When I have a bit of extra time, it is fun for me to visit Twitter (my postings may be found as JoAnne Growney @MathyPoems) and to find introductions to lots of interesting topics in math and poetry -- and to lots of brief poems. Recently I came upon the following post by Algebra Etc. @AlgebraFact.
Showing posts with label Pythagoras. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pythagoras. Show all posts
Saturday, May 29, 2021
Sunday, December 20, 2015
Who put the pie in Pythagoras?
Irish poet and physicist Iggy McGovern
has written both humorous and serious verse. Today we have lines from him that startle and amuse -- below I present, with his permission, selections from his collection Safe House (Dedalus Press, 2010). Here are "Belfast Inequalities" and "Proverbs for the Computer Age":
Belfast Inequalities by Iggy McGovern
for Master Devlin
Who put the pie in Pythagoras,
who put the bra in algebra
and who was the first to say: Let x
be that unknown quantity in sex?
the answer's in some chromosome
and not the sums you do at home
Belfast Inequalities by Iggy McGovern
for Master Devlin
Who put the pie in Pythagoras,
who put the bra in algebra
and who was the first to say: Let x
be that unknown quantity in sex?
the answer's in some chromosome
and not the sums you do at home
Labels:
algebra,
blog,
geek,
Iggy McGovern,
inequalities,
proverbs,
Pythagoras
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Stars and men revolve in a cycle . . .
In a book-discussion group in which I participate, we are reading some of the short fiction of Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986) and that reading has provoked me to dive again into my copy of his Selected Poems (Ed. Alexander Coleman, Penguin, 1999). Here is one of Borges' poems that uses terminology from mathematics:
The Cyclical Night by Jorge Luis Borges
tr. Alistair Reid (1926-2014)
to Sylvina Bullrich
They knew it, the fervent pupils of Pythagoras:
That stars and men revolve in a cycle,
That fateful atoms will bring back the vital
Gold Aphrodite, Thebans, and agoras.
The Cyclical Night by Jorge Luis Borges
tr. Alistair Reid (1926-2014)
to Sylvina Bullrich
They knew it, the fervent pupils of Pythagoras:
That stars and men revolve in a cycle,
That fateful atoms will bring back the vital
Gold Aphrodite, Thebans, and agoras.
Labels:
Alistair Reed,
cycle,
endless,
fraction,
Jorge Luis Borges,
periodic,
poem,
Pythagoras,
rotation,
square
Monday, June 13, 2011
Stanescu - poetic mathematics
Today I found a link to a recent article, "Matematica şi poezia," that considers commonalities among the arts and mathematics and, therein, mentions a poem by Nichita Stanescu (1933-1984) which Gabriel Prajitura and I have translated. The poem, "Poetic Mathematics," is dedicated to Romanian mathematician Solomon Marcus. Here is Gabi's and my translation:
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Troubles with math, expressed poetically
Should I admit that I sometimes feel a bit of resentment toward people who are insistently articulate about their difficulties with mathematics? As if that good energy might be turned toward learning the subject they decry.
On the whole, though, it seems better to face the fact that we folks who speak the language of mathematics are the odd ones. Here are perceptive trouble-with-math poems by John Stone (1936-2008), who wrote as a parent trying to help with homework, and Elizabeth Savage, who compares a pair of differently-able friends.
On the whole, though, it seems better to face the fact that we folks who speak the language of mathematics are the odd ones. Here are perceptive trouble-with-math poems by John Stone (1936-2008), who wrote as a parent trying to help with homework, and Elizabeth Savage, who compares a pair of differently-able friends.
Labels:
count,
cubes,
differences,
divide,
Elizabeth Savage,
homework,
John Stone,
math,
mathematics,
new math,
poetry,
polynomials,
Pythagoras,
squares
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Digital poetry -- Stephanie Strickland et al
Stephanie Strickland writes with mastery of numbers, as we see in her poem below. But numbers are only the beginning of her work. A director of the Electronic Poetry Association and author of "Born Digital," Strickland is one of the leaders in the development of new types of poems that are constructed using animation and rearrangements and other visual and aural communications made possible by computers and the internet.
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