One of the great things about writing this blog is the people who have -- out of the blue and across the miles -- sent along a great poem or tidbit. One of the valuable contributors is Tim Love, a British computer guy and poet -- and also a blogger (at LitRefs). The mysterious concept of "Action at a Distance" drives this Love poem:
Showing posts with label Strange Attractors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Strange Attractors. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Attitudes of Numbers
I like Bruce Snider 's "The Certainty of Numbers" (which you may already have found online at The Poetry Foundation website, featured in the April 14 posting) even though I disagree with the initial attitude toward mathematics expressed by its narrator. Writing a poem can be a voyage of discovery with the narrator's view flexing as the poem progresses.
Snider's poem brings to mind a view of mathematics that repeatedly bothers me: I wonder why some people -- who would not complain about the fixendess of spellings of "cat" or "dog" or "sum" -- dislike mathematics for the so-called rigidity of arithmetic facts such as "2 + 4 = 6." ? ? ?
Snider's poem brings to mind a view of mathematics that repeatedly bothers me: I wonder why some people -- who would not complain about the fixendess of spellings of "cat" or "dog" or "sum" -- dislike mathematics for the so-called rigidity of arithmetic facts such as "2 + 4 = 6." ? ? ?
Monday, April 18, 2011
Teaching math with a poem
Sarah Glaz is an algebraist (University of Connecticut) who uses poetry to teach mathematics. At her web page, scroll down to "Recent Articles" to see titles and links to three such papers. One of the articles is "The Enigmatic Number e: A History in Verse and its Uses in the Mathematics Classroom" -- and it contains an annotated version of the poem whose opening stanzas are found below; it's found in the Digital Library of the Mathematical Association of America (MAA), Loci: Convergence (April 2010).
Labels:
base,
e,
Euler,
JoAnne Growney,
mathematics,
Napier,
natural logarithm,
poem,
poetry,
Sarah Glaz,
Strange Attractors
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
How much math does a math-poem need?
Poems offered in this blog vary in the levels of mathematics they contain. One mathematical reader commented privately that in some of the poems the use of mathematical terms is "purely decorative." Indeed, some people have particular expectations for poetry that relates to mathematics -- they want the content to use mathematical notation or to present a mathematical truth. Such as, perhaps, this abbreviated statement of the four-color theorem (formulated as a 4x4 square):
Labels:
curve,
diagonal,
four-color theorem,
John Vieira,
map,
mathematical,
mathematics,
poetry,
square,
Strange Attractors,
tallies,
vector
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Horizon line
Poet James Galvin often uses mathematical imagery in his poems.
Art Class by James Galvin
Let us begin with a simple line,
Drawn as a child would draw it,
To indicate the horizon,
Art Class by James Galvin
Let us begin with a simple line,
Drawn as a child would draw it,
To indicate the horizon,
Labels:
center,
geometry,
horizon,
James Galvin,
line,
mathematics,
poetry,
radius,
Strange Attractors
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Poetry with base 10
In his collection, Rational Numbers (Truman State, 2000) Harvey Hix presents "Orders of Magnitude" -- a collection of 100 stanzas in which each stanza has ten lines and each line has ten syllables. Beyond this numeric structure is frequent use of mathematical imagery; here are samples (stanzas 42 and 100):
Labels:
curvature,
decimal,
Euclid,
fractions,
Gauss,
H. L. Hix,
mathematics,
numbers,
orders of magnitude,
poetry,
rational,
Strange Attractors,
Truman State
Thursday, October 21, 2010
I miss you, Martin Gardner
Martin Gardner (1914-2010), featured also in my June 6 posting, would have been 96 years old today--October 21, 2010. All over the world lovers of mathematical puzzles have taken time today to celebrate Gardner's puzzling--and the ways it stimulated their own. Although Gardner disclaimed poetic gifts, he popularized puzzle poems written by others -- and he introduced the poetry strategies of the OULIPO (see March 25, August 5, and August 23 postings) to American readers. Here is a puzzle poem, by an unknown author, included in Gardner's Puzzles from Other Worlds (Vintage, 1984) and in Strange Attractors (A K Peters, 2008).
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Is mathematics discovered -- or invented?
The issue of whether mathematics is invented or discovered is posed often. Less frequently, queries as to where poetry falls in these categories. Perhaps individual answers to these questions depend on how each of us, from the inside, views the workings of the mind. Here we have, from poet (and math teacher) Amy Uyematsu,"The Invention of Mathematics."
Monday, July 12, 2010
Poetry-application of The Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic
Destructive effects of human greed and neglect on the earth's natural environment are echoed hauntingly in the repetitions within "We Are the Final Ones" -- a dirge-like poem I've constructed using the Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic. (For those unfamiliar with the theorem, brief explanation is included in paragraphs that follow the poem):
Monday, June 21, 2010
Poetry with mathematical symbols
On the internet and elsewhere a variety of viewpoints are expressed about the criteria poetry should satisfy to be "mathematical." Today I want to introduce samples and links for three writers: Bob Grumman (Florida), Gregory Vincent St Thomasino (New York), and Kaz Maslanka (California). Grumman and Maslanka write poems with a strong visual element and, as the blogs and comments for all three testify, they differ in their views of what may be properly called "mathematical" poetry..
Thursday, April 29, 2010
A Numerical Poem (Fibonacci)
Consider the following poem involving the Fibonacci numbers:
1/89 = .0 +
.01 +
.001 +
.0002 +
.00003 +
.000005 +
.0000008 +
.00000013 +
.000000021 +
.0000000034 +
.00000000055 +
.000000000089 +
.0000000000144 +
. ...
Monday, April 19, 2010
Poems with Fibonacci number patterns
In 21st century poetry, there are a variety of non-rhyming forms--and several of them have derived from the Fibonacci numbers.* The Danish poet, Inger Christensen (1935-2009), wrote a book-length poem, alphabet (New Directions, 2000) in which the numbers of lines in stanzas followed the sequence of Fibonacci numbers. "Fibonacci," shown below, by Judith Baumel is a shorter example of this form.
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
John Donne's numbers
Perhaps best known for the religious themes in his poetry, John Donne (1572-1631) also wrote many love poems. Although the mathematics here includes only numbers, they are well-used to strengthen both the intensity and the precision of the work.
The Primrose by John Donne
The Primrose by John Donne
Labels:
A K Peters,
John Donne,
love poem,
number,
precision,
Strange Attractors
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Howard Nemerov's mathematical imagery
GETTING IT RIGHT IN LANGUAGE -- Poets and mathematicians alike are concerned with precise statement. Two-time US Poet Laureate Howard Nemerov (1920-1991) characterized poetry in a way that many mathematicians would likewise characterize their subject: POETRY is getting something right in language. Nemerov often used mathematical imagery in his poems. Here is a sample.
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