Despite the importance of fathers' encouragement (as noted in my post on 13 November), some women oppose their fathers' views. Recently I have been enjoying Rachel Swaby's Headstrong: 52 Women Who Changed Science and the World (Broadway
Books, 2015) and yesterday my reading focused on her bios of Maria Agnesi (1718-1799) and Ada Lovelace (1815-1852) and the roles their fathers played in their lives. Agnesi was a child prodigy who wished to be a nun but followed her father's wish that she research in mathematics until his death, when she was thirty-four; she devoted the rest of her life to serving the poor. The education of Ada Lovelace was directed by her mother who did not see her father, the poet Lord Byron, as a solid foundation.
Poetic expression by a daughter somewhat resistant to her father's wishes comes from our youngest-ever US Poet Laureate Rita Dove in her poem, "Flash Cards":
Monday, November 16, 2015
Friday, November 13, 2015
Encouragement from fathers
It was my observation as a professor in a mostly-male mathematics department that the men who joined me in supporting opportunities for women were fathers of daughters. They had come to see the world from a new perspective -- and saw that it needed changing. Somewhat along these lines was a recent Washington POST article that told of recent research findings about socially responsible behavior from CEO's with daughters.
With these thoughts in mind I started counting words . . . wanting to form a poem:
With these thoughts in mind I started counting words . . . wanting to form a poem:
Monday, November 9, 2015
Limericks for Hedy Lamarr
When seeking to draft a poem quickly, it is useful to have some sort of pattern to follow -- a pattern helping to dictate word choice. This morning, upon discovering Google's online celebration of the 101st birthday of inventor and actress Hedy Lamarr, I have wanted to join the commemoration with a poem. A verse pattern rather often used by hasty math writers is the limerick (see links below) -- and I have today constructed this pair of limericks to praise Lamarr.
May a beautiful actress present
Skills beyond stage and screen content?
Yes! Hedy Lamarr
Excelled as a star,
And had also talent to invent!
May a beautiful actress present
Skills beyond stage and screen content?
Yes! Hedy Lamarr
Excelled as a star,
And had also talent to invent!
Labels:
Google,
Hedy Lamarr,
invent,
limerick,
Marion Cohen,
math-women,
Rachel Swaby,
star,
Terry Trotter
Thursday, November 5, 2015
It is clear that . . .
"If I stand" by Inger Christensen (Denmark, 1935-2009)
If I stand
alone in the snow
it is clear
that I am a clock
how else would eternity
find its way around
If I stand
alone in the snow
it is clear
that I am a clock
how else would eternity
find its way around
Translated from the Danish by Susannah Nied
Labels:
alphabet,
Inger Christensen,
mathematics,
poem,
poetry,
Strange Attractors
Monday, November 2, 2015
Artificial Intelligence in the Library . . .
Libraries are wonderful places and library book sales are temptations impossible to resist -- and so, during a recent trip to Boston and exploration of the historic public library buildings on Boylston Street, I purchased a copy of Living Proof (Florida International University Press, 1985) by Edmund Skellings (1932-2012). Born in Boston and a poet laureate of Florida, Skellings was a pioneer in the application of computers to the arts and humanities. The word "proof" in his title was enough to make me pick up the book and I have relished the opportunity to turn up memories of a long ago graduate course in AI while reading this poem:
Artificial Intelligence by Edmund Skellings
Euclid rolled over in his bones
When Newell & Simon instructed
Their machine to look for new proof
For bisecting the ordinary triangle.
Artificial Intelligence by Edmund Skellings
Euclid rolled over in his bones
When Newell & Simon instructed
Their machine to look for new proof
For bisecting the ordinary triangle.
Labels:
AI,
artificial intelligence,
Boston,
library,
mathematician,
Newell,
poem,
proof,
Simon,
triangle
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, October 27, 2015
The magic of mathematics (in art)
Australian teacher and poet Erica Jolly is convinced that breaking down the barriers that
make silos of sciences and humanities subjects will promote better
education systems and improve job prospects for students. She brings mathematics into this engaging poem found in Holding Patterns, an online book of physics and engineering poems, part of the "Science Made Marvelous" project.
Sculpture at Questacon (Australia National Science and Technology Center)
children are turning
a great stone sphere
this way and that
smoothly, easily.
Sculpture at Questacon (Australia National Science and Technology Center)
by Erica Jolly
It looks like magic --children are turning
a great stone sphere
this way and that
smoothly, easily.
Labels:
Erica Jolly,
imagination,
mathematics,
poetry,
sphere,
STEAM,
STEM
Friday, October 23, 2015
JMM Seattle, 1-7-16 -- Poetry+Math+Art
Read your mathy poems in Seattle!
An invitation to participate -- in January! Read on!
ANNOUNCING Poetry + Art + Math
January 7, 2016, Thursday, 5:30 pm–7:00 pm.
Room 608, Washington State Convention Center, Seattle
At the Joint Mathematics Meetings (JMM) organized by Gizem Karaali, Pomona College;
Lawrence M. Lesser, University of Texas at El Paso; and Douglas Norton, Villanova University.
Monday, October 19, 2015
Celebrating waves of light . . .
On October 8, Scotland's celebration of National Poetry Day had the theme "Light." An online collection of themed poems suitable for children is available here. From my Romanian friend, Doru Radu, who attended that celebration, I received poem-cards from the event. One of the cards contained a poem by filmmaker and poet Margaret Tait (1918-1999). I include that poem with its accompanying image below.
Thursday, October 15, 2015
Use a phone App to find mathy poems
A day late, Happy Birthday, E. E. Cummings
(b 14 October 1894, d 3 September 1962).
Thursday, October 8, 2015
Daughter and Father - a warm geometry . . .
Kate Stange is a mathematician -- from the Canadian province of Ontario and now at the University of Colorado -- whose father, Ken Stange, is a visual artist and poet. I met them on the internet via our combined interests in the intersections of poetry and mathematics. Lots of years ago, Kate gathered an online anthology of mathy poems. One of her recent online ventures is the development of WIN -- Women in Number Theory. Below I offer one of Ken Stange's poems, taken from his collection Advice to Travellers (Penumbra, 1994).
Don't Mistake Your Mirror for a Window on the World by Ken Stange
Consider your daughter's first smile.
.
Don't Mistake Your Mirror for a Window on the World by Ken Stange
A reflection is both a thought about the world and the image we see in the mirror. -- Hippokrites
Consider your daughter's first smile.
.
Labels:
arc,
artist,
circles,
daughter,
geometry,
Kate Stange,
Ken Stange,
mathematician,
number theory,
poet,
poetry,
WIN
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