Log24

Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Semitism for St. Cecilia

Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 4:44 am

Time in Venice, Italy: 10:44  AM  Wednesday, August 27, 2025 (GMT+2)

'The Power Of The Center: A Study of Composition in the Visual Arts,' by Rudolf Arnheim

Cover illustration:

Spies returning from the land of
Canaan with a cluster of grapes.

Colored woodcut from
Biblia Sacra Germanica ,
Nuremberg, Anton Koberger, 1483.
Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

The AllSpark as Agent 13

Springsteen to a possible  Agent 13

"Is that you baby or just a brilliant disguise?"

 

Updates the same day . . .

Time in Venice, Italy: 8:35 PM  Wednesday, August 27, 2025 (GMT+2)

Related art from the dies natalis  of Rudolf Arnheim —

 

Time in Venice, Italy: 10:10 PM  Wednesday, August 27, 2025 (GMT+2)

In the end the space itself is the star

Saturday, March 22, 2025

Triskaidekamania

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:37 pm

Note that in the above illustration, there are four sets of points
that, with the exception of the top front corner point h0, form
four equilateral triangles . . .

z1, z2, z3

y1 , y2, y3

y1+, y2+, y3+

h0, h1, h2. h3 .

Enthusiasts of sacred geometry may investigate the mystical properties
of this four-triangle (plus h0) labeling.

For a less mystical approach to the 2011 Yu-Oh illustration, see . . .

Friday, March 21, 2025

Wag The Tag

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 12:43 pm

Two posts from the date below in an image from today's
previous post have now also been tagged Congregated Light.

Conway Scenic Locomotion

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — m759 @ 5:07 am

 

See as well Conway and Congregated Light  . . .

and, for Hotel New Hampshire  fans,
Conway Scenic Railroad . . .

Thursday, May 16, 2024

Cube Geometry

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 3:54 pm

From a search in this journal for Kochen

Related material — Hitchcock in this journal and Mermin Pentagrams on the Web.

Monday, April 13, 2020

Cubes and Axes

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 12:55 pm

See also this  journal on November 29, 2011 —The Flight from Ennui.

Related illustration from earlier in 2011 —

See also this  journal on 20 Sept. 2011 — Relativity Problem Revisited —
as well as other posts tagged Congregated Light.

Sunday, February 20, 2005

Sunday February 20, 2005

Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: , , , — m759 @ 2:20 pm

Relativity Blues

Today, February 20, is the 19th anniversary of my note The Relativity Problem in Finite Geometry.  Here is some related material.

In 1931, the Christian writer Charles Williams grappled with the theology of time, space, free will, and the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics (anticipating by many years the discussion of this topic by physicists beginning in the 1950's).

(Some pure mathematics — untainted by physics or theology — that is nevertheless related, if only by poetic analogy, to Williams's 1931 novel, Many Dimensions, is discussed in the above-mentioned note and in a generalization, Solomon's Cube.)

On the back cover of Williams's 1931 novel, the current publisher, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company of Grand Rapids, Michigan, makes the following statement:

"Replete with rich religious imagery, Many Dimensions explores the relation between predestination and free will as it depicts different human responses to redemptive transcendence."

One possible response to such statements was recently provided in some detail by a Princeton philosophy professor.  See On Bullshit, by Harry G. Frankfurt, Princeton University Press, 2005.

A more thoughtful response would take into account the following:

1. The arguments presented in favor of philosopher John Calvin, who discussed predestination, in The Death of Adam: Essays on Modern Thought, by Marilynne Robinson

2. The physics underlying Einstein's remarks on free will, God, and dice
 
3. The physics underlying Rebecca Goldstein's novel Properties of Light and Paul Preuss's novels  Secret Passages and Broken Symmetries

4. The physics underlying the recent so-called "free will theorem" of John Conway and Simon Kochen of Princeton University

5. The recent novel Gilead, by Marilynne Robinson, which deals not with philosophy, but with lives influenced by philosophy — indirectly, by the philosophy of the aforementioned John Calvin.

From a review of Gilead by Jane Vandenburgh:  

"In The Death of Adam, Robinson shows Jean Cauvin to be the foremost prophet of humanism whose Protestant teachings against the hierarchies of the Roman church set in motion the intellectual movements that promoted widespread literacy among the middle and lower classes, led to both the American and French revolutions, and not only freed African slaves in the United States but brought about suffrage for women. It's odd then that through our culture's reverse historicism, the term 'Calvinism' has come to mean 'moralistic repression.'"

For more on what the Calvinist publishing firm Eerdmans calls "redemptive transcendence," see various July 2003 Log24.net entries.  If these entries include a fair amount of what Princeton philosophers call bullshit, let the Princeton philosophers meditate on the summary of Harvard philosophy quoted here on November 5 of last year, as well as the remarks of November 5, 2003,  and those of November 5, 2002.

From Many Dimensions (Eerdmans paperback, 1963, page 53):

"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?"

A recent answer:

Modal Theology

"We symbolize logical necessity
with the box (box.gif (75 bytes))
and logical possibility
with the diamond (diamond.gif (82 bytes))."

Keith Allen Korcz,
(Log24.net, 1/25/05)

And what do we           
   symbolize by  The image “http://www.log24.com/theory/images/Modal-diamondbox.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors. ?

"The possibilia that exist,
and out of which
the Universe arose,
are located in
     a necessary being…."

Michael Sudduth,
Notes on
God, Chance, and Necessity
by Keith Ward,
Regius Professor of Divinity
at Christ Church College, Oxford
(the home of Lewis Carroll)

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