Some of the richness of a poem comes from the multiple meanings available for the poet's words. We read "line" and think of the geometric straight thing and of the type of work a person does and of a particular list of products and . . . . For mathematicians, a given term may have a precise mathematical specification that trumps all the others. (See, for example, the discussion of "random" in the 5 December 2012 posting.)
A math term that especially interests me poetically is "identity." One has a unique "identity" and experiences "identity theft" or an "identity crisis" -- each time I hear the word my cross-referencing brain links to the mathematical notion of identity. In the integers, the element zero, 0, is an identity for addition since 0 added to any integer produces no change. Likewise, 1 is an identity for multiplication since 1 multiplied by any integer produces no change.
Showing posts with label Jerome Rothenberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jerome Rothenberg. Show all posts
Sunday, December 9, 2012
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