Month: September 2006

  • A Little Story

    Quarter to Three
    continued:

     
    A Little Story

     
    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix06A/060929-PAlottery.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    So make it one for my baby (8/19) 
    And one more for the road  (7/13).

    8/19:

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix06A/060930-819.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    7/13:

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix06A/060930-713.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

  • Values

    for the High Holy Days



    (Rosh Hashanah began at sundown September 22;
    Yom Kippur begins at sundown October 1.  --holidays.net)

    Mark Finkelstein today
    :

    "Today comes more evidence of the left's painful struggle to deal
    with its diminished standing and repeated rejection at the polls. In
    the subscription-required Why Voters Like Values, [New York] Times columnist Judith Warner claims that "the Christian right's
    ability to stir voter passions is based not on values, but on
    psychology." Warner describes having bravely gone inside the belly of
    the conservative beast, recently attending a Values Voters Summit in
    DC, and declaring it "imbued with so much intolerance and hate." This
    is presumably in contrast with liberal love-ins, where Bush & Co.
    are regularly depicted as liars, murderers, Hitlers, etc.

    She
    later describes a schadenfreude-provoking scene of the day after
    Kerry's 2004 defeat, picking through the rubble with Harvard psychology
    professor emeritus, Jerome Kagan, who tried to console Warner and
    presumably himself. As she describes it:

    "Our conversation
    drifted to the Republicans' 'values' [note scare quotes] agenda, and
    Kagan's belief that values sell because they're an antidote to the
    endemic mental health problem of our time: depression.

    "'Humans
    demand that there be a clear right and wrong,' he said. 'You've got to
    believe that the track you've taken is the right track. You get
    depressed if you're not certain as to what it is you're supposed to be
    doing or what's right and wrong in the world."

    "People
    need to divide the world into good and evil, us and them, Kagan
    continued. To do otherwise-- to entertain the possibility that life is
    not black and white, but variously shaded in gray-- is perhaps more
    honest, rational and decent. But it's also, psychically, a recipe for
    disaster."

    Got it? Liberalism is "more honest, rational
    and decent" than conservativism, but that's just not what the benighted
    public wants. They're looking for political Prozac, a Manichean
    worldview they can cling to, and that's what conservatism cunningly
    offers.

    Less controversial values are provided by yesterday evening's Pennsylvania lottery-- namely, the values 4, 5, and 6.

    For a discussion of these values under the guise of musical intervals, see Professor Kagan again, in a paper (pdf)
    he wrote with Marcel R. Zentner, "Infants' Perception of Consonance and
    Dissonance in Music" (Infant Behavior & Development, Vol. 21, No.
    3, 1998):

    Adults judge as most consonant either the octave (difference of 12
    semitones) [or the unison, difference of 0 semitones], the fifth (7
    semitones), or the major third (4 semitones).

    Illustration (see also yesterday evening):

    The image “http://www.log24.com/music/images/Keys-Values.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Notes and frequency ratios

    The paper discusses consonant intervals
    as an example of alleged
    "perceptual universals."

    Related material on universals
    suitable for today, the Feast of
    St. Michael and All Angels:

    Shining Forth and
    Midsummer Eve's Dream.

    The material in Shining Forth
    is also related, tangentially, to the
    following presentation of the
    Warner "values" essay
    in today's online New York Times:

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix06A/060929-NYT.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    The above three Times items,
    taken together, suggest that
    those in search of "values"
    should consult Betty Suarez:

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix06A/060929-BettyPoncho.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Click on picture for further details.

  • Grace Notes

    Today's evening lottery number in the state of Grace was 546... or, digit by digit, 5 - 4 - 6.  Acoustic interpretation by frequency ratios: E, C, G.

    The image “http://www.log24.com/music/images/Keys-Piano.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
    Click on picture for a midi.

    See also this afternoon's entry.

    "Selah."

    -- Hunter S. Thompson  

  • Grace

    Background on today's noon entry:

    1. "Macau's economy is based largely on tourism, namely gambling." --Wikipedia
    2. The mid-day lottery today in the state of Grace: 313.

    Background on today's morning entry:


    1. Log24 on 3/13, 2006
      :

      Note the... description
      of Christmas Eve 1900,
      and the remark that
      "Ici, le jour, c’est comme
      dans une
      église
      ."

    2. Une
      église
      :
      The American Cathedral in Paris
      .

  • Today's birthday:
    Mira Sorvino


    In her honor, a "page visited" link from

    Xanga Footprints for Log24 this morning--


    Visitor Page Visited
    Macau /home.aspx?user=m759...
    Referrer Time
    search.yahoo.com...
    9/28/2006 11:34 AM



    -- and a memento of
    the 1952 film "Macao"--


    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix06A/060928-Macao.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Memorable Quotes:

    Halloran:
    You don't want that junk.
              Diamonds would only
       cheapen you.    

    Margie:    Yeah. But what a way    
        to be cheapened.

  • A Table

    From the diary
    of John Baez:

    September 22, 2006

    ... Meanwhile, the mystics beckon:

    Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing, there is a field.
    I'll meet you there.
    - Rumi

    September 23, 2006

    I'm going up to San Rafael (near the Bay in Northern California) to
    visit my college pal Bruce Smith and his family. I'll be back on
    Wednesday the 27th, just in time to start teaching the next day.

    A check on the Rumi quote yields
    this, on a culinary organization:

    "Out
    beyond rightdoing and wrongdoing there is a
    field.  I'll meet you there."

    This is the starting place of good spirit for
    relationship healing and building prescribed centuries ago in the
    Middle East by Muslim Sufi teacher and mystic, Jelaluddin Rumi
    (1207-1273).

    Even earlier, the Psalmists knew such a meeting place
    of adversaries was needed, sacred and blessed:

    "Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine
    enemies...."
    (23rd
    Psalm)

    A Field and a Table:

    The image “http://www.log24.com/theory/GF8-Table.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    From "Communications Toolbox"
    at MathWorks.com

    For more on this field
    in a different context, see
    Generating the Octad Generator
    and

    "Putting Descartes Before Dehors"

    in my own diary for December 2003.

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix06A/060928-Descartes.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Descartes



    Après l'Office à l'Église
    de la
    Sainte-Trinité, Noël 1890

    (After the Service at Holy Trinity Church,
    Christmas 1890), Jean
    Béraud

    Let us pray to the Holy Trinity that
    San Rafael guides the teaching of John Baez
    this year.  For related material on theology
    and the presence of enemies, see Log24 on
      the (former) Feast of San Rafael, 2003.

  • Today's Birthdays:
    T. S. Eliot and Linda Hamilton

    From Eliot's
    "Ash Wednesday"--

    "Prophesy to the wind,
        to the wind only for only

    The wind will listen.
        And the bones sang chirping

    With the burden of the grasshopper,
        saying...."         

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix06A/060926-Eliot.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    From The Man in the High Castle:

    "Juliana said, 'Oracle, why did you write The Grasshopper Lies Heavy? What are we supposed to learn?'

    'You have a disconcertingly superstitious way of phrasing your
    question,' Hawthorne said. But he had squatted down to witness the coin
    throwing. 'Go ahead,' he said; he handed her three Chinese brass coins
    with holes in the center. 'I generally use these.'


    She began throwing the coins; she felt calm and very much
    herself. Hawthorne wrote down her lines for her. When she had thrown
    the coins six times, he gazed down and said:

    'Sun at the top. Tui at the bottom. Empty in the center.'

    'Do you know what hexagram that is?' she said. 'Without using the chart?'

    'Yes,' Hawthorne said.

    'It's Chung Fu,' Juliana said. 'Inner Truth. I know without using the chart, too. And I know what it means.'"

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix06A/060926-Lady.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Our Lady of
    Judgment Day

    "One of the illusions is that the present hour is not the critical,
    decisive hour. Write it on your heart that every day is the best day in
    the year. No man has learned anything rightly until he knows that every
    day is Doomsday."

    -- Emerson, Ch. VII, "Works and Days," in The Complete Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Vol. VII, Society and Solitude (1870)


  • Adapted from Pierre Le-Tan
    in The New Yorker of 8/28/06