Philip Wexler plays with the terminology of calculus in this poem:
The Calculus of Ants on a Worm
Swarming tiny
bodies nibble
away, no limits,
Showing posts with label Cabin Fever. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cabin Fever. Show all posts
Sunday, August 8, 2010
Saturday, July 31, 2010
What nobody else has thought
Albert Szent-Gyorgyi (1893-1986) was a Hungarian Biochemist who discovered Vitamin C and won the 1937 Nobel Prize for Medicine. Szent-Gyorgi offered this summary of the research process: discovery is seeing what everyone has seen and thinking what noone else has thought. Mathematicians and poets join research scientists in that quest to see and say something new. I was reminded of Szent-Gyorgyi's view when I read this little poem, "The Roasted Swan Sings," by Mark Baechtel in the anthology, Cabin Fever (WordWorks, 2003):
Labels:
arrow,
axis,
Cabin Fever,
Carmina Burana,
discovery,
Mark Baechtel,
mathematician,
research,
Szent-Gyorgyi,
WordWorks
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