Robert Dawson is a mathematics professor at St Mary's University in Halifax, Nova Scotia -- an active mathematician who complements his research activity with mathematics education and with poetry. The following Dawson poem appeared here in 2013 -- in the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics, a journal whose every issue contains some poetry-with-mathematics.
Some Contributions to the Sociology of Numbers by Robert Dawson
The ones you notice first are the natural numbers.
Everybody knows their names; they are the anchors,
the stars, the alphas, the reference points. And of course
the rational numbers, who hang out with them,
sit next to them in arithmetic class.
Showing posts with label numerology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label numerology. Show all posts
Sunday, March 2, 2014
Monday, March 7, 2011
Numerology
On her website Deanna Rubin describes herself this way, "I have a degree in Technical Writing and Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University, and my head is full of random numbers." Illustrating this latter claim is her poem, "Numerology":
Labels:
Deanna Rubin,
infinity,
mathematics,
numbers,
numerology,
poetry,
random numbers
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