Separatrix:
From "Core Curriculum Vocabulary," Log24, July 5, 2014 . . .
Stephen King, Archimedes, and Daisy Buchanan —
Unitrix:
From the 2022 sequel to "365 Days" and "365 Days: This Day" —
Related literary symbolism —
8/2
* See Kipnis in this journal. For instance . . .
The trait of Derrida is mentioned also in
the paper from yesterday's Gefüge post.
Architectural theorist Jeffrey Kipnis in 1991, recalled here in 2015 —
For the source of the illustration, see Hexagram 14.
The McCormack of the title is the current owner
and editor-in-chief of The New Republic .
Note the separatrix between
Stoppard and Nichols.
Related cleavage art —
Alternate title: Art for Suckers.
"The number THREE is the formula of creation"
— From a novel by Balzac
See as well last midnight's "The Separatrix: 6/2."
The previous post, "Ask a Stupid Question,"
suggests some vocabulary review —
Let's not forget the slash ("rift," in the terminology of
the previous post) separating numerator from denominator.
See Separatrix in this journal.
— Jeffrey Kipnis, "Twisting the Separatrix"
Assemblage No. 14 (Apr., 1991), pp. 30-61
Published by: The MIT Press
Article Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3171098
Separatrix and Mulligan
An image from this journal on September 16, 2013:
Mulligan:
“A mulligan, in a game, happens when a player gets a second chance
to perform a certain move or action.” — Wikipedia
New York Times obituary for Richard Mellon Scaife:
“He had the caricatured look of a jovial billionaire promoting ‘family values’
in America: a real-life Citizen Kane with red cheeks, white hair, blue eyes and
a wide smile for the cameras. Friends called him intuitive but not intellectual.
He told Vanity Fair his favorite TV show was ‘The Simpsons,’ and his favorite
book was John O’Hara’s Appointment in Samarra , about a rich young
Pennsylvanian bent on self-destruction.” — Robert D. McFadden
Click image below for some nuclear family values in memory of Scaife:
See also the previous post,
Core Curriculum.
“… near-death experiences have all the
hallmarks of mystical experience…”
— “Bolt from the Blue,” by Oliver Sacks
(See “Annals of Consciousness,” June 20, 2014)
The late Charles Barsotti once “worked for Kansas City-based
Hallmark Cards,” according to an obituary.
See also Mad Day.
Some related deconstructive criticism:
Two links from the above post —
Gamalog and Separatrix.
The latter word has a technical meaning in mathematics.
It also has a non-technical meaning, as explained below.
The comparison of Derrida to Holmes is of course ridiculous
(like the rest of the Kipnis essay). For Moriarty, see (for instance)
"We've lost the plot!" (Feb. 27, 2008).
In which Plato continues to thank the Academy.
From the Academy, a lead balloon for 9/11 —
continued from March First, 2002.
A search today for the name Eisenman
(see previous post) yields the following :
"We need a cameo from Plato, a safecracker,
a wrinkle or two to be ironed out, some ice,
some diamonds, and, above all, laughter
for this irony of ironies."
— Jeffrey Kipnis, "Twisting the Separatrix,"
Assemblage No. 14, April 1991, MIT Press
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