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My interest in mathematics is more personal than it is academic. I learned what I know formally, in the usual sequence of undergraduate and graduate math courses. But it has penetrated my personal life, and I have come to see mathematics as deeply rooted in a fundamental human drive to live more, or to live [...]
In a blog back in January, I referenced a talk given by David Deutsch in which he made the argument that, while empiricism has been the basis of science, empiricism alone is inadequate because scientific theories explain the seen in terms of the unseen. What we see, in all these cases, bears no resemblance to [...]
We adopted a dog a couple of months ago, and there have been moments when I have watched a change in his attention or a change in his behavior, and wondered how his awareness might be structured. When we drive with him, he usually sits in front of the back seats of our Honda Element, [...]
I’ve always been intrigued by the sensation of movement in music. And it is fair to say that it was my first calculus class that led me to graduate study in mathematics because, for the first time, I saw movement in mathematics. My fascination with each of these was nudged again by an interview with [...]
I read a few articles today that brought aesthetic and religious expression, mathematical curiosity, and physical discovery into contact. A recent Physics World article reported that an architectural researcher found the first examples of perfect quasicrystal patterns in Islamic architecture. Also known as Penrose tiles, these patterns were described mathematically by Roger Penrose in the [...]
I have tried to make the argument, in some of the things I have written, that mathematics experiments with the ways we are able to ‘see.’ But there is a great deal of complexity in what it means ‘to see.’ ‘Seeing’ and ‘reasoning’ are not easily unraveled. An infant’s ‘intuitive physics,’ the subject of recent [...]
Hearing about visual processes, from neuroscientists and artists alike, consistently brings mathematical thoughts to mind for me – like Samir Zeki’s descriptions of how visual images are constructed, or the Impressionist painters’ attention to the sensations in the eye rather than the subject of the painting, and, of course, Poincaré’s suggestion that visual space has [...]
In another blogging heads interview (and in a related blog), John Horgan explores with David Rothenberg the significance of beauty in scientific thinking. Rothenberg’s new book Survival of the Beautiful, is the subject of much of their discussion. While the conversation centers on questions of beauty (how biology does or does not take it into [...]
Contrary to the by-line, this post is by Bob not Joselle. She wanted me to post an item that’s been of interest lately. As a reader of Mac and Apple rumor sites over the years, I was surprised the night of October 5th when I went to cnn.com to show Joselle a news item which [...]
I feel like I was pulled into a little whirlpool of interesting bits of info this morning. I was attracted to the title of David Castelvecchi’s blog: Archimedes and Euclid? Like String Theory versus Freshman Calculus. The blog reports the opening of an exhibition at the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, showcasing one of three [...]
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Post Titles
- 1005
- Juggling, interviews and grant opportunities
- A brief note and a little from Deutsch
- Structure, structure and more structure
- Pigeons, rats, monkeys and real numbers
- Mental Magnitudes
- The geometry of hallucinations
- Wigner, Persig, Leibniz and the nature of reality
- Lines on ochre and the roots of creativity
- The light that Einstein sees
- Avalanches, structure, and expectations
- Are we finding the mathematical structure of reality?
- Networks: The brain, the internet, and the cosmos
- Can we see where math begins and science ends?
- Chaitin, creativity, biology and mathematics
- Sensual Mathematics
- Life’s music, movement, language and mathematics
- Time, mathematics and Plato’s cave
- Ramanujan Visions
- Ant arithmetic and prairie dog conversation
- Riemann, angelfish and ants
- Kurzweil’s How to Create a Mind, and mathematics
- Lincoln, Euclid and vision
- Infinities, metaphors and being human
- Embodied and dis-embodied meaning
- Infinities, Tolstoy, dreams and Nabokov
- Daniel Tammet and imagination
- Mathematical life forms and really big numbers
- Order, computation and creativity in biology
- Bees, ants, space and algorithm
- Pollock, fractal expressionism and a mathematical thought
- Finger counting, finger gnosia and cerebral structures
- Julian Barbour, from metaphysics to mathematics to us
- The Irrationality of Mathematics?
- Birds and the number 0
- Dante, art, vision, and mathematics
- Anosognosia, Consciousness and Mathematics
- Compression, meaning, and mathematics
- Seeing, dreaming and mathematics
- Leibniz’s Insight? Looking forward and back
- Mathematics and the Higgs
- Spider webs and a random walk in software space
- The solstice, archaeoastronomy and mathematics
- Computational Linguistics, Matter and Meaning
- Kuhn, Gödel, on being wrong and being heroic
- The endless relay between numeric and spatial representations (and Riemann’s amazing ability to foreshadow possibilities)
- Category Theory and the extraordinary value of abstraction
- That something out of nothing problem…
- Sounds of space-time, cross-modal sensory experience, and the developing nervous system
- Foraging for food, remembering, and mathematics
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