During summer teaching opportunities a dozen or more years ago in Deva, Romania I met Doru Radu who taught English there -- and our mutual love of poetry led us to collaborate on English translations of work by Romanian poets George Bacovia and Ileana Malancioiu. Now Doru is in Poland and he is translating Polish poetry into Romanian. One of his favorite poets is Ewa Lipska -- a poet I have met via Poetry International. Below is her poem "Newton's Orange: Infinity" -- found at Poetry International together with the original Polish poem.
As I have noted before, "infinity" is a term whose varied uses fascinate me. Sometimes I wonder how much of my "mathematical" understanding of the concept I might some day incorporate into a poem.
Newton's Orange: Infinity by Ewa Lipska
Thursday, October 8, 2015
Sunday, October 4, 2015
A mathematician's favorite poet
A summertime gift book that I have much enjoyed reading is Love & Math: The Heart of Hidden Reality by Edward Frenkel (Basic Books, 2013). I admire the way Frenkel's memoir braids mathematics together with the other threads of his life. Including poetry. Like me, he chooses E E Cummings as one of his favorite poets. And he used lines from Cummings' 1931 poem "the surely" as an epigram for a 2007 book that summarized his work.
Below I include the entire text of Cummings' poem, with Frenkel's epigraph highlighted in bold face.
the surely
Cued
motif smites truly to Beautifully
retire through its english
the Forwardflung backwardSpinning hoop returns fasterishly
Below I include the entire text of Cummings' poem, with Frenkel's epigraph highlighted in bold face.
the surely
Cued
motif smites truly to Beautifully
retire through its english
the Forwardflung backwardSpinning hoop returns fasterishly
Labels:
algebra,
arithmetic,
concentric,
E E Cummings,
Edward Frenkel,
geometry,
love,
math,
mathematics,
number theory,
spiral
Monday, September 28, 2015
A subtraction problem
Let's solve this subtraction problem:
Women do the job
minus the recognition.
____________________________
The "found poem" above is from a headline for an article by Petula Dvorak in the Washington Post on 21 August 2015. Dvorak's full headline was a bit longer, "Women do the job minus the training and recognition." (Indeed Dvorak's article portrays the military as an even more difficult environment for women than the STEM fields.)
Also found in the Post (this past weekend) an enthusiastic review by Marcia Bartusiak of Eileen Pollack's The Only Woman In the Room: Why Science Is Still a Boys' Club. Another problem to solve!!!
Women do the job
minus the recognition.
____________________________
The "found poem" above is from a headline for an article by Petula Dvorak in the Washington Post on 21 August 2015. Dvorak's full headline was a bit longer, "Women do the job minus the training and recognition." (Indeed Dvorak's article portrays the military as an even more difficult environment for women than the STEM fields.)
Also found in the Post (this past weekend) an enthusiastic review by Marcia Bartusiak of Eileen Pollack's The Only Woman In the Room: Why Science Is Still a Boys' Club. Another problem to solve!!!
Labels:
Eileen Pollack,
found poem,
mathematics,
problem,
recognition,
STEM,
subtraction,
women
Thursday, September 24, 2015
C K Williams -- Three Mile Island
A poet whose work I have long enjoyed, C K Williams (1936-1915), died a few days ago. (You may find a generous sample of his poems online -- for example at PoetryFoundation.org and Poets.org.) Williams is a poet whose writing does not tend toward mathematics but his very fine poem "Tar" (about the Three Mile Island nuclear plant crisis of 1979, a year when I lived in Pennsylvania not far away) has a few numbers. I present below the first stanza of "Tar" and, beneath it, a link to the rest of the poem.
from Tar by C. K. Williams
The first morning of Three Mile Island: those first disquieting,
uncertain, mystifying hours.
from Tar by C. K. Williams
The first morning of Three Mile Island: those first disquieting,
uncertain, mystifying hours.
Labels:
accident,
C K Williams,
perfect,
poem,
Three Mile Island,
Yogi Berra
Monday, September 21, 2015
Choosing what words mean . . .
Nineteenth century writer and mathematician Lewis Carroll (1832-1898) gave his character, Humpty Dumpty, these words: "When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean -- neither more nor less." And so it is in mathematics -- where, for example, the term "rational" (used in the poem"The Disposition of Art," shown below) has a precise meaning that differs from its typical conversational usage.
The photo below shows computer-generated art by Silver Spring artist Allen Hirsh -- and, beside it, a framed version of the poem mentioned above. Our work was exhibited together at last summer's BRIDGES and MAA conferences. A clearer presentation of Hirsh's art -- "An Outgrabed Mome Rath" -- is available here. My poem is presented below, beneath the photo.
The photo below shows computer-generated art by Silver Spring artist Allen Hirsh -- and, beside it, a framed version of the poem mentioned above. Our work was exhibited together at last summer's BRIDGES and MAA conferences. A clearer presentation of Hirsh's art -- "An Outgrabed Mome Rath" -- is available here. My poem is presented below, beneath the photo.
Labels:
Allen Hirsh,
Bridges Conference,
equation,
Humpty Dumpty,
impossible,
Lewis Carroll,
ratio,
rational
Friday, September 18, 2015
Words of Ada Lovelace
These poetic words of Ada Lovelace (1815-1852) -- concerning translation of mathematical principles into practical forms -- I found here:
Those who view mathematical science,
not merely as a vast body
of abstract and immutable truths,
whose intrinsic beauty, symmetry and logical completeness,
when regarded in their connexion together as a whole,
entitle them to a prominent place
in the interest of all profound and logical minds,
Those who view mathematical science,
not merely as a vast body
of abstract and immutable truths,
whose intrinsic beauty, symmetry and logical completeness,
when regarded in their connexion together as a whole,
entitle them to a prominent place
in the interest of all profound and logical minds,
Labels:
Ada Lovelace,
beauty,
Charles Babbage,
language,
logical,
Lord Byron,
mathematical,
practical,
science,
symmetry,
translation,
truth
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
Shaping sentences with Fibonacci numbers . . .
Counting words . . ..
1 One
1 person
2 with courage
3 makes a majority. Andrew Jackson (updated)
Counting syllables . . .
1 Life
1 is
2 painting
3 a picture
5 not doing a sum. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
1 One
1 person
2 with courage
3 makes a majority. Andrew Jackson (updated)
Counting syllables . . .
1 Life
1 is
2 painting
3 a picture
5 not doing a sum. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
Friday, September 11, 2015
Songs of mathematics . . .
Larry Lesser is a songwriter who uses lyrics for teaching as well as entertainment. A varied sample of his creations for doing this are presented in his article "Mathematical lyrics; noteworthy endeavours in education" found in the "Poetry and Mathematics / Special Issue" of the Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, March-June 2014).
One of the article's enchanting items is a song for children -- "Circle Song" -- which Lesser has written to the familiar tune of "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star"; this lyric offers a way to remember critical formulas for a circle.
Circle Song by Lawrence Mark Lesser
Take your finger 'round the jar:
Circumf'rence equals 2πr!
One of the article's enchanting items is a song for children -- "Circle Song" -- which Lesser has written to the familiar tune of "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star"; this lyric offers a way to remember critical formulas for a circle.
Circle Song by Lawrence Mark Lesser
Take your finger 'round the jar:
Circumf'rence equals 2πr!
Labels:
area,
circle,
circumference,
infinity,
Lawrence Mark Lesser,
lyrics,
parody,
pi,
radius
Tuesday, September 8, 2015
It starts with counting . . .
Mathematical imagery is one of the many features I enjoy in the work of Canadian environmental scientist and poet Madhur Anand. Here is a sample from her new collection (A New Index for Predicting Catastrophes).
Type One Error by Madhur Anand
I avoid news, talk to strangers, walk around the block
a thousand times and toss nickels for random samples.
I still get a few false positives. I'm fine. It's good.
Background: In an experiment designed to test the truth of a given statement
(often called the null hypothesis), a Type I error occurs if the experiment results in a true hypothesis
being rejected (a "false positive") and a Type II error occurs if a false hypothesis is accepted.
being rejected (a "false positive") and a Type II error occurs if a false hypothesis is accepted.
Type One Error by Madhur Anand
I avoid news, talk to strangers, walk around the block
a thousand times and toss nickels for random samples.
I still get a few false positives. I'm fine. It's good.
Labels:
approximate,
degrees of freedom,
error,
false positive,
hypothesis,
Madhur Anand,
null,
poem,
random,
sample,
Type I,
Type II
Thursday, September 3, 2015
Mathematical Modeling
My friend and colleague, University of Connecticut mathematician Sarah Glaz, is an accomplished poet and is active in coordinating math-poetry activities -- via her website, the annual BRIDGES Conference, the anthology Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics . . . . Here is one of her mathy poems -- this one a pantoum, first published in London Grip.
Mathematical Modelling by Sarah Glaz
Mathematical modelling may be viewed
As an organizing principle
That enables us to handle
A vast array of information
Mathematical Modelling by Sarah Glaz
Mathematical modelling may be viewed
As an organizing principle
That enables us to handle
A vast array of information
Monday, August 31, 2015
The answer is NO
This past weekend I have much enjoyed reading Mathematics: a novel by Jacques Roubaud (Dalkey Archive Press, reprint 2010, translated from the French by Ian Monk); Roubaud is a mathematician, poet, and member of the OULIPO. And here is a found poem from Chapter 1:
.
A
question
posed to a
lively colleague:
do you tell your
dancing partners
that you practice
mathematics?
For me, like so many of us -- females especially -- revelation of a connection to mathematics leads to an awkward moment, an impediment to a possible relationship. And so we say things like "I am at the university" or "I am doing some writing" or . . .
.
A
question
posed to a
lively colleague:
do you tell your
dancing partners
that you practice
mathematics?
For me, like so many of us -- females especially -- revelation of a connection to mathematics leads to an awkward moment, an impediment to a possible relationship. And so we say things like "I am at the university" or "I am doing some writing" or . . .
Labels:
colleague,
found poem,
Ian Monk,
Jacques Roubaud,
mathematics,
Oulipo
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