Month: July 2005

  • Tribute

    to the Dance of Kali:

      From Feb. 18, 2003 --

    Fat Man and Dancing Girl

    Dance of
    Shiva and Kali

    Paul Newman as
    General Groves

    From "The Bomb of the Blue God," by M. V. Ramana--

    Gita
    11:32 --

    kalosmi lokaksaya krt pravrddho

    "This literally means: I am kala, the great destroyer of Worlds. What is intriguing about this verse, then, is the interpretation of kala by Jungk and others to mean death. While death is technically one of the meanings of kala, a more common one is time."

     See 1132 AD & Saint Brighid, and my 2003 weblog entries of January 5 (Twelfth Night and the whirligig of time), January 31 (St. Brigid's Eve), and February 1 (St. Brigid's Day).

    The fact that Oppenheimer thought, on this date in 1945, of Chapter 11, verse 32, of the Gita may, as a mnemonic device, be associated with the use of the number 1132 in Finnegans Wake.

    Related material for
    Michael Flatley on his
    July 16 birthday:

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050716-nataraj2.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Shiva as Lord of the Dance

    Michael and other Irish persons
    may benefit from the film
    "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom"
    as an introduction to
    the Dance of Shiva and Kali.

    On a more personal level:
    Log24 entries of July 12 and July 13.

  • Feast of St. Bonaventure

    From Darkness Visible:

    "Ed Rinehart [sic] made a fortune painting canvases that were just
    one solid color.  He had his black period
    in which the canvas was totally black. 
    And then he had a blue period
    in which he was painting the canvas blue."

    -- Martin Gardner interview in AMS Notices, June/July 2005 

    From Art History:

    "Art history was very personal through the eyes of Ad Reinhardt."

    -- Robert Morris,

        Smithsonian Archives of American Art

    From The Edge of Eternity:

    Christopher Fry's obituary
    in The New York Times--

    "His
    plays radiated an optimistic faith in God and humanity, evoking, in his
    words, 'a world in which we are poised on the edge of eternity, a world
    which has deeps and shadows of mystery, and God is anything but a
    sleeping partner.' He said he wrote his plays in poetry because that
    was 'the language in which man expresses his own amazement' at the
    complexity both of himself and of a reality which, beneath the surface,
    was 'wildly, perilously, inexplicably fantastic.'"

     

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050703-Cold.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Adapted from cover of
    German edition of Cold Mountain

  • Today's birthday: Harrison Ford

    Location, Location, Location

    Wikipedia on Temple of Doom:

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050713-Ford.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    "Most of the filming was done
    on location in Sri Lanka."

    Math Forum


    User Profile for: crankbuster

    UserID:

    226278

    Name:

    Email:

    Registered:

    7/5/05

    Occupation:

    Teacher

    Location:

    Srilanka

    Homepage:

    http://www.math16.com/

    Biography:

    Mathematics teacher in Srilanka.

    Total Posts:

    10

    Recent Messages:
      1.  Re: Steven Cullinane is a Crank
           Jul 12, 2005
      2.  Re: Steven Cullinane is a Crank
           Jul 12, 2005
      3.  Re: Steven Cullinane is a Crank
           Jul 12, 2005
      4.  Re: Steven Cullinane's "Diamond Theory"
           Jul 8, 2005
      5.  Steven Cullinane's "Diamond Theory"
           Jul 7, 2005
      6.  Re: Steven Cullinane is a Crank
           Jul 7, 2005
      7.  Re: Steven Cullinane is a Crank
           Jul 5, 2005
      8.  Re: Steven Cullinane is a Crank
           Jul 5, 2005
      9.  Steven Cullinane is a Crank
           Jul 5, 2005
    10.  Steven Cullinane is a Crank
           Jul 5, 2005

           Google Groups view of
           the main thread (at sci.math)
           to which crankbuster has posted

  • Reply to my fan mail

    Discussions in Internet forums indicate that at least three people seem deeply interested in my work in finite geometry:

    1. Someone falsely using the name of R. T. Curtis, a U. of Birmingham group theorist,
    2. Someone falsely using the name of George Polya, a deceased mathematician, and
    3. Someone using the nickname crankbuster.

    Unfortunately, remarks posted under these names are all extremely
    negative.  This is understandable, given that the author or
    authors have completely failed to comprehend what I was getting
    at.  Actually, I suspect that all three authors are the same
    person, who was inspired to bitter hatred by my negative review
    of an attempted proof of the four-color theorem.  I do not suspect
    the author of that attempted proof, but rather one of his countrymen;
    attacks posted using the forged name "R. T. Curtis" were posted from an
    address somewhere in Bombay, and "crankbuster" claims to be posting
    from Sri Lanka.

    As the real R. T. Curtis has noted,
    "If someone is deliberately using my name to attack Steven Cullinane
    anonymously, it shows malice and cowardice unusual in the mathematical
    world."  At least my anonymous fan has, it seems, stopped using other
    people's names to hide behind... although the latest attacks, under
    the name "crankbuster," seem to be trying to imply, falsely, a connection with the Crank Dot Net website.

  • Logos

    for St. Benedict's Day

    Click on either of the logos below for religious meditations -- on the left, a Jewish
    meditation from the Conference of Catholic Bishops; on the right, an
    Aryan meditation from Stormfront.org.

         

    Both logos represent different embodiments of the "story theory" of truth, as opposed to the "diamond theory" of truth.  Both logos claim, in their own ways, to represent the eternal Logos of the Christian religion.  I personally prefer the "diamond theory" of truth, represented by the logo below.

    See also the previous entry
    and the entries of 7/11, 2003.

  • Mathematics
    and Narrative

     

    Click on the title
    for a narrative about

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050710-Artemiadis.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.


    Nikolaos K. Artemiadis
    ,
     (Co-) author of

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050710-Hist.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    From Artemiadis's website:
    1986: Elected Regular Member
    of the Academy of Athens
    1999: Vice President
    of the Academy of Athens
    2000: President
    of the Academy of Athens
    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/AMS-seal.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    "First of all, I'd like to
       thank the Academy..."


    -- remark attributed to Plato

  • Today's birthday: Tom Hanks

    Christendom

    Catholic Encyclopedia, 1908:

    "In its wider sense this term is used to describe the part of the
    world which is inhabited by Christians.... But there is a narrower
    sense in which Christendom stands for a polity
    as well as a religion, for a nation as well as for a people.
    Christendom in this sense was an ideal which inspired and dignified
    many centuries of history and which has not yet altogether lost its
    power over the minds of men."

    Illustrations -- from
    Saving Private Ryan
    and from this week's G8 meeting:

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050709-Cross.JPG” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

  • Station

    From today's
    New York Times
    :

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050708-KingsCross.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
    Carl De Souza/
    Agence France-Presse

    "A construction worker
    bowed in prayer at

    the Kings Cross station

    in London."

    Related material:

    Log24 entries of

    July 3-5, 2005
    ,
    including an update
    of 3 AM July 8, 2005.

  • For Christopher Fry
    and the White Goddess:

    The Edge of Eternity


    Christian humanist playwright Christopher Fry, author of The Lady's Not for Burning, died at 97 on June 30, 2005.

    From Log24 on June 30:

    Robert Graves, author of
    The White Goddess:
    A Historical Grammar of Poetic Myth
    --

    How may the King hold back?
    Royally then he barters life for love.


    Or of the undying snake from chaos hatched,
    Whose coils contain the ocean,
    Into whose chops with naked sword he springs,
    Then in black water, tangled by the reeds,
    Battles three days and nights...

    From Cold Mountain:

    "He sat awhile on a rock, and
    then got up and walked all morning through the dim woods. The
    track was ill used, so coiled and knotted he could not say what its
    general tendency was. It aimed nowhere certain but up. The
    brush and bracken grew thick in the footway, and the ground
    seemed to be healing over, so that in some near future the way
    would not even remain as scar. For several miles it mostly
    wound its way through a forest of immense hemlocks, and the
    fog lay among them so thick that their green boughs were hidden.
    Only the black trunks were visible, rising into the low sky like old
    menhirs stood up by a forgotten race to memorialize the darkest
    events of their history....

    They climbed to a bend and from there they
    walked on great slabs of rock. It seemed to Inman that they were at the
    lip of a cliff, for the smell of the thin air spoke of considerable
    height, though the fog closed off all visual check of loftiness....

    Then he looked back down and felt a rush of vertigo as the
    lower world was suddenly revealed between his boot toes. He
    was indeed at the lip of a cliff, and he took one step back.... The
    country around was high, broken. Inman looked about and was
    startled to see a great knobby mountain forming up out of the
    fog to the west, looming into the sky.  The sun broke through a
    slot in the clouds, and a great band of Jacob's ladder suddenly
    hung in the air like a gauze curtain between Inman and the blue
    mountain....

    Inman looked at the big grandfather mountain and then he
    looked beyond it to the lesser mountains as they faded off into
    the southwest horizon, bathed in faint smoky haze. Waves of
    mountains. For all the evidence the eye told, they were endless.
    The grey overlapping humps of the farthest peaks distinguished
    themselves only as slightly darker values of the pale grey air. The
    shapes and their ghostly appearance spoke to Inman in a way he
    could not clearly interpret. They graded off like the tapering of
    pain from the neck wound as it healed."

    See also the entries of July 3.

    The crone figure in this section of Cold Mountain is not entirely unrelated to the girl accused of being a witch in Fry's play and to Graves's White Goddess.

    From Fry's obituary in The Guardian:

    "Though less of a public
    theorist than Eliot, Fry still believed passionately in the validity of
    poetic drama. As he wrote in the magazine Adam: 'In prose, we convey
    the eccentricity of things, in poetry their concentricity, the sense of
    relationship between them: a belief that all things express the same
    identity and are all contained in one discipline of revelation.'"

    From Fry's obituary in today's New York Times:

    "His plays radiated an optimistic faith in God and humanity, evoking, in
    his words, 'a world in which we are poised on the edge of eternity, a
    world which has deeps and shadows of mystery, and God is anything but a
    sleeping partner.' He said he wrote his plays in poetry because that
    was 'the language in which man expresses his own amazement' at the
    complexity both of himself and of a reality which, beneath the surface,
    was 'wildly, perilously, inexplicably fantastic.'"

  • Arrangement in
    Black and Blue

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05A/050703-Cold.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Adapted from cover of
    German edition of Cold Mountain

    Epigraph to Cold Mountain,
    by Charles Frazier --

    Men ask the way to Cold Mountain.
    Cold Mountain: there's no through trail.

    -- Han-shan