February 15, 2009

  • Today's Sermon:

    From April 28, 2008:

    Religious Art

    The black monolith of
    Kubrick's 2001 is, in
    its way, an example
    of religious art.

    Black monolith, proportions 4x9

    One artistic shortcoming
    (or strength-- it is, after
    all, monolithic) of
    that artifact is its
    resistance to being
    analyzed as a whole
    consisting of parts, as
    in a Joycean epiphany.

    The following
    figure does
    allow such
      an epiphany.

    A 2x4 array of squares

    One approach to
     the epiphany:

    "Transformations play
      a major role in
      modern mathematics."
    - A biography of
    Felix Christian Klein

    See 4/28/08 for examples
    of such transformations.

     
    Related material:

    From Wallace Stevens: A World of Transforming Shapes, by Alan D. Perlis, Bucknell University Press, 1976, pp. 117-118:

    "... his point of origin is external nature, the fount to which we come seeking inspiration for our fictions. We come, many of Stevens's poems suggest, as initiates, ritualistically celebrating the place through which we will travel to achieve fictive shape. Stevens's 'real' is a bountiful place, continually giving forth life, continually changing. It is fertile enough to meet any imagination, as florid and as multifaceted as the tropical flora about which the poet often writes. It therefore naturally lends itself to rituals of spring rebirth, summer fruition, and fall harvest. But in Stevens's fictive world, these rituals are symbols: they acknowledge the real and thereby enable the initiate to pass beyond it into the realms of his fictions.

    Two counter rituals help to explain the function of celebration as Stevens envisions it. The first occurs in 'The Pediment of Appearance,' a slight narrative poem in Transport to Summer. A group of young men enter some woods 'Hunting for the great ornament, The pediment of appearance.' Though moving through the natural world, the young men seek the artificial, or pure form, believing that in discovering this pediment, this distillation of the real, they will also discover the 'savage transparence,' the rude source of human life. In Stevens's world, such a search is futile, since it is only through observing nature that one reaches beyond it to pure form. As if to demonstrate the degree to which the young men's search is misaligned, Stevens says of them that 'they go crying/The world is myself, life is myself,' believing that what surrounds them is immaterial. Such a proclamation is a cardinal violation of Stevens's principles of the imagination. For in 'Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction' he tells us that

    ... the first idea was not to shape the clouds
    In imitation. The clouds preceded us.

    There was a muddy centre before we breathed.
    There was a myth before the myth began,
    Venerable and articulate and complete.

    From this the poem springs: that we live in a place
    That is not our own and, much more, not ourselves
    And hard it is in spite of blazoned days.

    We are the mimics.

                               (Collected Poems, 383-84)

    Believing that they are the life and not the mimics thereof, the world and not its fiction-forming imitators, these young men cannot find the savage transparence for which they are looking. In its place they find the pediment, a scowling rock that, far from being life's source, is symbol of the human delusion that there exists a 'form alone,' apart from 'chains of circumstance.'

    A far more productive ritual occurs in 'Sunday Morning.'...."

    For transformations of a more
    specifically religious nature,
    see the remarks on
    Richard Strauss,
    "Death and Transfiguration,"
    (Tod und Verklärung, Opus 24)

    in Mathematics and Metaphor
    on July 31, 2008, and the entries
    of August 3, 2008, related to the
     death of Alexander Solzhenitsyn.

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