Sunday, December 22, 2019
Spaceheads… For Stephen King’s Institute
Wednesday, August 14, 2019
For the Stephen King Institute*
* The title refers to The Institute , by Stephen King, a novel
to be published on September 10, 2019.
Saturday, August 3, 2019
Note for the Stephen King Institute*
Tuesday, February 4, 2020
A Kuhnian Ashtray, or “Welcome to the Institute”
The previous post suggests other Kuhnian remarks.
The Institute of the above title is not the one recently imagined
by Stephen King, but the one associated with a mathematician
who died on January 26 (Paul Newman's birthday).
For the Ashtray, see Ash Wednesday Surprise (March 9, 2011) and
https://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/
2011/03/06/the-ashtray-the-ultimatum-part-1/.
Friday, December 17, 2021
What Dreams May Come… continues.
For Harlan Kane:
The Rechtschaffen Avatar
In memory of dream researcher Allan Rechtschaffen,
who reportedly died at 93 on November 29, a story
concept by Stephen King:
"Then she realized she wasn’t actually seeing them at all.
They were projections. Avatars. And so was the huge telephone
they were circling."
— King, Stephen. The Institute: A Novel .
Scribner. Kindle Edition. Location 7120.
From a Log24 search,
"Signs and Symbols."
Wednesday, May 13, 2020
Adventures in the Book Trade
Click the Springer “train of thought” advertisement below to enlarge.
A line for Stephen King:
“She gets the locomotive, I get the caboose.”
Cover Design: Will Staehle / Unusual Co.
Thursday, January 30, 2020
Poster Boy
Cover Design: Will Staehle / Unusual Co.
This post is in memory of "Wes Wilson, Psychedelic Poster Pioneer,"
who died at 82 on January 24, according to the NY Times today.
Related material — This journal on January 24.
Tuesday, January 14, 2020
For a Black Swan
Related material from Stephen King —
— and from Black Swan author Nassim Nicholas Taleb —
See as well this journal on the Taleb date: Feb. 27, 2018 —
Thursday, April 4, 2019
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 —
Thursday, December 5, 2013
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.