⊢ "There's just an empty space"
— "Against All Odds" song lyric
Illustration . . .
https://cage.ugent.be/geometry/links.php —
* For the turnstile symbol itself, see Wikipedia.
⊢ "There's just an empty space"
— "Against All Odds" song lyric
Illustration . . .
https://cage.ugent.be/geometry/links.php —
* For the turnstile symbol itself, see Wikipedia.
Prologue — "Teaching a brick to sing"
The teacher . . . Emily Blunt in "Fall Guy" . . .
Vide her karaoke version of "Take a Look at Me Now."
. . . A Sequel to "Unknown" . . .
"Be on the lookout for
Annie Dillard's sequel to
Teaching a Stone to Talk, titled
Teaching a Brick to Sing."
William Butler Yeats —
"Poets and Wits about him drew;
'What then?' sang Plato's ghost.
'What then?'
'The work is done,'
grown old he thought,
'According to my boyish plan;
Let the fools rage,
I swerved in naught,
Something to perfection brought';
But louder sang that ghost,
'What then?'"
Duet
Scarlett Johansson —
"Let's give 'em somethin'
(Saturday Night Live, Plato's ghost —
"The clothes she wears,
She's a brick… house…
Shake it down, |
Birthdate of Hermann Weyl
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Result of a Google search.
Category: Science > Math > Algebra > Group Theory
Weyl, H.: Symmetry. |
Sponsored Link
Symmetry Puzzle
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Quotation from Weyl's Symmetry:
"Symmetry is a vast subject, significant in art and nature. Mathematics lies at its root, and it would be hard to find a better one on which to demonstrate the working of the mathematical intellect."
In honor of Princeton University, of Sylvia Nasar (see entries of Nov, 6), of the Presbyterian Church (see entry of Nov. 8), and of Professor Weyl (whose work partly inspired the website Diamond Theory), this site's background music is now Pink Floyd's
"Shine On, You Crazy Diamond."
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Updates of Friday, November 15, 2002:
In order to clarify the meaning of "Shine" and "Crazy" in the above, consult the following —
To accompany this detailed exegesis of Pink Floyd, click here for a reading by Marlon Brando.
For a related educational experience, see pages 126-127 of The Book of Sequels, by Henry Beard, Christopher Cerf, Sarah Durkee, and Sean Kelly (Random House paperback, 1990).
Speaking of sequels, be on the lookout for Annie Dillard's sequel to Teaching a Stone to Talk, titled Teaching a Brick to Sing.
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