tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4963606970537776518.post6266250733082571763..comments2024-03-14T14:39:45.804-04:00Comments on Intersections -- Poetry with Mathematics: Butterfly EffectsJoAnne Growneyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04654717097635624079noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4963606970537776518.post-30500434623947791802010-12-02T08:54:40.668-05:002010-12-02T08:54:40.668-05:00Thanks, Francisco, for this contribution.
Indeed ...Thanks, Francisco, for this contribution. <br />Indeed I too have wondered about the number of butterfly-effect poems; perhaps it is like this: since there are at least two from Eastern Pennsylvania, there may be two hundred in the US and two thousand in the world.JoAnne Growneyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04654717097635624079noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4963606970537776518.post-27131228355171637232010-12-02T08:23:52.076-05:002010-12-02T08:23:52.076-05:00I suppose there is enough material and it would be...I suppose there is enough material and it would be quite interesting to have an anthology on Poetry & the Butterfly Effect.<br />I can think of one other poem at least on the subject:<br /><br />Fatal Consequences by Roger McGough:<br /><br />I don't believe that one about the butterfly -<br />The air displaced by the fluttering<br />of its wings in Brazil<br />causing a tidal wave in Bangladesh.<br /><br />Mind you,<br />The day after I shook out<br />a tablecloth on the patio<br />there was an earthquake in Mexico.<br /><br />(Or was it the other way round?)<br /><br />R. M., CBE, comes from Liverpool, UK, where he was born in 1937.He presents the BBC Radio 4 programme Poetry Please.f j craveiro de carvalhonoreply@blogger.com