On page 53 of the February 6 issue of The New Yorker I recently found and enjoyed a poem entitled "The Infinite" by Charles Simic. Here are its opening lines:
The infinite yawns and keeps yawning.
Is it sleepy?
Does it miss Pythagoras?
Showing posts with label infinite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label infinite. Show all posts
Thursday, February 16, 2017
Thursday, December 31, 2015
Precision leads to poetry . . .
As the year ends, a quote from one of my once-favorite authors, Don DeLillo (in correspondence with David Foster Wallace -- whose Infinite Jest is on my to-read list), earlier offered by Jordan Ellenberg in Quomodocumque.
Quoting DeLillo:
Once, probably, I used to think that vagueness
was a loftier kind of poetry, truer
to the depths of consciousness, and maybe
when I started to read mathematics and science
back in the mid-70s I found an unexpected lyricism
in the necessarily precise language
that scientists tend to use.
My instinct, my superstition
is that the closer I see a thing
and the more accurately I describe it,
the better my chances of arriving
at a certain sensuality of expression.
And at the BrainyQuotes website is this quote (and many others) by DeLillo (and many others).
Quoting DeLillo:
Once, probably, I used to think that vagueness
was a loftier kind of poetry, truer
to the depths of consciousness, and maybe
when I started to read mathematics and science
back in the mid-70s I found an unexpected lyricism
in the necessarily precise language
that scientists tend to use.
My instinct, my superstition
is that the closer I see a thing
and the more accurately I describe it,
the better my chances of arriving
at a certain sensuality of expression.
And at the BrainyQuotes website is this quote (and many others) by DeLillo (and many others).
For me, writing is a concentrated form of thinking.
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Thursday, October 29, 2015
Mathematics and Poetry ARE Similar
A recent email request sent me looking for a one-page article / quiz I had published in the American Mathematical Monthly in 1992 -- a list of 17 statements (quotations) each with a word missing. The missing words are either "mathematics" or "poetry" (or a related word). My claim is that, without using the author's name as a clue, it is difficult to decide which of these arts is intended. I offer here the first four of the statements and suggest you reflect on missing words and then, if you wish, follow this link to a file with the entire list -- including also the author of each quote and (afterward) a list of the missing words.
_____ is the art of uniting pleasure with truth. (Mathematics/Poetry)
To think the thinkable -- that is the ____'s aim. (mathematician/poet)
All _____ [is] putting the infinite within the finite. (mathematics/poetry)
The moving power of _____ invention is not reasoning
but imagination. (Mathematical/Poetic)
Labels:
imagination,
infinite,
invention,
mathematician,
mathematics,
Monthly,
poet,
poetry,
similar
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
Caught in an infinite loop . . ..
Philadelphian Marion Cohen has been a mathematician since girlhood and a poet almost that long. Besides her mathematics and writing, she teaches an interdisciplinary math-and-literature course at Arcadia University. Here is a sample of Cohen's math poetry -- which imaginatively links mathematics to everyday life, sort of -- from her recent collection, Parables for a Rainy Day (Green Fuse Press, 2013).
Weirdness at 22nd and Walnut by Marion D. Cohen
Weirdness at 22nd and Walnut by Marion D. Cohen
Saturday, July 11, 2015
Math fun with song lyrics
Song-writer Bill Calhoun is a faculty member in the Department of Mathematics, Computer Science and Statistics at Pennsylvania's Bloomsburg University (where I also hung out for many years). He belongs, along with colleagues Erik Wynters and Kevin Ferland, to a band called "The Derivatives." And Bill has granted permission for me to include several of his math lyrics (parodies) here. (In this previous post, we consider the connection between song parodies and mathematical isomorphism.) My first Calhoun selection deals with difficult mathematical questions concerning classification of infinite sets and decidability. Following that, later lyrics consider proving theorems and finding derivatives.
Questions You Can’t Ever Decide* by Bill Calhoun
Picture yourself in a world filled with numbers,
But the numbers are really just words in disguise.
Gödel says “How can you prove you’re consistent,
If you can’t tell that this is a lie?”
Questions You Can’t Ever Decide* by Bill Calhoun
(These lyrics match the tune of "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" by Lennon and McCartney.)
Picture yourself in a world filled with numbers,
But the numbers are really just words in disguise.
Gödel says “How can you prove you’re consistent,
If you can’t tell that this is a lie?”
Labels:
Bill Calhoun,
cardinal,
compact,
contradiction,
decide,
derivative,
induction,
infinite,
lyrics,
parody,
proof,
real number,
slope,
theorem,
uncountable
Monday, June 22, 2015
Uncertainty . . .
Sometimes we find things of great value when we are looking for something else -- in fact, Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges has said, The best way to find a good thing is to go looking for something else . . .
One of my recent stumbles (while looking for work by Borges) was onto the website of Robert Ronnow -- and I have found it a fun place to browse. Here is a sample, a poem from his recent collection, The Scientific Way to Do Mathematics:
Uncertainty by Robert Ronnow
--with a line by Pico Iyer
There cannot be two identical things in the world. Two
hydrogen atoms
offer infinite locations within their shells for electrons.
Thus, nothing can be definitely eventually known.
One of my recent stumbles (while looking for work by Borges) was onto the website of Robert Ronnow -- and I have found it a fun place to browse. Here is a sample, a poem from his recent collection, The Scientific Way to Do Mathematics:
Uncertainty by Robert Ronnow
--with a line by Pico Iyer
There cannot be two identical things in the world. Two
hydrogen atoms
offer infinite locations within their shells for electrons.
Thus, nothing can be definitely eventually known.
Labels:
identical,
infinite,
Jorge Luis Borges,
mathematics,
number,
poetry,
Robert Ronnow,
uncertainty,
verse,
zero
Tuesday, June 16, 2015
Imagine a Fractal
California poet Carol Dorf is also a math teacher and is poetry editor of the online journal TalkingWriting. In the most recent issue of Talking-Writing is this fascinating poem by Brooklyn poet, Nicole Callihan, "How to Imagine a Fractal." Enjoy Callihan's poetic play with recursion and infinite nesting -- be lulled by the back and forth of forever.
How to Imagine a Fractal by Nicole Callihan
Carol Dorf's work has appeared in this blog:
Her fan-letter to the author of a math book is here
and a poem about fear of math is posted here.
Labels:
Carol Dorf,
finite,
fractal,
infinite,
Nicole Callihan,
prose poem,
recursion,
space,
talkingwriting.com
Sunday, May 3, 2015
Lines of breathless length
Brief reflections on definitions of LINE . . .
Breathless length by JoAnne Growney
A LINE, said Euclid, lies evenly
with the points on itself --
that is, it’s straight –-
and Euclid did (as do my friends)
named points as its two ends.
The LINE of modern geometry
escapes these limits
and stretches to infinity.
Just as unbounded lines
of poetry.
Breathless length by JoAnne Growney
A LINE, said Euclid, lies evenly
with the points on itself --
that is, it’s straight –-
and Euclid did (as do my friends)
named points as its two ends.
The LINE of modern geometry
escapes these limits
and stretches to infinity.
Just as unbounded lines
of poetry.
Labels:
breadthless,
Euclid,
geometry,
infinite,
line,
Martha Collins,
Molly Kirschner,
poetry,
segment
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
A poem for your pocket
Years ago, when "Poem in Your Pocket Day" (April 30) was first celebrated, we did not have cellphones to carry poems with us easily. Here is a tiny but memorable poem for you to carry with you tomorrow -- on your phone or in your pocket -- a poem to open and read, again and again.
Hughes' poem "Addition" is found in Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics (A K Peters, 2008) and was first posted in this blog, along with other poems linked to Black History Month on February 20, 2011.
Hughes' poem "Addition" is found in Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics (A K Peters, 2008) and was first posted in this blog, along with other poems linked to Black History Month on February 20, 2011.
Labels:
addition,
infinite,
Langston Hughes,
poem in your pocket day
Saturday, April 11, 2015
Time is no straight line . . .
Swedish poet and Nobel Laureate Tomas Transtromer (1931-2015) died last month. At his website I found this poem that reflects on the arithmetic and geometry of life:
Reply to a Letter by Tomas Transtromer
In the bottom drawer I find a letter which arrived for the first time twenty- six years ago. A letter written in panic, which continues to breathe when it arrives for the second time.
A house has five windows; through four of them daylight shines clear and still. The fifth window faces a dark sky, thunder and storm. I stand by the fifth window. The letter.
Reply to a Letter by Tomas Transtromer
In the bottom drawer I find a letter which arrived for the first time twenty- six years ago. A letter written in panic, which continues to breathe when it arrives for the second time.
A house has five windows; through four of them daylight shines clear and still. The fifth window faces a dark sky, thunder and storm. I stand by the fifth window. The letter.
Labels:
arithmetic,
geometry,
infinite,
labyrinth,
life,
line,
Nobel Prize,
Tomas Transtromer
Sunday, March 29, 2015
Science Verse
Recently coincidence has brought to me two collections of poems about science -- first, the 2014 issue of The Nassau Review, a gift from editor and poet Christina M. Rau. The second collection is a "used" children's book, Science Verse (by John Scieszka and Lane Smith) found at the wonderful Kensington Row Bookshop (scroll down their webpage to find out about their monthly poetry readings). I include below two rhyming stanzas from Science Verse, followed two selections from The Nassau Review 2014 -- a poem by Diane Giardi which is a parody (or isomorphic image) of a nursery rhyme and a poem by Katherine Hauswirth which may or may not consider infinity.
Hey Diddle Diddle
Hey diddle diddle, what kind of riddle
Is this nature of light?
Sometimes it's a wave,
Other times a particle . . .
But which answer will be marked right?
Sunday, March 22, 2015
March 21 -- World Poetry Day
Yesterday poetry was celebrated around the world -- the Guardian reported the event with mention of Cafés around the world that offered a cup of coffee in exchange for a poem. The occasion caused me to turn to one of my favorite international collections, The Horse Has Six Legs (Graywolf, 2010) -- an anthology of Serbian poetry translated and edited by poet Charles Simic. On 29 April 2011 I posted "Forgetful Number" by Yugoslav poet Vasko Popa (1922-1991) -- and here is another of Popa's poems. This one is part of a cycle of poems about "the little box" and it involves recursion.
Last News about the Little Box by Vasko Popa
The little box that contains the world
Fell in love with herself
And conceived
Still another little box.
Last News about the Little Box by Vasko Popa
The little box that contains the world
Fell in love with herself
And conceived
Still another little box.
Labels:
box,
Charles Simic,
infinite,
mathematics,
recursion,
Vasko Popa,
World Poetry Day
Saturday, February 21, 2015
How many grains of sand?
Sand beaches are places I love to walk. Next to oceans and soft underfoot.
Contemplating grains of sand turns my thoughts to the pair of terms "finite" and "infinite." One of my friends, university-educated, versed in literature and philosophy, offered "all of the grains of sand" as an example of an infinite set. As we talked further, he proposed "the stars in the universe" as a second example. This guy, like many, equates "infinite" with "too large to count." And then there is me; long ago in college I encountered a definition of "infinite" that went something like this: A set is infinite if there is a one-to-one correspondence between the members of the given set or one of its proper subsets with the set {1, 2, 3, . . ..} of counting numbers.
Below I post a stanza from Richard Bready's "Times of Sand" --
a long poem that explores many of the numbers related to sand.
Labels:
calculus,
finite,
Garrett Hardin,
infinite,
mathematics,
poem,
Richard Bready,
sand,
Tragedy of the Commons
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Fractals -- poems and photos
Marc Frantz and Annalisa Crannell have written about mathematics and art (Viewpoints: Mathematical Perspectives and Fractal Geometry in Art: Princeton University Press, 2011) and now Frantz (who is both a mathematician and an artist, a painter) has collaborated with a poet -- Robin Walthery Allen -- to develop a collection entitled Dance of Eye and Mind (not yet published). I am honored to present a poem-photo pair from this exquisite collection.
What is in us that must reach the top,
that longs to look down upon the world as if a god?
Don’t we know that in this infinite space
the same rocks at the seashore know the secret of each peak?
What is in us that must reach the top,
that longs to look down upon the world as if a god?
Don’t we know that in this infinite space
the same rocks at the seashore know the secret of each peak?
Labels:
dance,
fractal,
geometry,
infinite,
Marc Frantz,
mathematician,
photograph,
poetry,
Robin Walthery Allen,
space
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Geometry of Love
A couple of weeks ago my "Google Alert" linked me to a posting of a science poem concerning "the geometry of love." The posting -- at The Finch and Pea -- is a poem that is both elegant and precise (and one that has been included in the anthology, Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics, that Sarah Glaz and I collected and edited several years ago). Here it is:
The Definition of Love by Andrew Marvell (England, 1621-1678)
My love is of a birth as rare
As ‘tis for object strange and high;
It was begotten by Despair
Upon Impossibility.
The Definition of Love by Andrew Marvell (England, 1621-1678)
My love is of a birth as rare
As ‘tis for object strange and high;
It was begotten by Despair
Upon Impossibility.
Labels:
Andrew Marvell,
angle,
conjunction,
geometry,
infinite,
mathematics,
parallel,
planisphere,
poem,
union
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Giving thanks for poems
As Thanksgiving approaches I am thankful not only for many blessings but also for the numbers I use to count them -- eight grandchildren, four children, two parents, one sister, one brother, an uncountable number of friends. And I am thankful for poetry. Here is one of my favorite math-related poems.
How to Find the Longest Distance Between Two Points
by James Kirkup (England, 1919 - 2009)
From eye to object no straight line is drawn,
Though love's quick pole directly kisses pole.
The luckless aeronaut feels earth and moon
Curve endlessly below, above the soul
His thought imagines, engineers in space.
How to Find the Longest Distance Between Two Points
by James Kirkup (England, 1919 - 2009)
From eye to object no straight line is drawn,
Though love's quick pole directly kisses pole.
The luckless aeronaut feels earth and moon
Curve endlessly below, above the soul
His thought imagines, engineers in space.
Saturday, July 12, 2014
Prove It
After observing that
1 = 1
and 1 + 3 = 4
and 1 + 3 + 5 = 9
and 1 + 3 + 5 + 7 = 16
and 1 + 3 + 5 + 7 + 9 = 25
it seems easy to conclude that, for any positive integer n, the sum of the first n odd integers is n2.
1 = 1
and 1 + 3 = 4
and 1 + 3 + 5 = 9
and 1 + 3 + 5 + 7 = 16
and 1 + 3 + 5 + 7 + 9 = 25
it seems easy to conclude that, for any positive integer n, the sum of the first n odd integers is n2.
Labels:
infinite,
integer,
odd,
palindrome,
poem,
power,
proof,
prove,
sum,
William Kloefkorn
Sunday, May 25, 2014
How many grains of sand?
Recently one of my friends used "all the grains of sand" as an example of an infinite set "because it is impossible to count them all" and -- even as I rejected his answer -- I wondered how many of my other friends might agree with it. In the following poem, mathematician Pedro Poitevin considers a similar question as he reflects on the countability of the birds in the night sky.
Divertimentum Ornithologicum by Pedro Poitevin
After Jorge Luis Borges's Argumentum Ornithologicum.
A synchrony of wings across the sky
is quavering its feathered beats of flight.
Their number is too high to count -- I try
Divertimentum Ornithologicum by Pedro Poitevin
After Jorge Luis Borges's Argumentum Ornithologicum.
A synchrony of wings across the sky
is quavering its feathered beats of flight.
Their number is too high to count -- I try
Labels:
count,
hyperfinite,
inductive,
infinite,
Jorge Luis Borges,
less,
more,
natural number,
Pedro Poitevin
Monday, April 21, 2014
A Cento from Arcadia
Last week I had the enjoyable privilege of visiting with mathematician-poet Marion Cohen's math-lit class, "Truth and Beauty" at Arcadia University -- and the class members helped me to compose a Cento (given below), a poem to which each of us contributed a line or two of poetry-with-mathematics. Participants, in addition to Dr. Cohen and me, included these students:
Theresa, Deanna, Ian, Collin, Mary, Grace, Zahra, Jen, Jenna,
Nataliya, Adeline, Quincy, Van, Alyssa, Samantha, Alexis, Austin.
Big thanks to all!
Theresa, Deanna, Ian, Collin, Mary, Grace, Zahra, Jen, Jenna,
Nataliya, Adeline, Quincy, Van, Alyssa, Samantha, Alexis, Austin.
Big thanks to all!
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Extraneous -- and so on
Since my junior high math days, when I first heard the word "extraneous," I have loved the sound of it, the feel of my mouth when I say it, the mystery of how solving an equation can lead to extra solutions. And then learning to check found-solutions to see if they were true solutions -- a process that has been multiply useful to me far afield from mathematics.
My love for this math-word drew me quickly to the title of a poem by Alex Walsh, a high school student from Oberlin, Ohio, who presented her work at the poetry-with-math reading at JMM in Baltimore last Friday. Here are her poems "Convergence" and "The Extraneous Solution" :
My love for this math-word drew me quickly to the title of a poem by Alex Walsh, a high school student from Oberlin, Ohio, who presented her work at the poetry-with-math reading at JMM in Baltimore last Friday. Here are her poems "Convergence" and "The Extraneous Solution" :
Labels:
Alex Walsh,
convergence,
extraneous,
infinite,
JMM Poetry Reading,
math,
mathematician,
permutation,
poetry,
polynomial
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