Unlikely 2.0
This is my first Korean artwork
Dog Dream = Irrationality / Importance
The poem is in the form of an orthogonal space poem
Check out the lastest Unlikely Stories. My latest two pieces are among some wonderful new art/poetry work.
This is my first Korean artwork
Dog Dream = Irrationality / Importance
The poem is in the form of an orthogonal space poem
Check out the lastest Unlikely Stories. My latest two pieces are among some wonderful new art/poetry work.
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 10:33 AM 3 comments
Labels: Dog Dream, orthogonal space poem, unlikely 2.0
As you look at the graph of Y=1/x (above) you will notice the values become extremely large as you approach the asymptote where the value of x equals zero. At x = zero the y value becomes infinite (at the asymptote).
We have the same situation when we approach temptation. It gets stronger and stronger as we get closer to the object of our temptation and when you touch your temptation you lose the game. In other words the shorter the distance to your object of temptation the closer you get to the asymptote.
The form of the poem is an orthogonal space poem
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 6:24 PM 5 comments
Labels: orthogonal space poem, Temptation
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 10:19 PM 5 comments
Labels: Pi
Lothar Schmitz’ sculptures reconfigure and question corporate landscape elements using man-made materials. His topiary-like treatment of landscape alludes to the accelerating pace of ecological change and genetic mutation. He draws experience from both his art and physics background. Schmitz is a past Los Angeles Cultural Affairs COLA Individual Artist Grant recipient and a physicist.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
CONTRARY TO THE LAWS OF NATURE
Los Angeles based artists stretch those laws and present some of their own.Mitchell Friedman, Manfred Menz, Lothar Schmitz, Carrie Ungerman and Melinda Smith Altshuler address social, environmental and psychological circumstance in the landscape. Exhibition Dates: December 21, 2006 - January 27, 2007Artist’s Reception: Thursday, December 21, 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm
Sarah Lee Artworks & Projects
2525 Michigan Avenue (Bergamot Station), T1, Santa Monica, CA 90402
Media Contact: Melinda Smith Altshuler, 310 367.5246, msasees@yahoo.com
Gallery: 310 829.4938 E-mail, saralee4@verizon.net
Website: http://www.sarahleeartworks.com
Gallery hours: Tuesday through Saturday 10:30 am- 5:30 pmPlease direct e-mail inquiries about the exhibition to the gallery’s address (above);
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 10:23 PM 0 comments
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 12:20 AM 1 comments
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 10:27 PM 0 comments
Shown above is a three-dimensional verbogeometric polyhedral
Applications for Verbogeometry
Neal Goldman, a mathematician has come up with a single verbogeometric polytope to analyze huge amounts of data. Business week online has recently published an article talking about Goldman’s polytope and you can access this article here. I was proposing someone write a polytope poem in my blog entry on August 14, 2006. Goldman’s polytope is not a poem but it can be viewed as a hyper-dimensional verbogeometric structure.
I would like to present an excerpt from the article to arouse your curiosity:
How do you convert written words into math? Goldman says it takes a combination of algebra and geometry. Imagine an object floating in space that has an edge for every known scrap of information. It's called a polytope and it has near-infinite dimensions, almost impossible to conjure up in our earthbound minds. It contains every topic written about in the press. And every article that Inform processes becomes a single line within it. Each line has a series of relationships. A single article on Bordeaux wine, for example, turns up in the polytope near France, agriculture, wine, even alcoholism. In each case, Inform's algorithm calculates the relevance of one article to the next by measuring the angle between the two lines.
Here is the link to the original article from business week online
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 12:06 AM 0 comments
Labels: Verbogeometry
I would like to spotlight a new Journal on Mathematics and Art. Edited by Professor Gary R. Greenfield from the University of Richmond in Virginia … I will keep you posted when the first issue comes out.
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 11:26 PM 0 comments
For over twenty-five years, PHSColograms, the integration of photography,holography, sculpture, and computer graphics, have created a post-canvas three-dimensional medium that has expanded the visual imagery of the work of a variety of scientists, mathematicians, engineers, architects, and artists.
Paradox. The vessel is a metaphor of our human existence, the body symbolized as a box or bowl is the vessel for the soul. The paradox between the need to belong and the need for individuality; attraction and repulsion; the inside and the outside; materiel expansion and contraction.
Paul V. Galvin Library, Illinois Institute of Technology
35 West 33rd Street, Chicago, IL 60616
Exhibition hours: Monday - Thursday: 12 - 6 pm, Friday: 12 - 5 pm
Saturday: 8:30 am - 5 pm, Sunday: 2 - 6 pm
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 10:45 AM 0 comments
I just received my Bridges 2006 Conference Proceedings today! It is full of wonderful papers for which some of them I plan to review. I recommend you going down to your local bookstore and ordering it! ISBN 0-9665201-7-3
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 9:02 PM 0 comments
I have redesigned my main website with an attempt to make the navigation easier. Any feedback will be greatly appreciated!
Thanks!
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 12:39 PM 0 comments
“Multiple Universes” show opening today 2 pm to 5 pm … If you are in southern California come join the fun. Above is the map to the show
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 12:47 AM 2 comments
I would like to thank the young lady by the name of Tifinie who sent me the link to a ‘myspace.com’ account which had a copy the following essay posted. I am always interested in anyone expressing mathematical poetry. Here is a link to the original source of her information.
The following essay is by Allen L Roland a psychotherapist and political activist who can be found at allenroland.com. Dr. Roland’s essay is a perfect example of mathematical poetry in his metaphorical use illuminating his philosophy. I went to his website and found much of his spiritual and socio-political views to be similar to mine although he is much more aggressive than I.
His poem reminds me of a poem I had done a poem using this same equation. I haven’t published it on my blog because I haven’t made an electronic version of it yet. Maybe this will motivate me to post it later just to contrast this poem and show how the same equation can be used for many vastly different metaphors.
--Kaz
E=mc² / A NEW MATHEMATICAL EQUATION FOR LOVE AND WORLD PEACE
Since we now know that the particles of light ( photons )
are subject to another force ~ and I would argue that that force is a psychic energy field of love and soul consciousness ( The Unified Field ) which exists beyond time and space and whose principle property is the universal urge to unite ~ it's time to add another dimension to Einstein's famous equation ~
E=mc².
E=mc² in Einsteinian terms means that the energy contained in matter is equal to its mass multiplied by the velocity of light squared.
Unfortunately, man, in his limited consciousness, has used this equation to create nuclear bombs and the means to completely destroy mankind.
But we now have growing scientific evidence that light is not the one constant of the Universe and may very well be a condition of state within a greater constant.
David Adam, science correspondent for the Guardian, in an April 11th article entitled Why Einstein may have got it wrong , reports some startling findings as physicists gather in England to celebrate Einstein's work;
"Astronomers will tell experts gathering at Warwick University to celebrate the anniversary of the great man's "miracle year" that the speed of light - Einstein's unchanging yardstick that underpins his special theory of relativity - might be slowing down. Michael Murphy, of the Institute of Astronomy at Cambridge University, said: "We are claiming something extraordinary here. The findings suggest there is a more fundamental theory of the way that light and matter interact; and that special relativity, at its foundation, is actually wrong."
The Bose/ Einstein Condensate established that photons, and now even atoms have a tendency to unite and dance in perfect unison.
Einstein was in a quandry about this phenomenon so he dismissed this obvious attraction of photons as not only spooky but evidently a " tendency to want to travel together " ~ and Einstein later died never realizing he had found his elusive Unified Field.
For, as I have written before, it was Einstein's consciousness that kept him from grasping that he had indeed discovered the Universal primal urge to unite that exists from atoms to human beings ~ and that even galaxies are subject to its universal pull.
As such, this psychic field of love and urge to unite deepest within us cannot be observed through the most powerful electron microscope nor through the lens of the largest telescope, for it is an energy which must be surrendered to and experienced before it can be perceived through the consciousness of the observer.
So now, let us breath fire into Einstein's most famous mathematical equation E=mc² and apply it to a Unified field of love and soul consciousness which could lead us instead to our ultimate fulfillment as human beings;
E = Love ~ The ultimate totalization of human energy ( The Unified Field )
M = Man, the most complex and conscious form of matter that we know.
c²= Consciousness squared.
Thus, the energy of conscious unconditional love, which is deepest within all living matter, is equal to man times his consciousness squared.
British physicist, Steven Hawking, regarded by many as today's successor to Einstein, wrote that there ought to be something special and simple about a theory of everything .
And what could be more special and simple than love.
Finally, at this critical moment for mankind ~ it is imperative that we now recognize that love, not light, is the one constant of the Universe.
ONLY LOVE HEALS
Allen L Roland
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 11:18 PM 0 comments
Unfortunately to see it you must click here
This poem uses the physics equation for energy E = Fd Energy is also called work "W"
Energy (or work) is the force applied to an object multiplied by distance that object travels
If we pull force out of the context of the sentence above and look at what defines force we will find that Newton’s second law states Force is equal to the mass of an object multiplied by the acceleration the object is experiencing. Now if we look at acceleration we find that acceleration is the change in velocity per the change in time. In our energy equation we are multiplying the F times the distance the object is traveling. The way we calculate distances is with the distance formula. The poem above uses the distance formula in a nine dimensional space where every verbogeometrical axis is described in the poem underneath the radical.
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 12:21 AM 2 comments
Here is something unrelated to mathematical poetry but interesting none the less. I received this information from my vision science list today. These are the results from the best optical illusion contest of 2006 --- If you are an interested vision scientist, they are now calling for submission to the 2007 contest.
Check out the winners of 2006 here
Go to this page then click on TOP 10 finalists
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 8:24 PM 0 comments
Karl Kempton sent me this link ... all I could say was WOW!
check out all these books (click here)
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 12:07 AM 0 comments
I tend to think that without logic, you cannot communicate and without communication, you cannot have a philosophy. To me logic presupposes philosophy ... Logic is the supportive structure for thought without it everything would fall apart, no one could predict where our next meal would come from, much less anything else. The other side of the coin is that without a philosophy coloring ones theory of logic, ones logic has no starting point. In this sense, ones logic can have no logic without a philosophical stone to stand on. It is a vicious circle!
The clipping below originally came from a polytope list and was sent to me by my friend the mathematician Paul Gailiunas. My original question to him a few weeks ago concerned the importance of infinity within modern scientific equations. Math poets seem to gravitate toward using infinity in our math poems and as professor Gailiunas told me scientists tend to avoid infinity as much as they can. The following is an example of scientific thinking in this area.
Kaz,
This came from a completely different direction.
I thought you might beinterested.
Paul
On Thu 7 Sep 2006 (21:46:48 +0100), guy@steelpillow.com wrote:On Wed, 6 Sep 2006 08:54:09, "Wenninger, Magnus"
Posted by Kaz Maslanka at 11:09 AM 0 comments