Wednesday, March 10, 2021
“Always with a little humor.” — Dr. Yen Lo
Saturday, February 16, 2019
“Always with a little humor” — Dr. Yen Lo
Wednesday, April 3, 2024
Aesthetics from The New York Times :
“High Art and Low Humor”
Report of a Tuesday death:
For another such mixture, see yesterday's posts
now also tagged Art Humor.
"Always with a little humor." — Dr. Yen Lo
“High Art and Low Humor”
Saturday, February 24, 2024
Saturday Night Live: The Full Snow Moon
Monday, March 7, 2022
Statement from the American Nomenklatura:
Tuesday, May 4, 2021
Annals of Advertising: May Tag
Eames in Inception , about planting an idea—
“It’s not just about depth.
You need the simplest version of the idea,
the one that will grow naturally
in the subject’s mind.
It’s a very subtle art.”
The above quote is from this journal on Jan. 9, 2014,
a date suggested by the New York Times business section:
“Always with a little humor.” — Dr. Yen Lo
Thursday, March 16, 2017
Hexagram 64 in Context
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Our Most Important Product
Hexagram 35:
Progress
"Then came a 'Robot Psychologist,' known as a Psychological Matrix Rotator,
developed for the Department of Defense. It is still used to literally 'see' that
the right man gets the right Army job."
— Ronald Reagan, 1961 GE Sales Meeting
"Always with a little humor." — Yen Lo
In memory of Dr. Irving Peress,
who reportedly died on Thursday,
November 13, 2014.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Through a Mirror, Darkly
Review of a book first published in 1989—
Reality's Mirror: Exploring the Mathematics of Symmetry —
"Here is a book that explains in laymen language
what symmetry is all about, from the lowliest snowflake
and flounder to the lofty group structures whose
astonishing applications to the Old One are winning
Nobel prizes. Bunch's book is a marvel of clear, witty
science writing, as delightful to read as it is informative
and up-to-date. The author is to be congratulated on
a job well done." — Martin Gardner
A completely different person whose name
mirrors that of the Mathematics of Symmetry author —
See also this journal on the date mentioned in the Princetonian .
"Always with a little humor." — Yen Lo
Monday, July 23, 2012
Manchurian Symphony
Monday, February 21, 2011
Another Manic Monday
"The curriculum begins with a game called Winding Around Positions.
There are twelve stations that could represent hours on a clock
or the Chinese years zodiac."
— The current (March 2011) Notices of the American Mathematical Society
Background — "Winding Games" (pdf, 1.43 MB)—
For the not-too-tightly wound —
“Always with a little humor.” – Dr. Yen Lo (See The China Candidate and Humorism)
We are now at the Year of the Rabbit —
(Click images for sources.)
Friday, December 12, 2008
Friday December 12, 2008
Wikipedia on Rubik's 2×2×2 "Pocket Cube"–
"Any permutation of the 8 corner cubies is possible (8! positions)."
Some pages related to this claim–
Analyzing Rubik's Cube with GAP
Online JavaScript Pocket Cube.
The claim is of course trivially true for the unconnected subcubes of Froebel's Third Gift:
© 2005 The Institute for Figuring
fom the Inventing Kindergarten
exhibit at The Institute for Figuring
(co-founded by Margaret Wertheim)
See also:
and
"Ad Reinhardt and Tony Smith:
A Dialogue,"
an exhibition opening today
at Pace Wildenstein.
For a different sort
of dialogue, click on the
artists' names above.
For a different
approach to S8,
see Symmetries.
"With humor, my dear Zilkov.
Always with a little humor."
-- The Manchurian Candidate
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Tuesday May 20, 2008
The China Candidate
In honor of the 100th birthday of actor James Stewart,
Turner Classic Movies is now showing
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.
In light of an ABC News story tonight,
Report: U.S. Soldiers Did 'Dirty Work' for Chinese Interrogators,
the following film seems more relevant:
Welcome to the Garden Club, Pilgrim
Related material:
The Dictatorship of Talent, by David Brooks
in The New York Times of December 4, 2007—
"When you talk to Americans, you find that they have all these weird notions about Chinese communism. You try to tell them that China isn’t a communist country anymore. It’s got a different system: meritocratic paternalism. You joke: Imagine the Ivy League taking over the shell of the Communist Party and deciding not to change the name. Imagine the Harvard Alumni Association with an army."
— and Harvard mathematician
See also Sylvia Nasar's 2006 New Yorker article on Yau
and the screenplay of The Manchurian Candidate:
A long pause. Finally, Yen Lo laughs. YEN LO With humor, my dear Zilkov. Always with a little humor.