One of my recent poetry acquisition treasures is Measure for Measure: An Anthology of Poetic Meters, edited by Annie Finch and Alexandra Oliver (Everyman's Lbrary, 2015). From a DC poet and friend, Paul Hopper, a few weeks ago I received comments about one of the sections of this collection -- a section containing stanzas in hendecasyllabics, that is, in 11-syllable lines Hopper has sent a sample quatrain of hendecasyllabics that points to "Into Melody" by Lewis Turco. A bit of mathematical terminology is found in the opening lines of Peter Kline's "Hendecasyllabics for Robert Frost" -- and I offer these samples below.
Hopper's quatrain:
Someone should build a large dodecahedron,
with a poem in hendecasyllabics
on each pentagonal face except the base.
I'd start with this poem by Lewis Turco.
Saturday, June 27, 2015
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
Found poetry -- Mary Cartwright
Recently I have been reading about mathematician Mary Cartwright (1900-1998) and working to develop a poem about her -- relying on a fine article/interview by my friend Jim Tattersall published in the The College Mathematics Journal (September 2001). Her work on the foundations of chaos theory was prominently presented in a 2013 BBC News article. A couple of days ago my acquisition of Rachel Swaby's book -- Headstrong Women: 52 Women Who Changed Science and the World (Broadway Books, 2015) -- added to my information about Cartwright. Here, from quotations offered by Tattersall and Swaby, are some of Cartwright's poetic words (reflecting on the ages and genders of mathematicians). First, speaking of her employment at Cambridge:
I regret to say that my impression
when I began research was that, in general,
less qualified men were employed quite a lot,
which eliminated some quite good women.
I regret to say that my impression
when I began research was that, in general,
less qualified men were employed quite a lot,
which eliminated some quite good women.
Labels:
change,
found poem,
James Tattersall,
learning,
Mary Cartwright,
mathematics,
Rachel Swaby,
women
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
Sunday, June 21, 2015
Seeing the NEWS in square stanzas
Reading today's Washington Post, a surprising statistic:
Sharks don't kill
as many
as cows do.
Also, Pope Francis has spoken out, expressing his concerns for our environment:
Pope Francis,
like me, sees
climate change--
a real
problem.
Sharks don't kill
as many
as cows do.
In the years 2001 to 2013 in the US an average of 20 deaths annually were caused by cows,
compared with 1 during each of those years from sharks.
Also, Pope Francis has spoken out, expressing his concerns for our environment:
Pope Francis,
like me, sees
climate change--
a real
problem.
Labels:
abortion,
climate change,
cow,
die,
kill,
Pope Francis,
square,
statistics,
syllable-square
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Judith Grabiner and Howard Nemerov
Last evening at the Distinguished Lecture Series sponsored by the MAA it was my privilege to hear an outstanding presentation by Judith Grabiner entitled "Space: Where Sufficient Reason Isn't Enough." (I invite you to go to the MAA website to learn more about Grabiner and her talk.)
Grabiner is a math-woman I have long admired and, after the lecture, while I was shaking her hand and thanking her for the excellent presentation, I took a moment to ask her if she had any favorite mathy poems. Although surprised by my question she was able to cite Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Sonnet XLIII that counts the ways of love -- a few lines of which are found here -- and the name Howard Nemerov, whom readers of this blog know is one of my favorite poets.
You may scroll down to find Nemerov's "Magnitudes" (found also at PoetryFoundation.com and PoemHunter.com along with other work by this fine poet). Poet Laureate of the United States during 1988-1990, Howard Nemerov (1920-1991) served as a combat pilot during World War II and maintained a continuing interest in the stars and navigation. Here are links to my earlier postings of poems by this favorite poet.
"Two Pair" "Grace to Be Said at the Super Market"
"Lion and Honeycomb" "Creation Myth on a Mobius Band"
"To David, About His Education" "Found Poem" "Figures of Thought"
And here, expressing concerns about our planet, is Nemerov's "Magnitudes":
Grabiner is a math-woman I have long admired and, after the lecture, while I was shaking her hand and thanking her for the excellent presentation, I took a moment to ask her if she had any favorite mathy poems. Although surprised by my question she was able to cite Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Sonnet XLIII that counts the ways of love -- a few lines of which are found here -- and the name Howard Nemerov, whom readers of this blog know is one of my favorite poets.
You may scroll down to find Nemerov's "Magnitudes" (found also at PoetryFoundation.com and PoemHunter.com along with other work by this fine poet). Poet Laureate of the United States during 1988-1990, Howard Nemerov (1920-1991) served as a combat pilot during World War II and maintained a continuing interest in the stars and navigation. Here are links to my earlier postings of poems by this favorite poet.
"Two Pair" "Grace to Be Said at the Super Market"
"Lion and Honeycomb" "Creation Myth on a Mobius Band"
"To David, About His Education" "Found Poem" "Figures of Thought"
And here, expressing concerns about our planet, is Nemerov's "Magnitudes":
Labels:
billion,
change,
doubling,
Howard Nemerov,
Judith Grabiner,
limit,
magnitude,
million,
speed
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
Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Square stanzas for Women in Maths
Women
in Maths --
it all
adds up.
Go here for "It All Adds Up" -- a story in plus Magazine by Rachel Thomas about the recent Women in Maths conference sponsored by the London Mathematical Society.
And if you know of POEMS that celebrate women in mathematics, please contact me (email address at bottom of blog) or post a link in the comments to this post.
Friday, June 5, 2015
A portrait of TB in numbers
Poet Sarah Browning recently directed me to "Tuberculosis in Numbers," a fine poem by M. Brett Gaffney that appears in the latest issue of Rogue Agent. The poem opens this way:
Tuberculosis in Numbers by M. Brett Gaffney
“In the past, we have been unable to get a true picture of the TB situation
in Louisville due to the method of keeping statistics.” – Dr. Oscar O. Miller
Two weeks coughing when the mother’s only son
finds three bloody tissues—thinks of maple leaves.
Ten days at the sanatorium, four ribs taken. One father teaches
his boy how to wait by filling in crossword puzzles—
twelve across, seven letters: to eat or devour.
The boy’s mother dies four months after his thirteenth birthday.
Tuesday morning at nine, it rains. His father smokes one cigarette, two.
Men come and take her body away. Under the sheet, ten toes.
One priest. Four lines of scripture. . . .
Tuberculosis in Numbers by M. Brett Gaffney
“In the past, we have been unable to get a true picture of the TB situation
in Louisville due to the method of keeping statistics.” – Dr. Oscar O. Miller
Two weeks coughing when the mother’s only son
finds three bloody tissues—thinks of maple leaves.
Ten days at the sanatorium, four ribs taken. One father teaches
his boy how to wait by filling in crossword puzzles—
twelve across, seven letters: to eat or devour.
The boy’s mother dies four months after his thirteenth birthday.
Tuesday morning at nine, it rains. His father smokes one cigarette, two.
Men come and take her body away. Under the sheet, ten toes.
One priest. Four lines of scripture. . . .
Gaffney's complete poem is available here.
Labels:
M. Brett Gaffney,
numbers,
Rogue Agent,
Sarah Browning,
statistics,
TB
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
17 syllables -- and other art
What is he talking about? What does he mean?
The thought-provoking riddle posed by these 17 syllables (presented here as 3 square stanzas) from Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951) is something I found on the the wall of the National Gallery of Modern Art in Rome, not far from a replica of "Fountain" by Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968). Photos of both are shown below.
The thought-provoking riddle posed by these 17 syllables (presented here as 3 square stanzas) from Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951) is something I found on the the wall of the National Gallery of Modern Art in Rome, not far from a replica of "Fountain" by Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968). Photos of both are shown below.
What you are
regarding
as a gift
is a
problem
for you
to solve.
Labels:
4th dimension,
art,
Ludwig Wittgenstein,
Marcel Duchamp,
problem,
square
Friday, May 29, 2015
Add and subtract to get . . . a minimalist poem
Thinking today of poet Bob Grumman (1941-2015) with special gratitude for the way he expanded my poetic horizons. For example, he introduced me to this addition-subtraction minimalist poem by LeRoy Gorman -- called "the day":
un + s = up;
up - s = un.
More information about Gorman and several more poetry samples are available here.
un + s = up;
up - s = un.
More information about Gorman and several more poetry samples are available here.
Labels:
addition,
Bob Grumman,
haiku,
LeRoy Gorman,
minimalist,
poem,
subtraction
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Galileo in Florence
Poetry found in the words of Galileo Galilei (1564-1642):
"Philosophy is written in this grand book,
the universe, which stands continually
open to our gaze.
But the book cannot be understood unless one first
learns to comprehend the language and read the letters
in which it is composed.
It is written in the language of mathematics,
"Philosophy is written in this grand book,
the universe, which stands continually
open to our gaze.
But the book cannot be understood unless one first
learns to comprehend the language and read the letters
in which it is composed.
It is written in the language of mathematics,
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Sonnets from The Voyage of the Beagle
The sonnet is a song of the body as well as of the mind:
14 breaths
5 heartbeats each breath
5 heartbeats each breath
A few weeks ago I had the opportunity to be part of a poetry reading that also featured Rick Mullin -- who serves science as an editor of the Chemical and Engineering News -- and whose latest poetry book is a collection of sonnets that offer a magical and musical retelling of Darwin's voyage -- in Sonnets from The Voyage of the Beagle (Dos Madres Press, 2014). Here are two selections from that collection -- the opening sonnet (first of a triptych) and a later one that features geometry of birds.
After Uranus by Rick Mullin
On reading Richard Holmes
I
There was an age when poetry and science
shared the province of discovery,
when Coleridge wished he's studied chemistry
and Humphry Davy, in exact defiance
of the Royal Society, blew things up.
Labels:
Beagle,
Charles Darwin,
circle,
coil,
mathematics,
poetry,
Rick Mullin,
sonnet
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
Folk music -- counting syllables
Learn about and support Women in Mathematics.
One place to do that is here.
Using 4x4 and 2x2 syllable-squares, I emphasize the counting that lies behind folk music in the following selection from "Some Walls" (lyrics by Mary Ann Kennedy, Pamela Rose, Randy Sharp -- but line breaks are mine), recorded by Peter, Paul, and Mary:
Some walls
Some walls are made
of stone. Sometimes
we build our own.
Some walls can stand
Labels:
count,
Peter Paul and Mary,
square stanza,
walls
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Stars and men revolve in a cycle . . .
In a book-discussion group in which I participate, we are reading some of the short fiction of Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986) and that reading has provoked me to dive again into my copy of his Selected Poems (Ed. Alexander Coleman, Penguin, 1999). Here is one of Borges' poems that uses terminology from mathematics:
The Cyclical Night by Jorge Luis Borges
tr. Alistair Reid (1926-2014)
to Sylvina Bullrich
They knew it, the fervent pupils of Pythagoras:
That stars and men revolve in a cycle,
That fateful atoms will bring back the vital
Gold Aphrodite, Thebans, and agoras.
The Cyclical Night by Jorge Luis Borges
tr. Alistair Reid (1926-2014)
to Sylvina Bullrich
They knew it, the fervent pupils of Pythagoras:
That stars and men revolve in a cycle,
That fateful atoms will bring back the vital
Gold Aphrodite, Thebans, and agoras.
Labels:
Alistair Reed,
cycle,
endless,
fraction,
Jorge Luis Borges,
periodic,
poem,
Pythagoras,
rotation,
square
Friday, May 8, 2015
Include Arts in STEM -- and have STEAM !
Welcome to this blog where we support STEAM !
math-student, performance-poet Harry Baker's
"A love poem for lonely prime numbers"
A bit more about Harry Baker can be found in this May 23, 2014 posting.
In May 2015 visit Takoma Park Community Center Galleries for a STEAM exhibit organized by visual artist and poetry-lover Shanthi Chandrasekar.
In May 2015 visit Takoma Park Community Center Galleries for a STEAM exhibit organized by visual artist and poetry-lover Shanthi Chandrasekar.
Labels:
Harry Baker,
math,
poem,
prime,
STEAM,
STEM,
Takoma Park,
YouTube
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Balancing Opposites -- Tagore's Epigrams
Many important mathematical ideas occur as pairs of opposites:
-2 and +2 (additive inverses), 5 and 1/5 (multiplicative inverses),
bounded and unbounded, rational and irrational,
convergent and divergent, finite and infinite
Some other familiar mathematical notions occur often in contrasting pairs but are not fully opposites:
horizontal and vertical, positive and negative,
open and closed, perpendicular and parallel
Recently I have returned to reading work by Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1931; Bengal, India; winner of the 1913 Nobel Prize in Literature) and I enjoy reflecting on contrasts posed by this reflective poet in a series of "Epigrams":
Epigrams by Rabindranath Tagore
I will close my door to shut out all possible errors.
"But how am I to enter in?" cried Truth.
-2 and +2 (additive inverses), 5 and 1/5 (multiplicative inverses),
bounded and unbounded, rational and irrational,
convergent and divergent, finite and infinite
Some other familiar mathematical notions occur often in contrasting pairs but are not fully opposites:
horizontal and vertical, positive and negative,
open and closed, perpendicular and parallel
Recently I have returned to reading work by Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1931; Bengal, India; winner of the 1913 Nobel Prize in Literature) and I enjoy reflecting on contrasts posed by this reflective poet in a series of "Epigrams":
Epigrams by Rabindranath Tagore
I will close my door to shut out all possible errors.
"But how am I to enter in?" cried Truth.
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 25, 2015
Geometry of baseball
Many poems are written of baseball; a few of them involve mathematics -- see the posting for April 9, 2010 for math-related baseball poems by Marianne Moore (1877-1972) and Jerry Wemple; see the posting for September 18, 2011 for one by Jonathan Holden.
Today I feature the opening stanza from a baseball poem by Pennsylvania poet, Le Hinton.
from Our Ballpark by Le Hinton
This is the place where my father educated us:
an open-air school of tutelage and transformation.
This is where we first learned
to count to three, then later to calculate the angle
of a line drive bouncing off the left field wall.
We studied the geometry and appreciated the ballet
of third to second to first, a triple play.
. . .
Today I feature the opening stanza from a baseball poem by Pennsylvania poet, Le Hinton.
from Our Ballpark by Le Hinton
This is the place where my father educated us:
an open-air school of tutelage and transformation.
This is where we first learned
to count to three, then later to calculate the angle
of a line drive bouncing off the left field wall.
We studied the geometry and appreciated the ballet
of third to second to first, a triple play.
. . .
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Earth Day -- April 22, 2015
Consider today the thoughtful words of this sonnet by Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892-1950):
Read history: so learn your place in Time
And go to sleep: all this was done before;
We do it better, fouling every shore;
We disinfect, we do not probe, the crime.
Our engines plunge into the seas, they climb
Above our atmosphere: we grow not more
Profound as we approach the ocean's floor;
Our flight is lofty, it is not sublime.
Yet long ago this Earth by struggling men
Was scuffed, was scraped by mouths that bubbled mud;
And will be so again, and yet again;
Until we trace our poison to its bud
And root, and there uproot it: until then,
Earth will be warmed each winter by man's blood.
These lines are found on my shelf in Collected Sonnets (Revised and Expanded Edition) by Edna St. Vincent Millay (Harper & Row, 1988). AND, recall the arithmetic of a sonnet: 14 lines (or breaths) and 5 iambs (or heartbeats) per line.
Read history: so learn your place in Time
And go to sleep: all this was done before;
We do it better, fouling every shore;
We disinfect, we do not probe, the crime.
Our engines plunge into the seas, they climb
Above our atmosphere: we grow not more
Profound as we approach the ocean's floor;
Our flight is lofty, it is not sublime.
Yet long ago this Earth by struggling men
Was scuffed, was scraped by mouths that bubbled mud;
And will be so again, and yet again;
Until we trace our poison to its bud
And root, and there uproot it: until then,
Earth will be warmed each winter by man's blood.
These lines are found on my shelf in Collected Sonnets (Revised and Expanded Edition) by Edna St. Vincent Millay (Harper & Row, 1988). AND, recall the arithmetic of a sonnet: 14 lines (or breaths) and 5 iambs (or heartbeats) per line.
Labels:
arithmetic,
Earth day,
Edna St. Vincent Millay,
sonnet
Sunday, April 19, 2015
April celebrates Math and Poetry
April is National Poetry Month and Mathematics Awareness Month. Yesterday I was able to attend several of the popular and crowded events at the National Math Festival (Here's a link to "A Field Guide to Math on the National Mall" where you can see photos of items pointed out to yesterday's visitors.) and tomorrow evening (April 20) I will be part of a reading that features poetry of math and science at the DC Science Cafe (at Busboys & Poets, 5th &K Streets, 6:30 PM).
For tomorrow evening's reading I intend to wear my red-peppers earrings; one of the poems I will offer will be "A Taste of Mathematics" (from my collection Red Has No Reason and posted in its entirety at this link). Here is the poem's final stanza:
She said, "Hot peppers
are like mathematics —
with strong flavor
that takes over
what they enter."
For tomorrow evening's reading I intend to wear my red-peppers earrings; one of the poems I will offer will be "A Taste of Mathematics" (from my collection Red Has No Reason and posted in its entirety at this link). Here is the poem's final stanza:
She said, "Hot peppers
are like mathematics —
with strong flavor
that takes over
what they enter."
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
Remembering Abraham Lincoln
Today -- April 14, 2015 -- marks the 150th birthday of the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln (1809 - 1865) and April 15 is the date on which he died. Lincoln loved poetry and trained his reasoning with Euclid's geometry. Here is a brief sample of his own poetry (found -- along with other samples -- at PoetryFoundation.org).
Abraham Lincoln by Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln
his hand and pen
he will be good but
god knows When
From my copy of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass (Signet Classics, 1955), from the section "Memories of Lincoln," I have copied these well-known and thoughtful (and non-mathematical) lines:
Abraham Lincoln by Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln
his hand and pen
he will be good but
god knows When
From my copy of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass (Signet Classics, 1955), from the section "Memories of Lincoln," I have copied these well-known and thoughtful (and non-mathematical) lines:
Labels:
Abraham Lincoln,
assassination,
Euclid,
geometry,
mathematics,
poetry,
Walt Whitman
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
Tuesday, April 7, 2015
Man Ray's "Human Equations"
Art lovers in Washington, DC have the opportunity (until 5/10/15) to see, on exhibit at The Phillips Collection, "Man Ray -- Human Equations: A Journey from Mathematics to Shakespeare." I visited the exhibit on February 19 on the occasion of a poetry reading by Rae Armantrout -- she presented work of hers that she felt captured the spirit of Man Ray's work. (Bucknell poet Karl Patten, whom I had as a poetry teacher years ago, insisted that "Every Thing Connects" and, indeed, this is the title of one of the poems in Patten's collection The Impossible Reaches. Both of these phrases that became titles for Patten seem also to describe Man Ray's and Armantrout's work: they have taken seemingly disparate objects and reached across seemingly impossible gaps to relate them. As often happens in mathematics.)
Friday, April 3, 2015
Mathematics and poetry -- are the same ! ! !
Last week the Art Works Blog posted an interview with mathematician, poet, and translator, Enriqueta Carrington. You will want to follow the link and read the whole thing. Here is a paragraph:
quoting Enriqueta Carrington:
quoting Enriqueta Carrington:
Mathematics and poetry are the same thing,
or one is a translation of the other.
Well, perhaps that is an overstatement;
but both math and poetry are about beautiful patterns,
about creating, gazing at, and sharing them,
or one is a translation of the other.
Well, perhaps that is an overstatement;
but both math and poetry are about beautiful patterns,
about creating, gazing at, and sharing them,
and about appreciating those created by others.
It is not necessary to be a great mathematician or a great poet
to enjoy this beauty, as I can tell you from my own experience.
to enjoy this beauty, as I can tell you from my own experience.
Several years ago, at a time near the beginning of this poetry-math blog, in the posting for April 8, 2010, is a pantoum by Carrington. And here is another of hers, this time a Fibonacci poem -- whose lines increase in word-count that matches the first eight Fibonacci numbers: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21.
Labels:
beautiful,
beauty,
Enriqueta Carrington,
Fibonacci,
mathematics,
poetry,
translation
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
April is . . . a time for math and poetry . . .
Once upon a time
I counted to the tenth prime
and found a word to rhyme.
Tomorrow is not only April Fool's Day -- it also begins "National Poetry Month" and "National Mathematics Awareness Month." I hope you will scroll down through this blog for math-poetry intersections -- and that you will like what you find and return for more.
(If you are near Washington, DC, consider a visit to MathFest on Saturday, April 18.)
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?
Thursday, March 26, 2015
The problem of time
Californian Brenda Hillman is a poet whose work I like and admire. In "Time Problem" she weaves prime numbers into a deft description of the dilemma of not enough time.
Time Problem by Brenda Hillman
The problem
of time. Of there not being
enough of it.
My girl came to the study
and said Help me;
I told her I had a time problem
which meant:
I would die for you but I don’t have ten minutes.
Numbers hung in the math book
like motel coathangers. The Lean
Cuisine was burning
Time Problem by Brenda Hillman
The problem
of time. Of there not being
enough of it.
My girl came to the study
and said Help me;
I told her I had a time problem
which meant:
I would die for you but I don’t have ten minutes.
Numbers hung in the math book
like motel coathangers. The Lean
Cuisine was burning
Labels:
boundary,
Brenda Hillman,
curve,
factoring,
math,
poem,
Poetry Foundation,
prime,
time
Monday, March 23, 2015
March 23 -- Emmy Noether's birthday
Today, March 23, 2015, Google celebrates the 133rd birthday of mathematician Emmy Noether. In support of the celebration here is a link to "My Dance is Mathematics," a poem I wrote to honor this pioneering mathematician. I hope that celebrations of Noether and other math-women will help to create a world in which these lines from my poem about her are no longer true:
If a woman's dance is mathematics,
she dances alone.
If a woman's dance is mathematics,
she dances alone.
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
Thursday, March 19, 2015
Multiplied by Rain
There are many mathematical terms that are used in daily life -- not only multiplied and divided and negative but also closure and identity and field and commute -- and it is fun for me, a math person, to see poets use such terms in new and thoughtful ways.
Poet Jane Hirschfield weaves words into fine tapestries that give us new dimensions of meaning. The Table of Contents of her new book, The Beauty (Knopf, 2015), is scattered with mathematical terms -- we find zero, plus, subtraction, and the final title, "Like Two Negative Numbers Multiplied by Rain." This poem first appeared in Poetry (2012) and is available at the Poetry Foundation website along with more than thirty additional Hirshfield poems.
Like Two Negative Numbers Multiplied by Rain by Jane Hirshfield
Lie down, you are horizontal.
Stand up, you are not.
Poet Jane Hirschfield weaves words into fine tapestries that give us new dimensions of meaning. The Table of Contents of her new book, The Beauty (Knopf, 2015), is scattered with mathematical terms -- we find zero, plus, subtraction, and the final title, "Like Two Negative Numbers Multiplied by Rain." This poem first appeared in Poetry (2012) and is available at the Poetry Foundation website along with more than thirty additional Hirshfield poems.
Like Two Negative Numbers Multiplied by Rain by Jane Hirshfield
Lie down, you are horizontal.
Stand up, you are not.
Labels:
Jane Hirshfield,
logic,
mathematics,
multiplied,
negative,
number,
poetry
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
A Russian toast (with mathematics)
Several weeks ago I had the pleasure of visiting the Washington Museum of Poetry and Music -- a collection in Rockville, MD gathered and maintained in the home of Uli Zislin
who has lived in the US since 1996. (Among other treasures, the musuem has recordings of poets Anna Akhmatova, Boris Pasternak, Osip
Mandelstam, and Anastasia Tsvetaeva.) At the time of my visit, Zislin
presented me with one of his own poems that includes a bit of mathematics.
The original Russian version of Zislin's poem is at the bottom of this
post. Prior to that I offer a translation into English by Arlington poet,
teacher, and award-winning Russian translator, Katherine Young. Thank you, Katherine.
A Pedagogical Toast by Uli Zislin
translated by Katherine E. Young
Friends and colleagues, pedagogues!
We’re not philosophers, not gods.
We’re simply people, soldiers of God,
destined to suffer and to love.
A Pedagogical Toast by Uli Zislin
translated by Katherine E. Young
Friends and colleagues, pedagogues!
We’re not philosophers, not gods.
We’re simply people, soldiers of God,
destined to suffer and to love.
Labels:
delta t,
Katherine Young,
mathematics,
museum,
poetry,
Russian,
Uli Zislin
Friday, March 13, 2015
Three Greguerías
From Portugal, from Francisco -- who emailed me the gift of these lines:
Three Greguerías by Rámon Gómez de la Serna (1888-1963)
translated by Francisco J Craveiro de Carvalho and JoAnne
Holding her hoop the little girl goes to school and to the playground,
to play with the circle and its tangent.
Zeros are the eggs from which all the other numbers are hatched.
Numbers are the best acrobats in the world: they stand on top of each other without falling down.
Ramón Gómez de la Serna is considered the father of the greguería -- a one-liner in which he combined gentle humor with a metaphor.
Three Greguerías by Rámon Gómez de la Serna (1888-1963)
translated by Francisco J Craveiro de Carvalho and JoAnne
Holding her hoop the little girl goes to school and to the playground,
to play with the circle and its tangent.
Zeros are the eggs from which all the other numbers are hatched.
Numbers are the best acrobats in the world: they stand on top of each other without falling down.
Ramón Gómez de la Serna is considered the father of the greguería -- a one-liner in which he combined gentle humor with a metaphor.
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
Similar, self-similar -- fractals, a poem
In geometry two objects are said to be similar if they have the same shape --- which happens if their angles are the same size and occur in the same sequence. For example, any pair of triangles with angles 30, 60, and 90 degrees are similar; also, the lengths of pairs of corresponding sides of these triangles have the same ratio.
A term used in the terminology of fractals is self-similarity: a self-similar object has exactly (or approximately) the same shape as a part of itself. A variety of objects in the real world, such as ferns and coastlines, are approximately self-similar: parts of them show the same statistical properties at many scales. At the end of this post are a couple of diagrams that illustrate how a fractal may be developed. But first, experience the generative beauty of self-similarity via a poem by Maryland poet Greg McBride. Mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot (1924-2010), quoted in McBride's epigraph, often is nicknamed "the father of fractals."
A term used in the terminology of fractals is self-similarity: a self-similar object has exactly (or approximately) the same shape as a part of itself. A variety of objects in the real world, such as ferns and coastlines, are approximately self-similar: parts of them show the same statistical properties at many scales. At the end of this post are a couple of diagrams that illustrate how a fractal may be developed. But first, experience the generative beauty of self-similarity via a poem by Maryland poet Greg McBride. Mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot (1924-2010), quoted in McBride's epigraph, often is nicknamed "the father of fractals."
Labels:
angle,
Benoit Mandelbrot,
fractal,
Greg McBride,
Innisfree,
mathematics,
poem,
recursion,
self-similar
Saturday, March 7, 2015
The mathematician, she . . . .
Tomorrow, March 8, is the International Day of the Woman -- and I celebrate the day with mixed feelings. YES, there are many women I want to celebrate. BUT WHY are they not celebrated daily, equally with men? And a more specific concern, WHY, when the word "mathematician" is used, is the person assumed to be a man. (There is, on the other hand, a nice non-gendered neutrality in numbers -- as in this first stanza of "Numbers," by Mary Cornish, found below.)
In this posting I celebrate Grace Brewster Murray Hopper (1906-1992) -- a mathematician with a doctorate from Yale, a navy admiral, a computer scientist who led in the development of COBOL, an early (c.1959) programming language. A person I had the good fortune to meet when she visited Bloomsburg University in 1984 to receive an honorary Doctor of Science Degree. Hopper was imaginative and articulate; here is some poetry found in her words.
If it's a
good idea,
do it.
In this posting I celebrate Grace Brewster Murray Hopper (1906-1992) -- a mathematician with a doctorate from Yale, a navy admiral, a computer scientist who led in the development of COBOL, an early (c.1959) programming language. A person I had the good fortune to meet when she visited Bloomsburg University in 1984 to receive an honorary Doctor of Science Degree. Hopper was imaginative and articulate; here is some poetry found in her words.
If it's a
good idea,
do it.
Friday, March 6, 2015
Celebrate Pi -- write in Pilish
On 3/14/15 many of us will celebrate π - day; for those who like to gaze on the digits of π, one hundred thousand of them are available here. In honor of this upcoming special day I have composed a small stanza in Pilish (the language whose word-lengths follow the digits of π ).
3. 1 4
Get a list,
1 5
I shout,
9 2 6 5 3 5
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Women in Maths -- on Facebook
Recently I prepared an item for Rachel Levy's Grandma Got STEM blog that told a bit about my granddaughters who like math. My preparation for that posting led me to focus on my wish to have math be a fun place for girls to hang out -- a place for lots of girls: feminine girls, sporty girls, popular girls, silly girls (as well as geek girls). Mathematics has mostly been a lonely place for females -- my first girl-friend who was also a math person was a colleague whom I met in my 40s (see my poem for Toni, "Girl-Talk"). I want mathematics to be a welcoming place for my granddaughters. A place with friends.
Related to this concern, wonderful news came in my email box recently from Susanne Pumpluen (video) at the University of Nottingham. She has started a Women in Maths page on Facebook . There one can find bios, videos, news links and FRIENDS. Visit. LIKE. Offer your comments and support.
Related to this concern, wonderful news came in my email box recently from Susanne Pumpluen (video) at the University of Nottingham. She has started a Women in Maths page on Facebook . There one can find bios, videos, news links and FRIENDS. Visit. LIKE. Offer your comments and support.
Labels:
Facebook,
friend,
girls,
granddaughters,
Grandma,
math,
poem,
Rachel Levy,
Susanne Pumpluen,
think,
Toni Carroll,
Women in Maths
Saturday, February 28, 2015
Reflections on Logic
Miroslav Holub (1923-1998), Czech poet and immunologist who excelled in both endeavors, is one of my favorite poets. He combines scientific exactitude with empathy and absurdity. Here is a sample:
Brief Reflections on Logic by Miroslav Holub
translated by Stuart Friebert and Dana Habova
The big problem is everything has
its own logic. Everything you can
think of, whatever falls on your head.
Somebody will always add the logic.
In your head or on it.
Brief Reflections on Logic by Miroslav Holub
translated by Stuart Friebert and Dana Habova
The big problem is everything has
its own logic. Everything you can
think of, whatever falls on your head.
Somebody will always add the logic.
In your head or on it.
Labels:
cube,
cylinder,
logic,
mathematics,
Miroslav Holub,
Numbers and Faces,
poetry
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
Found poetry - words of Dirac
The epigraph for Richard Bready's "Times of Sand" (a stanza of which I posted a few days ago on 21 February) is a quote from British physicist Paul Dirac (1902-1984, founder of quantum theory). This quote reminded me how often we find poetry within well-written prose -- and I have gone to WikiQuotes and found more poetic words from Dirac:
If you are
receptive
and humble,
mathematics
will lead you
by the hand.
If you are
receptive
and humble,
mathematics
will lead you
by the hand.
Labels:
equation,
mathematical,
mathematics,
Paul Dirac,
physical,
poetry,
quantum theory,
science
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
Monday, February 16, 2015
The numbers say it all . . .
The title of my posting today, "The numbers say it all" comes from the final line of "After Leviticus," by Detroit poet Philip Levine. Levine (1928-2015) died this past Saturday. Often termed "a working class poet," this fine writer won many awards for his work.
After Leviticus by Philip Levine
The seventeen metal huts across the way
from the great factory house seventeen
separate families. Because the slag heaps
burn all day and all night it’s never dark,
so as you pick your way home at 2 A.M.
on a Saturday morning near the end
After Leviticus by Philip Levine
The seventeen metal huts across the way
from the great factory house seventeen
separate families. Because the slag heaps
burn all day and all night it’s never dark,
so as you pick your way home at 2 A.M.
on a Saturday morning near the end
Friday, February 13, 2015
America, land of equals (perhaps)
Preparing to celebrate (after Valentine's Day) Presidents' Day, remembering particularly George Washington (b February 22, 1732) and Abraham Lincoln (b February 12,1809), I offer a few lines by Walt Whitman (1819-1892).
America by Walt Whitman
Centre of equal daughters, equal sons,
All, all alike endear'd, grown, ungrown, young or old,
Strong, ample, fair, enduring, capable, rich,
Perennial with the Earth, with Freedom, Law and Love,
A grand, sane, towering, seated Mother,
Chair'd in the adamant of Time. [1888]
This poem is found here in the Walt Whitman Archive.
America by Walt Whitman
Centre of equal daughters, equal sons,
All, all alike endear'd, grown, ungrown, young or old,
Strong, ample, fair, enduring, capable, rich,
Perennial with the Earth, with Freedom, Law and Love,
A grand, sane, towering, seated Mother,
Chair'd in the adamant of Time. [1888]
This poem is found here in the Walt Whitman Archive.
Monday, February 9, 2015
Surreal parabola, Mobius strip
When a math term appears in a poem, will its usage make sense to a mathematician? Some mathematical folks are critical of poetic use of math words because precision may be lost to "poetic license." Others feel a pleasing tension between the mathness of a term and the stretched or layered meanings suggested by the poem. With these thoughts in mind, consider these two mathematically-titled poems "Mobius Strip" and "Parabola" by Robert Desnos (France, 1900-1945), translated by Amy Levin and selected from "A sampling of French surrealist poetry."
Mobius Strip by Robert Desnos (trans. Amy Levin)
The track I'm running on
Won't be the same when I turn back
It's useless to follow it straight
I'll return to another place
Mobius Strip by Robert Desnos (trans. Amy Levin)
The track I'm running on
Won't be the same when I turn back
It's useless to follow it straight
I'll return to another place
Labels:
Amy Levin,
mathematics,
Mobius band,
parabola,
poetic license,
poetry,
Robert Desnos
Friday, February 6, 2015
Celebrate Black History, Valentine's Day
February is Black History Month and on the 14th we celebrate love with Valentine's Day. To find in this blog a variety of mathy poems on these topics (and many others) use the SEARCH box found at the top of the right-hand column of this blog.
Labels:
Black History Month,
love,
mathy,
poem,
Valentine
Thursday, February 5, 2015
Moebius Strip
Following a lead from Francisco, I found (here) this tiny poem by Michael Hessel-Mial:
moebius strip
a belt of clouds
twist it, latch it
twisted
which way will it rain?
To find more poems that feature the Mobius strip locate the SEARCH box at the top of the this blog's right-hand column -- and enter the term mobius. Alternatively, the search box also works for a myriad of other topics.
moebius strip
a belt of clouds
twist it, latch it
twisted
which way will it rain?
To find more poems that feature the Mobius strip locate the SEARCH box at the top of the this blog's right-hand column -- and enter the term mobius. Alternatively, the search box also works for a myriad of other topics.
Labels:
Michael Hessel-Mial,
Mobius strip,
rainbow,
twist
Monday, February 2, 2015
Is winter half over?
Today (February 2) those of us with roots in Pennsylvania join enthusiasts from everywhere as we look to mythical groundhog Punxsutawney Phil for a forecast concerning prolonged winter or early spring. This morning Phil's forecast was bleak but not unexpected: we will have six more weeks of winter.
This news that our winter is only half over has led me to a poem (found in the illustrated anthology Talking to the Sun, edited by Kenneth Koch and Kate Farrell, published in 1985 by the Metropolitan Museum of Art):
Another Sarah by Anne Porter (1911-2011)
for Christopher Smart
When winter was half over
God sent three angels to the apple-tree
Who said to her
"Be glad, you little rack
Of empty sticks,
Because you have been chosen.
In May you will become
A wave of living sweetness
A nation of white petals
A dynasty of apples."
Another winter poem by Porter with a bit of mathematics is included in this post for 25 November 2012.
This news that our winter is only half over has led me to a poem (found in the illustrated anthology Talking to the Sun, edited by Kenneth Koch and Kate Farrell, published in 1985 by the Metropolitan Museum of Art):
Another Sarah by Anne Porter (1911-2011)
for Christopher Smart
When winter was half over
God sent three angels to the apple-tree
Who said to her
"Be glad, you little rack
Of empty sticks,
Because you have been chosen.
In May you will become
A wave of living sweetness
A nation of white petals
A dynasty of apples."
Another winter poem by Porter with a bit of mathematics is included in this post for 25 November 2012.
Labels:
Anne Porter,
groundhog,
half,
mathematics,
poetry,
Punxsutawney,
winter
Friday, January 30, 2015
Twined Arcs, Defying Euclid
The English language has adopted into current usage many terms from other languages. French terms like coup de grace and haut monde have for many years been found in English dictionaries. Recently, computer terms such as bite and captcha and google have achieved widespread use. In addition, those of us who are fluent in the language of mathematics find that its terms sometimes offer a concise best way to describe a non-mathematical phenomenon.
Mathematician-poet Sarah Glaz weaves mathematical terms into her poem, "Departures in May" -- a poem that uses the language of geometry to vivify the presence of loss, death and other dark forces.
Departures in May by Sarah Glaz
Big things crush, inside the brain,
like plaster of Paris on stone;
a taste of splintered metal;
terra-cotta hardness of heart's desire.
Statues motionless
at railroad depots,
proclaim imitation as life.
Mathematician-poet Sarah Glaz weaves mathematical terms into her poem, "Departures in May" -- a poem that uses the language of geometry to vivify the presence of loss, death and other dark forces.
Departures in May by Sarah Glaz
Big things crush, inside the brain,
like plaster of Paris on stone;
a taste of splintered metal;
terra-cotta hardness of heart's desire.
Statues motionless
at railroad depots,
proclaim imitation as life.
Labels:
arcs,
curve,
Euclid,
infinity,
mathematics,
poem,
Sarah Glaz
Monday, January 26, 2015
Poetry-math images; Expectation
Search engines are very useful in my search for mathy poets and poems. Recently I have noticed that a link to images has been offered prior to the verbal links when I have queried Google using "mathematics poetry." Some of the visuals are quotations, some are book-covers, some are poems. When you have time, explore and enjoy!
Finding more via Google that I expected connected me with an old poem. Here, unearthed recently, is "Expectation" -- some lines from the 1980s, when I was beginning to write poems.
Expectation
teach you to expect two teach you to expect one
to be more than one. to be the sum of its parts.
Labels:
expectation,
Google,
mathematics,
Parable of the Watchmakers,
poetry,
time
Thursday, January 22, 2015
Girls who like math
Often I think about the interactions of girls with mathematics and recently I have been feeling delighted that all of my school-age granddaughters like math. In fact, Harvey Mudd mathematician Rachel Levy has included views from these girls (and from me) here in her blog, "Grandma Got STEM."
S u m
f o r
f u n
To read selections from several of my favorite poems about girls-in-math (including Sharon Olds' poem "The One Girl at the Boys' Party" and Kyoko Mori's poem, "Barbie Says Math is Hard") follow this link to a posting made on 10 June 2010. Another math-girls post was back on 26 December 2010. Or use the SEARCH box (upper right) to find poems related to your own choice of topics.
T h i s
g i r l
d o e s
m a t h
g i r l
d o e s
m a t h
S u m
f o r
f u n
s o
i f
1
i f
1
To read selections from several of my favorite poems about girls-in-math (including Sharon Olds' poem "The One Girl at the Boys' Party" and Kyoko Mori's poem, "Barbie Says Math is Hard") follow this link to a posting made on 10 June 2010. Another math-girls post was back on 26 December 2010. Or use the SEARCH box (upper right) to find poems related to your own choice of topics.
Labels:
girls,
Grandma,
Kyoko Mori,
math,
poetry,
Rachel Levy,
Sharon Olds,
STEM
Sunday, January 18, 2015
Probability and Coincidence
On page 26 of my copy of the latest New Yorker is a poem by Lia Purpura entitled "Probability." In her brief poem Purpura renders with poetic power the astonishment each of us feels when meeting a long-ago classmate at an out-of-town super market or some other unexpected event. Take time to follow the link and read this poem.
Recently several friends have shared with me their amazement at unexpected coincidences and I have been tempted to illustrate -- perhaps with the birthday paradox -- how likely to happen unexpected events may be.
Recently several friends have shared with me their amazement at unexpected coincidences and I have been tempted to illustrate -- perhaps with the birthday paradox -- how likely to happen unexpected events may be.
With more than 23 persons in a room the chances are more than 50-50
that two of them will share a birthday (same day, maybe different years).
Many websites offer explanation of this "birthday paradox" -- here is one.
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
To add two and two
Today I call attention again (as in my post for 6 January, 2015) to the extensive Science-Poetry collection edited by Norman Hugh Redington and Karen Rae Keck. Mathy (rather than bawdy) limericks are featured in the collection; for example, this one by an unknown author:
There was an old man who said, "Do
Tell me how I'm to add two and two?
I'm not very sure
That it doesn't make four --
But I fear that is almost too few."
There was an old man who said, "Do
Tell me how I'm to add two and two?
I'm not very sure
That it doesn't make four --
But I fear that is almost too few."
Saturday, January 10, 2015
Opposites, Balance
Recently, and perhaps always, opposites have interested me. For example, the complementary and sometimes conflicting nuggets of advice contained in "Pinch a penny, waste a pound" and "It is best to prepare for the days of necessity." And in "Kindness effects more than severity" and "Spare the rod, spoil the child." Maybe what I like best is the challenge of synthesizing opposite truths.
Mathematics contains many pairs of entities that are, each in some different sense, opposites:
In an ideal world, opposites exist with "Balance" -- which is the title of the following lovely and contemplative poem by Adam Zagajewski :
Mathematics contains many pairs of entities that are, each in some different sense, opposites:
2 and -2 2 and 1/2
horizontal and vertical differentiation and integration
And there are some arbitrary subdivisions that often are treated as if they are disconnected opposites:
pure vs. applied (creating mathematics vs. solving problems)
teaching and learning, creating vs. teaching, arts and sciences
In an ideal world, opposites exist with "Balance" -- which is the title of the following lovely and contemplative poem by Adam Zagajewski :
Labels:
Adam Zagajewski,
balance,
Clare Cavanagh,
count,
measure,
nothing,
opposite
Thursday, January 8, 2015
The Geometry of Winter, with Eagles
A poetry-listening opportunity in the Washington, DC area:
Poet Martin Dickinson will read from his new collection, My Concept of Time,
on Sunday, January 11 at Arlington's Iota Cafe.
on Sunday, January 11 at Arlington's Iota Cafe.
AND -- if you 're San Antonio on January 11, 2015 you'll want to attend
the 5:30 PM poetry-with-math reading (details here)
at the Gonzales Convention Center, sponsored by JHM.
From My Concept of Time, here's a poem of the geometry of our winter world.
for Phyllis
We spot them, first almost imaginary
thin pencil lines or scratches on our glasses.
The earth's disk flattens out
where this pale land becomes the bay,
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
from MIT Science-Poetry -- The Cal-Dif-Fluk Saga
Recently I have enjoyed browsing a voluminous online 19th century Science-Poetry collection (Watchers of the Moon) hosted by MIT, gathered and edited by Norman Hugh Redington and Karen Rae Keck. Google led me to the site in a search for " poetry of calculus" and I found there found a fascinating item by J. M. Child:
The Cal-Dif-Fluk Saga (from The Monist: A Quarterly Magazine Devoted to the Philosophy of Science -- Open Court Publishing, 1917) and described as "a pseudo-epic about the invention of calculus."
Child was a translator (from Latin into English) of the works of Isaac Barrow and Gottfried Leibniz and his poem presents the names of well-known mathematicians in clever scrambles: Isa-Tonu is Newton, Zin-Bli is Leibniz, Isa-Roba is Barrow, Gen-Tan-Agg stands for Barrow's Gen-eral method of Tan-gents and of Agg-regates while Shun-Fluk and Cal-Dof refer to the methods of Newton and Leibniz. One may, with a fair amount of work, enjoy this dramatization of warriors and weapons -- battles that were part of the development of calculus. Here from the middle of the Saga (from Section 6 (of 17)), is a sample of Child's lines illustrating the struggles that calculus required.
Child was a translator (from Latin into English) of the works of Isaac Barrow and Gottfried Leibniz and his poem presents the names of well-known mathematicians in clever scrambles: Isa-Tonu is Newton, Zin-Bli is Leibniz, Isa-Roba is Barrow, Gen-Tan-Agg stands for Barrow's Gen-eral method of Tan-gents and of Agg-regates while Shun-Fluk and Cal-Dof refer to the methods of Newton and Leibniz. One may, with a fair amount of work, enjoy this dramatization of warriors and weapons -- battles that were part of the development of calculus. Here from the middle of the Saga (from Section 6 (of 17)), is a sample of Child's lines illustrating the struggles that calculus required.
Saturday, January 3, 2015
The Role of Zero
In mathematics, as in poetry, multiple meanings are common and create power for the language. For example, the number 0 is an idempotent element, an additive identity, a multiplicative annihilator -- and it also plays the role of something that may represent nothing.
In Dorothea Tanning's poem below -- I found it at poets.org -- zero takes on still another of its roles, that of place-holder -- as in the numbers 101 and 5000, for example.
Zero by Dorothea Tanning (1910-2012)
Now that legal tender has
lost its tenderness,
and its very legality
is so often in question.
it may be time to consider
the zero--
long rows of them.
empty, black circles in clumps
of three,
In Dorothea Tanning's poem below -- I found it at poets.org -- zero takes on still another of its roles, that of place-holder -- as in the numbers 101 and 5000, for example.
Zero by Dorothea Tanning (1910-2012)
Now that legal tender has
lost its tenderness,
and its very legality
is so often in question.
it may be time to consider
the zero--
long rows of them.
empty, black circles in clumps
of three,
Labels:
decimal place,
Dorothea Tanning,
Graywolf Press,
mathematics,
place-holder,
poem,
poetry,
Poets.org,
zero
2014 (and prior) -- titles, dates of posts
Scroll
down to find titles and dates of posts in 2014. At the bottom are links to lists of posts through 2013 and 2012 and 2011 -- and all the way back to March 2010 when this
blog was begun. This link leads to a PDF file that lists searchable topics and names of poets and mathematicians presented herein.
Dec 30 Be someone TO COUNT ON in 2015
Dec 28 A Fractal Poem
Dec 25 A thousand Christmas trees
Dec 24 The gift of a poem
Dec 20 The Girl Who Loved Triangles
Dec 30 Be someone TO COUNT ON in 2015
Dec 28 A Fractal Poem
Dec 25 A thousand Christmas trees
Dec 24 The gift of a poem
Dec 20 The Girl Who Loved Triangles
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