Friday, February 13, 2026
The previous post — "Cube Space" — and today's date
suggest a review of the 13 symmetry axes of the cube.
Related geometry —
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By NotebookLM today —
Symmetry in Finite Geometry and Combinatorial Design
The provided sources explore the mathematical and artistic intersections of finite geometry, specifically focusing on the Cullinane diamond theorem and its square-based representations of PG(3,2). By utilizing 4×4 and 4×6 arrays, these works illustrate how combinatorial designs, such as Latin squares and Miracle Octad Generators, relate to highly symmetric structures like the Mathieu group M24 and the binary Golay code. The texts demonstrate that properties of symmetry, such as the affine group AGL(4,2), govern both abstract group theory and visual patterns found in puzzles, quilt designs, and sphere packings. This framework extends into coding theory and quantum mechanics, where geometric "bricks" and "lines" help simplify the analysis of complex lattices and error-correcting systems. Ultimately, the collection bridges rigorous algebraic abstraction with interactive visualization, showing that the logic of finite space underpins both mathematical truth and aesthetic form.
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Theorem:
Some large natural symmetry groups of the sets of 8, 16, 32, or 64 points
in Euclidean space that are located at the vertices of a cube in 3, 4, 5. or 6
dimensions are generated by, respectively, arbitrary permutations of
parallel edges or parallel faces or parallel cubes or parallel hypercubes .
(For an example, see Diamond Theory in 1937.)
Illustration of related group actions:

Thursday, February 12, 2026
See as well Peplowski in this journal.

"Suggest an improvement to earn IQ" . . .
Update at 9:06 AM EST —

A search this morning for "SourceForge logo" led to a podcast featuring
a website-creation company that offers the following "agency" template —
A fictional "forward-thinking" brand . . .
* Vide other posts so tagged.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
From the target of the "Artistic Style" link above . . .
For another meditation on a "marriage of math and physics," see other
posts tagged Cartier Wedding.
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
"… fertile ideas regarding the nature of space and symmetries . . . ."

Blue-Black Lyrics
Speak, Memory
A 1956 passage by Robert Silverberg—
"There was something in the heart of the diamond—
not the familiar brown flaw of the others, but something
of a different color, something moving and flickering.
Before my eyes, it changed and grew.
And I saw what it was. It was the form of a girl—
a woman, rather, a voluptuous, writhing nude form
in the center of the gem. Her hair was a lustrous blue-black,
her eyes a piercing ebony. She was gesturing to me,
holding out her hands, incredibly beckoning from within
the heart of the diamond."
The Day I Turned 14:
The Chicago Hangover

Monday, February 9, 2026
The natural symmetry group of the 16 vertices of a tesseract
is generated by arbitrary permutations of parallel faces and
is of order 322,560.
(This is an abstract version of the Cullinane diamond theorem.)
For the corresponding cube theorem, see Cube Space.
Some backstory . . .

"Shawn’s characters ponder the preprogrammed compulsions
to fall in and out of love, to be overwhelmed by and then lose
all desire,
'to use the tiny, pitiful words that the creature uses
to point to invisible parts of itself, invisible parts
that grow so vast that they turn us inside out and
then swallow us up and eat us.' "
— www.nytimes.com/2026/02/08/t-magazine/wallace-shawn.html
A less "tiny, pitiful" word . . . "inscape" in this journal.
Sunday, February 8, 2026
“There are dark comedies. There are screwball comedies.
But there aren’t many dark screwball comedies.
And if Nora Ephron’s Lucky Numbers is any indication,
there’s a good reason for that.”
— Todd Anthony, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
"Now he believed that where there was a key,
there must also be a lock…."
— The Brothers Grimm
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From The Golden Key by George MacDonald
"We must find the country from which the shadows come," said Mossy.
"We must, dear Mossy," responded Tangle. "What if your golden key should be the key to it?"
"Ah! that would be grand," returned Mossy.
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"Before time began . . . ." — Optimus Prime
For the above K-Pop date [ Sept. 19, 2022 ] in this journal
see the Cube Codes posts.
A less Pop approach to cube codes —

From The Daily Beast . . .
"The Story Behind the Plot Twists on Netflix’s Best Drama:
The creator and showrunner of 'The Diplomat' talks to Obsessed
about the biggest twists in the new season."
By Sophie Brookover
Published Oct. 27 2025 11:12 AM EDT

In this journal, "e" often signifies "Einheit,"
German for "identity" in algebra.
And then there is the identity of one
Michael Harris . . .
From yesterday's post "Lowell Space" —
A Song for Harris to Sing
I prefer Kerouac.
Saturday, February 7, 2026
"… enclosed in a bubble wrap of darkness and hatred and resentment"
— Rahm Emanuel, according to Maureen Dowd today .
I prefer Nathalie Emmanuel.

Related reading from http://m759.net/wordpress/?s=Hot+Wife —
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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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"A Hanging Detail" — 1531*
* This "Wolf Hall" year was suggested by the 15:31 time-remaining data above.
260207-DJ_School-AI_Overview-Piano_Man-quote.jpg
* Cf. https://m759.net/wordpress/?p=866 .
Friday, February 6, 2026
From a post of February 9, 2007 —
From Facebook yesterday…
Doubledoublebb lipsyncs "Stupid Cupid" —

Detail —

"Put the candle BACK!"
From other posts now tagged Severance —
“… There was a problem laid out on the board, a six-mover.
I couldn’t solve it, like a lot of my problems. I reached down
and moved a knight…. I looked down at the chessboard.
The move with the knight was wrong. I put it back where
I had moved it from. Knights had no meaning in this game.
It wasn’t a game for knights.”
— Raymond Chandler, The Big Sleep
Evolution of an image . . .
( Not to be confused with The Tin Man’s Hat. )
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From the monograph preprint Diamond Theory (1976) —
(See pages 2 and 3 of the monograph.)
The above theorem underlies a revised anatomy of the Fano plane . . .
The fundamental theorem, expounded further in a 2001 web page, also
underlies the "seventh seal" derived from Peter J. Cameron's 1976 book
Parallelisms of Complete Designs — a representation of the 105 lines of the
Klein Quadric in PG(5,2) as the 105 partitions of an 8-set into four 2-sets.
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)
Thursday, February 5, 2026
* Cf. Anselm, De Veritate .
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Undirty Dancing . . .
Baby in a Corner
Less Undirty . . .
Attitude of Gratitude

Related reading from http://m759.net/wordpress/?s=Hot+Wife —
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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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Tuesday, February 3, 2026
♫ Und der Haifisch, der hat Zähne . . . .
260203-Surreal-Three-Dog-Memorial.jpg

Monday, February 2, 2026
"Across the page the symbols moved in grave morrice,
in the mummery of their letters, wearing quaint caps of
squares and cubes. Give hands, traverse, bow to partner:
so: imps of fancy of the Moors. Gone too from the world,
Averroes and Moses Maimonides, dark men in mien and
movement, flashing in their mocking mirrors the obscure
soul of the world, a darkness shining in brightness which
brightness could not comprehend." — James Joyce
The date November 30, 2014, in a Harvard Crimson story yesterday
suggests some posts from that date now tagged Strand Flake.
Also so tagged . . .

Sunday, February 1, 2026
"Should we arbitrate life and death
at a round table or a square one?"
— Wislawa Szymborska
Vide the geometry in
a post from last summer.
Illustration of a title by George Mackey
"Should we arbitrate life and death
at a round table or a square one?"
— Wislawa Szymborska
Saturday, January 31, 2026
Synchronology check — Nov. 21, 2018 —

See as well this journal on the above Tsinghua date, 2025-11-17 . . .
♫ "When logic and proportion
Have fallen sloppy dead
And the White Knight is talking backwards…."

*
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(And “Simple, Earnest” James Joyce)
Friday, January 30, 2026
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https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=825068717111731 —
From "All Creatures Great and Small" S6 E3 —
A seminar room window at Harvard in today's online Crimson —

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Deadline yesterday reporting a January 28 death —
". . . 'remembered as a legend of Hollywood publicity,
one who helped define the role . . . .'"
This journal on January 28 —
Earlier in this journal . . .

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Definition
* See the term "Waymark" in this journal.
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Thursday, January 29, 2026
Comments Off on Wag the Tag: Kidshapes
From a Jan. 27 post —
The Hustvedt title "Dance Around the Self" suggests
a review of other posts now tagged Jung Diamonds.
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Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Update at 11:19 PM EST —

Comments Off on “Techniques and Tips”
Comments Off on “Experiential Ideation” *
From the star of Swimming with Sharks today . . .
260128-Branding-agency-featuring-Kiernan_Shipka-navel-pic.jpg
260126-Innie-Outie-Kiernan-Shipka-LA-Times-detail.jpg
Earlier . . .

Comments Off on For Your Consideration: California Navel-Gaze . . .
Art by Marcela Nowak, Performance by Kiernan Shipka
260128-Crary_Art-Philadelphia_Dawn-photo-date-
synchronology-check-Maltese_Parrot.jpg —
Also on May 23, 2024 . . .

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Comments Off on Annals of Popular Culture:
PopCult for Quine*
"A 2012 story in the East Bay Express of Oakland, Calif.,
described Mr. Legend as 'a living nexus of pop culture.'"
— New York Times report tonight of a Jan. 2 death.
See also this journal on Jan. 2.
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Tuesday, January 27, 2026
260127-Mozart's_Birthday-Eagles-lyric.jpg
— "This could be heaven or this could be . . . ."
— "Sunset Boulevard?"

Comments Off on YouTube Reverie
260127-Elliott_Smith-memorial-mural-in-LA.jpg
In 2004 —
See as well this journal on the above upload date, 7 August 2010 —
The Matrix Reloaded, Camp Inception, Rift Designs .
Comments Off on Annals of Cultural Appropriation:
Waymark for Erewhon
"the reflection in the water showed an iron man"
is the line of verse by Elliott Smith that lay hidden
in a fold of cloth on the breast of Soundwavesoffwax
in an Instagram post yesterday.
Related meditation —
Tony Stark in The Avengers , May the Fourth, 2012
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Monday, January 26, 2026
* Related material — The black shirt above, and Elliott Smith.
From https://genius.com/artists/Elliott-smith —
" Smith is best-known for 'Miss Misery', his Oscar-nominated
contribution to the Good Will Hunting soundtrack, and XO’s
addictive and gorgeous family tension meditation, 'Waltz #2'."
Comments Off on For Your Consideration:
Multispeech Illustrated*
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We are born with the dead:
See, they return, and bring us with them.
The moment of the rose and the moment of the yew-tree
Are of equal duration. A people without history
Is not redeemed from time, for history is a pattern
Of timeless moments. So, while the light fails
On a winter's afternoon, in a secluded chapel
History is now and England.
With the drawing of this Love and the voice of this Calling
We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.
Through the unknown, unremembered gate
When the last of earth left to discover
Is that which was the beginning;
At the source of the longest river
The voice of the hidden waterfall
And the children in the apple-tree
Not known, because not looked for
But heard, half-heard, in the stillness
Between two waves of the sea.
Quick now, here, now, always–
A condition of complete simplicity
(Costing not less than everything)
And all shall be well and
All manner of thing shall be well
When the tongues of flames are in-folded
Into the crowned knot of fire
And the fire and the rose are one.
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* A post from Dec. 3, 2023, that was saved as a draft and
apparently future-dated to today —whether by mistake or not,
I do not know — and appeared to me this (Monday) evening.
Comments Off on Sunday Evening*
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The "Gray Lotus" octad within the Miracle Octad Generator
(MOG) framework of Robert T. Curtis might be called, for
fans of Freemasonry, The Twin Pillars.

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Comments Off on About Last Night . . .
White Dot Award!
Sunday, January 25, 2026
From posts tagged Art Space —
From Instagram today —
From posts tagged Tools —

Comments Off on Palette Portrait
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Comments Off on For Your Consideration:
The Hollywood Pronoun Problem
From a search in this journal for Moon Knight —

Comments Off on ♫ “We are all just prisoners here
of our own device.”
Saturday, January 24, 2026
From the current New Yorker,
a link for Katherine Neville —
https://www.newyorker.com/cartoon/a25783 .
Comments Off on Eightfold Cube AI Overview
From a search in this journal for "Abracadabra" . . .

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Friday, January 23, 2026
Comments Off on For the Portman* Files
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Related material . . .

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See as well this journal on October 11, 2003.
Comments Off on Waymarks
Comments Off on A Summerfield Waymark Prize:
MacLean for McLaren
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Sagan as Fagin —
An Arroway for Garroway
[A verse suggested by a Facebook post today . . .
"The cast of Sentimental Value all received
their first-ever Oscar nominations" . . .
and by the Jan. 22, 2026, New Yorker Cartoon of the Day.]

Comments Off on Annals of Hollywoodland
Comments Off on History for Beverly Hillbillies
"A witch hiding a dangerous secret is thrust
into an elite magical academy, where survival
means risking her life and her heart.
Dark secrets. Deadly choices. A destiny that
can’t be outrun. Welcome to Shadowcraft Academy."
— https://www.breannerandall.com/
The Source . . . A Titusville bookstore —
Other May Tricks —

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Shadowcraft Backstory
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"We keep coming back to the real . . . ." — Wallace Stevens
"Facets and labyrinths . . . ." — Nicole Kidman
Illustration — Biarritz Balcony Scene.
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Related reading for cultural historians — Quantum Lumps.
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Wednesday, January 21, 2026
From http://m759.net/wordpress/?s=Faustus —
Design from 1514
"One of those bells that now
and then rings" — Song lyric
From http://m759.net/wordpress/?tag=zauberberg —
From the Web today —

Comments Off on Thomas Mann’s High Concept:
Magic Square Meets Magic Mountain
Act purposefully! Think rationally!
Play IT as IT lays!
Related Reading —

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Likewise.com is now pix-media.com.
Adapted song lyric for Pennywise fans . . .
♫ "Floating . . . takes me away to where I'm going . . . ."
For a different, but not unrelated, Bellevue, see
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale and WAIS Blocks.
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The Source —

Comments Off on Sonic Shadow for a Stone Cold Fox
Comments Off on A Central Paradox
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Update:

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Swingin' with the old stars . . . .
Kissin' in the blue dark . . . .
— Song lines, Lana Del Rey

Comments Off on Where Credit Is Due
Comments Off on For Harlan Kane . . . Rosebud!
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