Log24

Saturday, September 30, 2023

The Algorithm and Mrs. Davis

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — m759 @ 8:39 am

On the recent Peacock series "Mrs. Davis" —

"The algorithm is known as Mrs. Davis and is
the all-seeing, all-knowing, not-quite-all-merciful
manifestation of artificial intelligence to whom
humanity has plighted its troth in this eight-part
manifestation of real intelligence from creators 
Tara Hernandez and Damon Lindelof."
— John Anderson in The Wall Street Journal ,
    Tuesday, April 18, 2023

For The Algorithm , see last evening's Michaelmas post and . . .

For a different Mrs. Davis,  see  . . .

From Tom McCarthy's review yesterday of The Maniac , a novel about 1940s social life at Los Alamos —

"The mathematician Martin Davis’s wife, Lydia, storms out of a Trinity dinner party, condemning the men’s failure to fully take on board the consequences of their atom splitting. Besides sharing her name with our own age’s great translator of Blanchot and Proust, this Lydia Davis is a textile artist — a hanging detail that points back toward the novel’s many looms and weavings.

For the Greeks, the fates spinning the threads of human lives were female (as Conrad knew, recasting them as Belgian secretaries in 'Heart of Darkness'). So was Theseus’ wool-ball navigator, Ariadne. And so, too, was the Ithacan ur-weaver Penelope, whose perpetual making and unraveling of her tapestry beat Gödel to an incompleteness theory by thousands of years.

'Text,' by the way, means something woven, from which we get 'textile.' It might just be that Penelope was not only testing her own version of the ontological limit, but also embedding it — in absent form, a hole — within the weft and warp of what we would eventually call the novel."

Martin Davis reportedly died this year on New Year's Day.

This  journal on that date —

Thursday, August 17, 2023

Gathering Moss

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 6:28 am

"Formed in 1962, Alpert and Moss’ A&M (named after their initials)
label’s quarter-plus century run included some major blockbuster
albums, including Carole King’s Tapestry, Peter Frampton’s Frampton
Comes Alive!
, and Alpert’s own Whipped Cream & Other Delights."

— BY ALTHEA LEGASPI  August 16, 2023 

See as well "Report from Clouded Mountain" (Log24, June 8, 2023).

Wednesday, November 16, 2022

“A wondrous woven magic” — Song lyric

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 12:17 pm

Tuesday, July 19, 2022

Two for the Undercroft

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 7:54 pm

From The New York Times  this afternoon —

Transylvania III, a 1973 tapestry made of horsehair and goat hair.

Backstory —

Monday, March 21, 2016

A Fixed Feast

Filed under: General — m759 @ 10:08 pm

See as well some posts related in time and in space.

Friday, February 5, 2016

Death on New Year’s Day

Filed under: General,Geometry — m759 @ 11:20 am

From the American Mathematical Society today

Jean Pedersen (1934-2016) 
Friday February 5th 2016

Jean Pedersen died January 1 at the age of 81.
She was a longtime member of the faculty at
Santa Clara University. Pedersen and Peter Hilton
co-authored A Mathematical Tapestry: Demonstrating
the Beautiful Unity of Mathematics 
, which used paper
folding to show connections between geometry,
number theory, and group theory. Pedersen was an
AMS member since 1979.

Related art —

"Spiel ist nicht Spielerei" — Friedrich Fröbel

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Almost

Filed under: General — m759 @ 7:59 pm

Todd Leopold at CNN today on a novel by
the late Gabriel García Márquez —

“…a tapestry of almost biblical proportions….”

See also Sermon (Sunday, March 6. 2011).

Sunday, July 28, 2002

Sunday July 28, 2002

Filed under: General — m759 @ 3:07 pm

Keats and the Web

From a letter of John Keats on the Web:

“There is the passage in a famous letter of John Keats, 19th February, 1818:

Now it appears to me that almost any Man may like the spider spin from his own inwards his own airy Citadel — the points of leaves and twigs on which the spider begins her work are few, and she fills the air with a beautiful circuiting. Man should be content with as few points to tip with the fine Web of his Soul, and weave a tapestry empyrean full of symbols for his spiritual eye, of softness for his spiritual touch, of space for his wandering, of distinctness for his luxury.”

This seems not unrelated to the observations below on commonplace books and Web logs. 

Powered by WordPress