One of the challenges posed by a multi-year blog is locating interesting old posts. One of my frequent early topics was "poems starring mathematicians" and I offer links to several of these from 2011 below:
December 8 "Monsieur Probability" by Brian McCabe
November 13 My abecedarian poems, "I Know a Mathematician" and "Mathematician"
July 5 "Fixed Points" by Susan Case -- about mathematicians in Poland during WWII
July 2 "To Myself" by Abba Kovner
January 30 "Mr Glusenkamp," a sonnet to a geometry teacher by Ronald Wallace
January 28 "Mathematician" by Sherman K Stein
And, here is a link, via PoemHunter.com to "The Mathematician in Love," a poem by William John Macquorn Rankine, a poem that appears also in the multi-variable anthology, Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics (AK Peters, 2008), edited by Sarah Glaz and me. Here is the first (of 8) stanza of Rankine's entertaining poem:
A mathematician fell madly in love
With a lady, young, handsome, and charming:
By angles and ratios harmonic he strove
Her curves and proportions all faultless to prove.
As he scrawled hieroglyphics alarming.
Showing posts with label Sherman Stein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sherman Stein. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 11, 2017
Sunday, October 6, 2013
Measuring the World . . .
Yesterday afternoon, at the Goethe Institut in Washington DC, I saw a wonderful film, "Measuring the World." Based on a popular 2005 novel by Daniel Kehlmann, the story of a friendship between preeminent German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855) and Prussian naturalist Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859). The film offers a delightful interplay of personalities and ideas as it darts between the explorations of these two men -- one digging inside his head for mathematics and the other traveling over mountains, through jungles, across oceans.
Labels:
Alexander von Humboldt,
Carl Friedrich Gauss,
exploration,
film,
mathematics,
poem,
Sherman Stein,
sum
Friday, June 7, 2013
A Man-Made Universe and "found" poems
Some poems are found rather than crafted.
It's such fun -- can happen to anyone --
to be reading along and find a poem.
It's such fun -- can happen to anyone --
to be reading along and find a poem.
This post continues (from the June 4 posting) consideration of lines that were not initially written as poetry but have been later discovered to have the desirable characteristics of a poem.
In an early-April posting I offered a poem-in-a-photo, a poem created of book spines -- and the bottom book in my pile of six is Mathematics, the Man-Made Universe: an Introduction to the Spirit of Mathematics by Sherman K Stein (Third Edition, Freeman, 1976). Reprinted in 2010 in paperback format, Stein's textbook -- for a "general reader," a curious person who is not a mathematician -- has been on my shelf for many years and, though I never taught from it, I have enjoyed it and shared it with friends (and I love its title). Recently, in the opening paragraph of Stein's Chapter 19 (page 471), I found a poem:
Labels:
answers,
Descartes,
fire,
found poem,
Greg Coxson,
Jorge Luis Borges,
mathematician,
mathematics,
questions,
river,
Sherman Stein,
tiger,
time,
universe
Saturday, February 12, 2011
Loving a mathematician (Valentine's Day and . . . )
A perfect way to celebrate Valentine's Day -- especially for you who enjoy mathematics -- read (aloud and to each other) some "poems of love and mathematics." Such is easily possible, for the anthology, Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics (A K Peters, 2008), edited by Sarah Glaz and me, contains words on the topic by more than 150 poetic voices.
Labels:
cardioid,
circle,
Hannah Stein,
irrational,
love,
mathematician,
mathematics,
pi,
poetry,
Sherman Stein,
square root,
Valentine
Friday, January 28, 2011
Poems starring mathematicians - 8
Even though Johnny Depp played a mathematician in his recent film, The Tourist, we don't learn much about what mathematicians think or do from that story. Poetry offers more insight. Mathematician and writer Sherman Stein gives us this portrayal:
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