall in L.A. —
The book title Get the Picture above suggests a review of
a different Louvre picture, starring Audrey Hepburn —
Creeds
From a novel featuring the Navier-Stokes problem —
A search for "Creed" in this journal yields
a different sort of Shiva —
For further reviews, click on the Penguin below.
Aesthetic Distance
In memory of a Disney "imagineer" who reportedly died yesterday.
From the opening scene of a 2017 film, "Gifted":
Frank calls his niece Mary to breakfast on the morning she is
to enter first grade. She is dressed, for the first time, for school —
- Hey! Come on. Let's move! - No! - Let me see. - No. - Come on, I made you special breakfast. - You can't cook. - Hey, Mary, open up. (She opens her door and walks out.) - You look beautiful. - I look like a Disney character. Where's the special? - What? - You said you made me special breakfast. Read more: http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/ movie_script.php?movie=gifted |
Thursday, July 27, 2017
Keeping It Simple
Michiko Kakutani in The New York Times —
"The detective story genre concerns the finding of clues
and the search for hidden designs, and its very form
underscores Mr. Pynchon’s obsession with conspiracies
and the existence of systems too complicated to understand."
— Review of Pynchon's Bleeding Edge , Sept. 10, 2013
Background: "Moss on the Wall," this journal on that date.
A less complicated system —
"Plan 9 deals with the resurrection of the dead."
— Bill Murray in "Ed Wood"
(The plan , as well as the elevation ,
of the above structure is a 3×3 grid.)
Voices from a Cartoon Graveyard
The previous post illustrated
"Decorations for a Cartoon Graveyard."
A search for Psychonauts in
this journal yields …
In other news …
Hedwig and the Square Inch
From "In the Park with Yin and Yang" (May 10, 2017) —
Decorations for a Cartoon Graveyard
In Memoriam —
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
Icon Parking
For the title, see Icon Parking in a search for 54th in this journal.
For related iconic remarks, click on either image below.
This post was suggested by the Dec. 30, 2016, date of the
death in Nuremberg of mathematician Wolf Barth. The first
image above is from a mathematics-related work by
John von Neumann discussed here on that date.
See also Wolf Barth in this journal for posts that largely
concern not the above Barth, but an artist of the same name.
For posts on the mathematician only, see Barth + Kummer.
Tuesday, July 25, 2017
Science Monitor
The corner being turned in the previous post
is formed by the south wall of a Christian Science
church at 1776 N. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles.
For a related Christian Science meditation, see …
The Corner Trick
"At a visual level a trick is played" —
Or: Annie Hall Revisited —
Air date: January 5, 2017.
For other philosophical remarks from the first eight days of 2017, see
posts now tagged Conceptualist Minimalism.
Related material: See March 14, 2017, and the 2007 film Waitress .
Monday, July 24, 2017
Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition
The above title was suggested by a film trailer quoted here Saturday —
" Jeremy Irons' dry Alfred Pennyworth:
'One misses the days when one's biggest concerns
were exploding wind-up penguins.' "
"Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition" describes, among other books,
an edition of the I Ching published on December 1, 2015.
Excerpt from this journal on that date —
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
Verhexung
|
Related material —
Sunday, July 23, 2017
Reality Butts
The Partitioned Self
Saturday, July 22, 2017
Comic Con
From The Hollywood Reporter today —
" Jeremy Irons' dry Alfred Pennyworth:
'One misses the days when one's biggest concerns
were exploding wind-up penguins.' "
See as well the today's 9 AM (ET) post and …
The author —
A Circle of Influence
In memory of Doris Lessing and Clancy Sigal —
". . . along with [R. D.] Laing they formed 'a circle
of almost incestuous mutual influence . . . .' "
— Sam Roberts, The New York Times , July 21 obituary of Sigal
"Thus I would wish to emphasize that
our 'normal' 'adjusted' state is too often
the abdication of ecstasy,
the betrayal of our true potentialities,
that many of us are only too successful
in acquiring a false self
to adapt to false realities.
But let it stand.
This was the work of an old young man.
If I am older, I am now also younger."
— R. D. Laing, London, September 1964,
preface to the Pelican edition of
The Divided Self: An Existential Study
in Sanity and Madness (Penguin Books, 1965)
"My Back Pages," by Bob Dylan, Verse 3 —
Girls’ faces formed the forward path
From phony jealousy
To memorizing politics
Of ancient history
Flung down by corpse evangelists
Un-thought of, though, somehow
[Refrain]
Ah, but I was so much older then
I’m younger than that now
— From an album released August 8, 1964
Friday, July 21, 2017
Faux News
Thursday, July 20, 2017
Divided Attention
The previous post alluded to the phrase "undivided attention."
An example of divided attention —
The "Orphan Black" scene (at right above) is from a post, "Art's Space,"
of Saturday, July 15, 2017. The themes of the Orphan Black series —
in the context of Silicon Valley, not of Orphan Black — were discussed
in the Los Angeles Review of Books on Monday, July 17, 2017. Other
Silicon Valley themes appear in the recent film "The Circle" (at left above).
Another phrase for divided attention is "bulk apperception."
Undeniable
From "Silicon Valley’s Bonfire of the Vainglorious"
By W. Patrick McCray in the Los Angeles Review of Books
on Monday, July 17, 2017 —
"Whether people are information, chemistry, or indeed
'spirit' or 'soul' has kept stoned undergraduates talking
into the wee hours and philosophers employed, but
there’s now an undeniable commercial aspect to all of
this."
"You have my (divided) attention." — The Singularity.
(See the link on "At" in this journal on Monday.)
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
Death and the Compass
Or: Emma Watson at the Church of Synchronology .
Amir Aczel was the author of, among other books,
The Mystery of the Aleph :
Mathematics, the Kabbalah,
and the Search for Infinity , and
The Riddle of the Compass :
The Invention That Changed the World .
He reportedly died on November 26, 2015.
Monday, July 17, 2017
Athens Meets Jerusalem . . .
At the Googleplex .
For those whose only interest in higher mathematics
is as a path to the occult …
Plato's Diamond and the Hebrew letter Aleph —
and some related (if only graphically) mathematics —
Click the above image for some related purely mathematical remarks.
Sunday, July 16, 2017
Snow Mann
An Arousing Quality
MOVIE REVIEW from The New York Times 'Distance,' Sensitive Film Story … By RICHARD EDER Published: December 22, 1975 Sometimes "Distance" is awkward and sometimes it is misconceived, but it had a central virtue lacking in a number of more elaborate and—to use a horrible word—cinematic films around. It wants to be made. It believes in itself, in its story, in its characters; and that belief pulls viewers into it. Sometimes they are pulled too hard, or in a certain embarrassment because the sequence is obvious or excessive or telegraphed in advance. But self-belief is an arousing quality, especially at a time when an extreme of baroque weariness gives movies such as "Three Days of the Condor" or Sam Peckinpah's "Killer Elite" the hopeless feeling that they are meant for an empty theater. |
See also Log24 posts on and just after the date of Eder's demise.
A phrase of baroque weariness —
"Pull it … Surprise!"
Saturday, July 15, 2017
Bilder för Hilma
"In 1906, after 20 years of artistic works, and at the age of 44,
Hilma af Klint painted the first series of abstract paintings." — Wikipedia
Friday, July 14, 2017
Pensée*
"The reason, therefore, that some intuitive minds
are not mathematical is that they cannot at all
turn their attention to the principles of mathematics.
But the reason that mathematicians are not intuitive
is that they do not see what is before them, and that,
accustomed to the exact and plain principles of
mathematics, and not reasoning till they have well
inspected and arranged their principles, they are lost
in matters of intuition where the principles do not
allow of such arrangement. They are scarcely seen;
they are felt rather than seen; there is the greatest
difficulty in making them felt by those who do not
of themselves perceive them."
— Blaise Pascal, Pensées
* Title suggested by a French remark of July 3, 2017
March 26, 2006 (continued)
The above image, posted here on March 26, 2006, was
suggested by this morning's post "Black Art" and by another
item from that date in 2006 —
Black Art
A search for posts in this journal on the actress Ellen Page
in the film "Inception" was suggested by Bastille Day (today),
by her character's name, Ariadne, and by the concluding image
of the previous post —
.
That search yielded the following image …
… which in turn suggests a "loop" back to this date last year —
The New York Times seems to prefer another sort of black art.
A 9 AM illustration from the Times Wire this morning is a misleading
attempt at humor that links to a very dark poem —
Squares
Box-style I Ching, January 6, 1989 —
(Click on images for background.)
Detail:
See also yesterday's illustration of
the 1965 paperback edition
of Whittaker and Watson …
Detail:
Thursday, July 13, 2017
Knowing
"Knowing is good … but knowing everything is better."
— Tom Hanks in "The Circle"
"OK …" — The Singularity
Conspiracy Meets Confederacy
Wednesday, July 12, 2017
Lucky Number
Operation Childlike Innocence, Phase Two
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
A Date at the Death Cafe
The New York TImes reports this evening that
"Jon Underwood, Founder of Death Cafe Movement,"
died suddenly at 44 on June 27.
This journal on that date linked to a post titled "The Mystic Hexastigm."
A related remark on the complete 6-point from Sunday, April 28, 2013 —
(See, in Veblen and Young's 1910 Vol. I, exercise 11,
page 53: "A plane section of a 6-point in space can
be considered as 3 triangles perspective in pairs
from 3 collinear points with corresponding sides
meeting in 3 collinear points." This is the large
Desargues configuration. See Classical Geometry
in Light of Galois Geometry.)
This post was suggested, in part, by the philosophical ruminations
of Rosalind Krauss in her 2011 book Under Blue Cup . See
Sunday's post Perspective and Its Transections . (Any resemblance
to Freud's title Civilization and Its Discontents is purely coincidental.)
Dialogue from Plato’s Cave
Why was the Cosmic Cube named the Tesseract
in the Marvel movie series? Is there any specific reason
for the name change? According to me, Cosmic Cube
seems a nice and cooler name.
— Asked March 14, 2013, by Dhwaneet Bhatt
At least it wasn't called 'The AllSpark.'
It's not out of the realm of possibility.
— Solemnity, March 14, 2013
Monday, July 10, 2017
Plato Thanks the Academy (continued)
See also this journal on Feb. 15, 2017 —
Related item from Arts & Letters Daily today —
Under Bleu Cup
Publishers Weekly on a Nov. 1, 2011, book, Under Blue Cup —
"Krauss’s core argument (what she deems a 'crusade')
is that the 'white cube,' which conceptual and installation
artists have deemed obsolete, actually thrives."
For other "core arguments," see Satuday's post "Common Core"
and the Art Space posts "Odd Core" and "Even Core."
Sunday, July 9, 2017
Perspective and Its Transections
The title phrase is from Rosalind Krauss (Under Blue Cup , 2011) —
Another way of looking at the title phrase —
"A very important configuration is obtained by
taking the plane section of a complete space five-point."
(Veblen and Young, 1910, p. 39) —
For some context, see Desargues + Galois in this journal.
Sunday School Lesson
"The Occult Roots of Modernism," by Alex Ross,
in the June 26, 2017, issue of The New Yorker .
A related illustration —
Saturday, July 8, 2017
Das Nichts … According to Albee
Desargues and Galois in Japan
Related material now available online —
A less business-oriented sort of virtual reality —
For example, "A very important configuration is obtained by
taking the plane section of a complete space five-point."
(Veblen and Young, 1910, p. 39)—
Friday, July 7, 2017
Psycho History
The title was suggested by the term “psychohistory” in
the Foundation novels of Isaac Asimov. See the previous post.
See also a 2010 New York Times review of
DeLillo’s novel Point Omega . The review is titled,
without any other reference to L’Engle’s classic tale
of the same name, “A Wrinkle in Time.”
Related material: The Crosswicks Curse.
A Prime Radiant for Krugman
Paul Krugman:
Asimov’s Foundation novels grounded my economics
In the Foundation novels of Isaac Asimov …
“The Prime Radiant can be adjusted to your mind, and all
corrections and additions can be made through mental rapport.
There will be nothing to indicate that the correction or addition
is yours. In all the history of the Plan there has been no
personalization. It is rather a creation of all of us together.
Do you understand?”
“Yes, Speaker!”
— Isaac Asimov, Second Foundation , Ch. 8: Seldon’s Plan
“Before time began, there was the Cube.“
See also Transformers in this journal.
Thursday, July 6, 2017
A Pleasing Situation
The 4x4x4 cube is the natural setting
for the finite version of the Klein quadric
and the eight "heptads" discussed by
Conwell in 1910.
As R. Shaw remarked in 1995,
"The situation is indeed quite pleasing."
Wednesday, July 5, 2017
Imaginarium of a Different Kind
The title refers to that of the previous post, "The Imaginarium."
In memory of a translator who reportedly died on May 22, 2017,
a passage quoted here on that date —
Related material — A paragraph added on March 15, 2017,
to the Wikipedia article on Galois geometry —
George Conwell gave an early demonstration of Galois geometry in 1910 when he characterized a solution of Kirkman's schoolgirl problem as a partition of sets of skew lines in PG(3,2), the three-dimensional projective geometry over the Galois field GF(2).[3] Similar to methods of line geometry in space over a field of characteristic 0, Conwell used Plücker coordinates in PG(5,2) and identified the points representing lines in PG(3,2) as those on the Klein quadric. — User Rgdboer |
The Imaginarium
"The heart of the doctor's show is a magic mirror that allows
those who go through it to experience another dimension of
their own minds. Once inside, people choose for good or evil,
opting for — to give one example — either the difficult but
rewarding heights of Mt. Parnassus or the easy pleasures of
Mr. Nick's Lounge Bar. As the doctor angrily puts it when asked
what he's playing at, 'We don't play, what we do is deadly serious,'
which means nothing less than the eternal battle with the devil
for the spirit of man."
— Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times film critic, Christmas Day 2009,
reviewing "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus."
In terms that might interest the late museum director of the previous post …
Quoted here from The New Criterion on June 2, 2017 —
Quoted here from The New York Times on June 1, 2017 —
MoMA’s Makeover Rethinks the Presentation of Art
"The new design calls for more gallery space and a transformed
main lobby, physical changes that, along with the re-examination
of art collections and diversity, represent an effort to open up MoMA
and break down the boundaries defined by its founder, Alfred Barr.
'It’s a rethinking of how we were originally conceived,' Glenn D. Lowry,
the museum’s director, said in an interview at MoMA. 'We had created
a narrative for ourselves that didn’t allow for a more expansive reading
of our own collection, to include generously artists from very different
backgrounds.'"
Tuesday, July 4, 2017
Dharmadhatu
In memory of a museum director who reportedly died on May 19, 2017 —
See also posts tagged May 19 Gestalt.
Monday, July 3, 2017
Sunday, July 2, 2017
One Code to Bring Them All…
Practically Cubist
From an Anthony Lane movie review in the April 8, 2013,
issue of The New Yorker —
"When the Lord God forbade his worshippers to bow down
before any graven image, [Rosario] Dawson’s face was
exactly the kind of thing He had in mind. No other star can
boast such sculptured features—except Vincent Cassel,
who is pretty damn graven himself. When the two of them
make love, in 'Trance,' one strong bone structure pressed
against another, it’s like a clash of major religions. What if
they had a family? The kids would be practically Cubist."
As for the other film Lane reviewed in that issue, "Blancanieves" —
See Snow White + Cube in this journal.
See as well a related cartoon graveyard, also from April 8, 2013.
Saturday, July 1, 2017
Friday, June 30, 2017
Connecting Dots
From a post of Sunday, Dec. 19, 2004 —
Sunday Sermon
on Saturday’s Numbers
The "dots" of this post's title were subscribers to
a literary journal co-edited by poet Adrienne Rich.
Hurriedly Put Together
The previous post quoted one theologian on a book
by another theologian, saying its tone "is patronizing
and its arguments are hurriedly put together."
For a more leisurely sort of argument, see a 1995* remark
by a mathematician, Ronald Shaw, quoted here on the morning
of Tuesday, June 27, in an update at the end of the previous day's
post "Upgrading to Six" —
". . . recall the notions of Eddington (1936) . . . ."
* In "Finite Geometry, Dirac Groups and the
Table of Real Clifford Algebras," pages 59-99 of
R. Ablamowicz and P. Lounesto (eds.),
Clifford Algebras and Spinor Structures ,
Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1995.
Thursday, June 29, 2017
Rumors
Berger reportedly died on Tuesday, June 27. See the patronizing title
"Connecting the Dots" of a Log24 post on that date.
Wednesday, June 28, 2017
You Say Goodbye, I Say …
The title is from a Beatles song. See a link to 2008 in the previous post.
Maori Farewell
The second editor mentioned below reportedly died
on June 21, 2017. A page in his memory —
See also "Detail for Hopkins" in this journal on June 21.
For a Maori finale, see "De Haut en Bas " (July 11, 2008).
Ominous Erotic Overture
The title is from a New Yorker review of …
"So put your glad rags on
And join me, hon …"
See also The Skeleton Twins (2014)
and Blackboard Jungle (1955).
In Memory of Steve Jobs …
And his June 12, 2005, "Connecting the Dots" address at Stanford —
Tuesday, June 27, 2017
Monday, June 26, 2017
Upgrading to Six
This post was suggested by the previous post — Four Dots —
and by the phrase "smallest perfect" in this journal.
Related material (click to enlarge) —
Detail —
From the work of Eddington cited in 1974 by von Franz —
See also Dirac and Geometry and Kummer in this journal.
Updates from the morning of June 27 —
Ron Shaw on Eddington's triads "associated in conjugate pairs" —
For more about hyperbolic and isotropic lines in PG(3,2),
see posts tagged Diamond Theorem Correlation.
For Shaw, in memoriam — See Contrapuntal Interweaving and The Fugue.
Four Dots
Analogies — “A : B :: C : D” may be read “A is to B as C is to D.”
Gian-Carlo Rota on Heidegger…
“… The universal as is given various names in Heidegger’s writings….
The discovery of the universal as is Heidegger’s contribution to philosophy….
The universal ‘as‘ is the surgence of sense in Man, the shepherd of Being.
The disclosure of the primordial as is the end of a search that began with Plato….
This search comes to its conclusion with Heidegger.”
— “Three Senses of ‘A is B’ in Heideggger,” Ch. 17 in Indiscrete Thoughts
See also Four Dots in this journal.
Some context: McLuhan + Analogy.
Sunday, June 25, 2017
Do Do for Dodos
"Do do that voodoo . . . ." — Cole Porter
This post's title was suggested by a new novel,
"The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O." . . . .
. . . and by the concepts of
synchronicity and diachronicity
in music.
Related reading for Harvard Summer School (click to enlarge) —
Saturday, June 24, 2017
It’s 10 PM.
Joke question from the 2013 film "Her" —
"What does a baby computer call its father?"
Answer for Harvard Summer School —
Imagekind Meet Seerkind
Imagekind —
Seerkind —
This post may be regarded as a sequel to the post Dream Girls (Oct. 5, 2013).
Witwiccans Go to College*
* Title suggested by my viewing last night "Revenge of the Fallen,"
no. 2 in the Transformers series. That film reportedly opened
on this date eight years ago.
Friday, June 23, 2017
Annals of Art and Design
The life of Mr. Breder is not unrelated to that of Carl Andre.
See also, in this journal, Bulk Apperception.
A Kind of Cross* Continued
A Kind of Cross
"For every kind of vampire, there is a kind of cross."
— Gravity's Rainbow
See also Heidegger + Rift in this journal.
“Information from the Middle of the Night”
The title is from an obituary in tonight's online New York Times.
Information —
See also another art publication cover from 1976 —
Thursday, June 22, 2017
Wednesday, June 21, 2017
Design Is How It Works: A Bedtime Story
Detail for Hopkins
Detail from the previous post —
See Space Cross in this journal.
See also Anthony Hopkins' new film
"Transformers: The Last Knight" and …
Concept and Realization
Remark on conceptual art quoted in the previous post —
"…he’s giving the concept but not the realization."
A concept — See a note from this date in 1983:
A realization —
Not the best possible realization, but enough for proof of concept .
Tuesday, June 20, 2017
Truly Tasteless* Tulips
Excerpt from the above story —
"The project could also be a new frontier for Mr. Koons.
'It’s superconceptual,' said Judith Benhamou-Huet,
a French art critic and blogger, in that 'he’s giving
the concept but not the realization.' She compared
the approach to that of Sol LeWitt, who sold wall drawings
that buyers then executed on their own."
See also the previous post and Rota on Beauty.
* A reference to Truly Tasteless Jokes , by Blanche Knott
(Book 1 of 11, Ballantine Books paperback, May 1985, page 50).
All-Spark Notes
"For years, the AllSpark rested, sitting dormant
like a giant, useless art installation."
— Vinnie Mancuso at Collider.com yesterday
Related material —
Giant, useless art installation —
Sol LeWitt at MASS MoCA. See also LeWitt in this journal.
Epic
Continuing the previous post's theme …
Group actions on partitions —
Cube Bricks 1984 —
Related material — Posts now tagged Device Narratives.
Monday, June 19, 2017
Dead End
The above 1985 note was an attempt to view the diamond theorem
in a more general context. I know no more about the note now than
I did in 1985. The only item in the search results above that is not
by me (the seventh) seems of little relevance.
Singularity
Log24 ten years ago today —
"Here, in a strategy of simple erasure,
the Subject masks his singularity . . . ."
— Jacques Derrida
See also the previous post and . . .
— Detail from the ending of Philip Pullman's new
graphic novel "Mystery of the Ghost Ship"
“Design Is How It Works”*
* See the title in this journal.
Final Club
Today’s New York Times on a character in a 1978 film —
“Cluelessly upbeat and charmingly idiotic.”
Related material from a post Saturday —
Coda —
See as well this journal on the above date — Sept. 24, 2015.
Sunday, June 18, 2017
Saturday, June 17, 2017
The Formula
With apologies to the late director of "Rocky" and "The Formula" —
Below: John Gielgud as "Abraham Esau" in "The Formula" (1980).
For the real Abraham Esau, see Wikipedia.
Friday, June 16, 2017
The Biersdorfer Synchronology
See also this journal on the above date — July 13, 2016.
Ein Eck*
Rough Night at the Museum
See the previous three posts… and the Nobel flashback titled Cuber.
Chalkroom Jungle
At MASS MoCA, the installation "Chalkroom" quotes a lyric —
Oh beauty in all its forms funny how hatred can also be a beautiful thing When it's as sharp as a knife as hard as a diamond Perfect |
— From "One Beautiful Evening," by Laurie Anderson.
See also the previous post and "Smallest Perfect" in this journal.
Thursday, June 15, 2017
Building Six
Berkshire tales of May 25, 2017 —
See also, in this journal from May 25 and earlier, posts now tagged
"The Story of Six."
Early Personal Computer
(The title is from yesterday morning's Graphical Interfaces.)
Wednesday, June 14, 2017
Graphical Interfaces
Thacker reportedly died on Monday, June 12, 2017.
This journal on that date —
Thacker retired from Microsoft in February.
Tuesday, June 13, 2017
Inventing Sex at Harvard
Annals of Embedded Space
This journal on the above date —
Thursday, April 13, 2017
|
Monday, June 12, 2017
Bubble
The "bubble" passage in the previous post suggests a review of
a post from December 21, 2006, with the following images —
Update of 11:01 PM ET the same day, June 12, 2017 —
Related material for the Church of Synchronology —
From a tech-article series that began on Halloween 2006 and
ended on the date of the above Geometry's Tombstones post —
Compare and contrast (from a post of Feb. 27, 2017) —
“Lord Arglay had a suspicion that the Stone would be
purely logical. Yes, he thought, but what, in that sense,
were the rules of its pure logic?”
—Many Dimensions (1931), by Charles Williams
See also "The Geometry of Logic:
Finite Geometry and the 16 Boolean Connectives"
by Steven H. Cullinane in 2007.
Sunday, June 11, 2017
Saturday, June 10, 2017
Cardinal Interplay
Friday, June 9, 2017
Overarching Theme
“Communications disorders were the overarching theme of my mother’s career.”
— Anne Louise Oaklander, daughter of a famed autism expert, Isabelle Rapin,
who reportedly died at 89 on May 24.
See also a post on Mark Zuckerberg's recent Harvard commencement address.
Some background — Overarching in this journal.