Tuesday, September 24, 2024
Plato’s Ghost . . .
Friday, January 5, 2018
Subway Art for Plato’s Ghost
Saturday, September 20, 2014
Plato’s Ghosts
The previous post, “Ennead Boo,” refers indirectly to
a passage from Pindar in Plato’s Meno :
See also posts from nine years ago
on the death of director Robert Wise.
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Plato’s Ghost
Jeremy Gray, Plato's Ghost: The Modernist Transformation of Mathematics, Princeton, 2008–
"Here, modernism is defined as an autonomous body of ideas, having little or no outward reference, placing considerable emphasis on formal aspects of the work and maintaining a complicated— indeed, anxious— rather than a naïve relationship with the day-to-day world, which is the de facto view of a coherent group of people, such as a professional or discipline-based group that has a high sense of the seriousness and value of what it is trying to achieve. This brisk definition…."
Brisk? Consider Caesar's "The die is cast," Gray in "Solomon's Cube," and yesterday's post—
This is the group of "8 rigid motions
generated by reflections in midplanes"
of Solomon's Cube.
Related material:
"… the action of G168 in its alternative guise as SL(3; Z/2Z) is also now apparent. This version of G168 was presented by Weber in [1896, p. 539],* where he attributed it to Kronecker."
— Jeremy Gray, "From the History of a Simple Group," in The Eightfold Way, MSRI Publications, 1998
Here MSRI, an acronym for Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, is pronounced "Misery." See Stephen King, K.C. Cole, and Heinrich Weber.
*H. Weber, Lehrbuch der Algebra, Vieweg, Braunschweig, 1896. Reprinted by Chelsea, New York, 1961.
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Wednesday April 8, 2009
Is God
“For every kind of vampire,
there is a kind of cross.”
— Thomas Pynchon in
Gravity’s Rainbow
“Since 1963, when Pynchon’s first novel, V., came out, the writer– widely considered America’s most important novelist since World War II– has become an almost mythical figure,
— Nancy Jo Sales in the November 11, 1996, issue of New York Magazine
(Click on images for their
source in past entries.)
In a Nutshell:
“Plato’s Ghost evokes Yeats’s lament that any claim to worldly perfection inevitably is proven wrong by the philosopher’s ghost….”
— Princeton University Press on Plato’s Ghost: The Modernist Transformation of Mathematics (by Jeremy Gray, September 2008)
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Monday, March 16, 2009
Monday March 16, 2009
— Princeton University Press on Plato’s Ghost: The Modernist Transformation of Mathematics (by Jeremy Gray, September 2008)
“She’s a brick house…”
— Plato’s Ghost according to
Log24, April 2007
“First of all, I’d like
to thank the Academy.”
— Remark attributed to Plato
(Cf. the “I tell you a mystery”
link of March 11 in
“Politics, Religion, Scarlett.”)
Sunday, April 22, 2007
Sunday April 22, 2007
“Be on the lookout for
Annie Dillard’s sequel to
Teaching a Stone to Talk, titled
Teaching a Brick to Sing.”
William Butler Yeats —
“Poets and Wits about him drew;
‘What then?’ sang Plato’s ghost.
‘What then?’
‘The work is done,’
grown old he thought,
‘According to my boyish plan;
Let the fools rage,
I swerved in naught,
Something to perfection brought’;
But louder sang that ghost,
‘What then?’“
Duet Scarlett Johansson — “Let’s give ’em somethin’ (Saturday Night Live, Plato’s ghost — “The clothes she wears, She’s a brick… house… Shake it down, |