Log24

Friday, February 6, 2026

Innie-Outie . . .  Continues.

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — m759 @ 12:34 am

For the title, see http://m759.net/wordpress/?s=Inner+Outer .

Earlier . . .

Tonight . . .

"Between aliens and music . . . ."
or "Between a rock and a hard place."

From Appalachian Theology (March 20, 2025) —

"A key concept in Augustine's great
The City of God  is that the Christian church
is superior and essentially alien
to its earthly surroundings."

— David Van Biema in Time Magazine
(May 2, 2005, p. 43)

Close Encounter at Devil's Tower

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Metadata for Jula . . .

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 12:02 pm

And for The Futterman Files . . .

Floor Show

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — m759 @ 9:34 am

http://www.log24.com/log/pix10B/101027-LangerSymbolicLogic.jpg

Related reading from http://m759.net/wordpress/?s=Hot+Wife

From Tom McCarthy's review 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."

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