Log24

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

For Rilke’s Panther

Filed under: General — m759 @ 12:00 pm

The title refers to yesterday evening's remarks titled
"Free the Philosophical Beast" in The Stone , a NY Times  weblog. 

The January 2015 issue of the Notices of the American Mathematical Society
has an article by Michael J. Barany.  From November 2012 remarks
by Barany :

"A highlight of the workshop was Cathryn Carson’s interpretation
of the transcendental phenomenology and historicism of Husserl,
Heidegger, Cassirer, and a few others, launched from a moving
reflection on the experience of reading Kuhn."

See Carson's paper "Science as Instrumental Reason: Heidegger, Habermas,
Heisenberg," Continental Philosophy Review  (2010) 42483–509.

Related material: Monday's Log24 posts Rota on Husserl and Annals of Perception.

Friday, October 20, 2023

Artfield Invitation

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 7:47 pm

Last night's touching dialogue on "Loki" between Victor Timely and
Miss MInutes suggests a review of a recent rather one-sided conversation
of my own —

Thus far, there has been no reply.

The "Loki" dialogue above took place in Chicago, a town repeatedly
described by novelist Willard Motley as a "blue-black panther."

Perhaps the email addressee has in mind the sage advice of
Ogden Nash . . .

"If called by a panther, don't anther."

Saturday, February 11, 2023

Annals of Entertainment

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 12:13 am

The New York Times  on a set designer who
reportedly died at 83 on Monday (Feb. 6, 2023) —

"Adrian Hall, the founding artistic director,
brought him in as resident designer.
(Mr. Hall died on Feb. 4 in Van, Texas.)"

Hall was the founding artistic director of
Trinity Repertory Company, Providence, R.I.

Not-so-holy writ ….

Panthers — "Dimensions," Log24, Feb. 5, 2023.
Beast Belly — Tonight's previous post, "Gutter Mathematics."

Sunday, February 5, 2023

Dimensions

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — m759 @ 2:01 am

A Logo for Riri

The above Nick Romano passage is from Knock on Any Door,
a 1947 novel by Willard Motley.  Another Motley novel about
Chicago, from 1958 . . .

Let No Man Write My Epitaph

Page 41

The city was a blue-black panther that slunk along beside them. The tall, skyscraper night-grass hemmed them in. The thousand neon animal eyes watched their going.

Page 67

The blue-black panther of a city watched their going. The un- blinking neon animal eyes watched their going. Thousands of neon signs lit their way. In an alley behind West Madison Street half an

Page 68

hour before, a bum, drunk, had frozen to death lying in the back doorway of a pawnshop. The blue-black panther crouched over him.

Page 70

First the creak of ice as an automobile goes by. Then the frown into your room of the red brick building across the street, its windows frosted over like cold, unfriendly eyes. Then a bum stumbling along trying to keep warm. Now a drunk, unevenly. And the wind like the howling voice of the blue-black panther, hunting, finding. And the clanging of impersonal streetcars. And each bar of neon, cold, dead. No message. The clown takes his bow and it is Christmas Day.

Page 79

The blue-black panther followed them, sniffing at their heels.

Page 106

Above them the blue-black panther lay on the roof of a tenement house, its feline chin on the cornice, its yellow-green eyes staring down onto the black night street of Maxwell. Its tail, wagging slowly back and forth, was like a lasso, a noose, sending little shivers of pebbles rolling loosely across the roof.

Page 154

Then he went down to the Shillelagh Club. Through the pane, in the crowded, noisy place, he saw her. She was sitting at a table near the back, alone. Her cigarette had fallen from her lips and rolled away from her on the table top. It had burned itself to a long gray ash. Her head hung loosely on her neck as if she was asleep. A half-empty glass of beer was in front of her. Please, Mother, please come out, he prayed to her. And he stood next door to the tavern, waiting, his small shoulders drawn in, his head down in shame. And often he walked to the window and stood on tiptoe. She was still there. In the same position. He waited. He would be late to school tomorrow. He waited, keeping the long vigil. He waited. Twelve years old. And the thousand neon-animal eyes stared at him savagely. He waited. The blue-black panther lashed out its tail, flicking its furry tip against his ankles. He waited.

Page 250

Alongside the blue-black patrol wagon the blue-black panther walks majestically.

Page 262

Outside the door the blue-black panther rubs its back like a house cat.

Page 409

Nick held the cigarette listlessly. The smoke curled up his wrist and arm like a snake. The blue-black panther licked his hand.

Sunday, April 4, 2021

Dutch Logic

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:00 pm

This is from a book by five Dutch authors

See as well . . .

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Roman Road

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 8:18 pm

"All roads lead to Rome."

— Xi Jinping, President of the
People's Republic of China,
at Davos today

In memoriam  Harvard art historian
James S. Ackerman, who reportedly
died on New Year's Eve 2016 —

"Is this an obelisk* I see before me?" 
— Adapted from a play by William Shakespeare

* See the previous post and "The Cherished Gift."

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

At the Still Point

Filed under: General — m759 @ 9:29 pm

Then

And now.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Mathematics and Narrative (continued)

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 12:00 pm

In diamond-narrative news today…

IMAGE- Pink Panther actor dies at 95

"Among the low points of his career was his performance
in the disastrous 1985 remake of “King Solomon’s Mines….”

— David Belcher in today's online New York Times

Friday, April 6, 2007

Friday April 6, 2007

Filed under: General — m759 @ 2:56 pm
 Good Friday,
2:56:38 PM:

Fire Lake

Hexagram 38: Above, Fire; Below, Lake

Hexagram 38

Above, Fire;
Below, Lake

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