inexplicable superconductor fractals hint at higher universal laws, Brandon
Keim, Wired.com: Rich Murray 2010.10.11
http://rmforall.blogspot.com/2010_10_01_archive.htm
Sunday, October 11, 2010
[ at the end of each long post, click on Older Posts ]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rmforall/message/99
Clairborne,
I absolutely agree with the restraint shown by tutors at St. Johns in
"leading" discussions, but almost every tutor at St Johns has a phd in
something and, in addition, has spent more or less of a professional life
time reading and discussing Those Books.
The effect of a few
Don't forget "Sound and Sense" by Laurence Perrine.
Grant Holland
VP, Product Development and Software Engineering
NuTech Solutions
404.427.4759
On 10/9/2010 6:29 PM, Stephen Thompson wrote:
Pamela & Steve:
Winging their way to me via the magic of the Internet
and Amazon Books are three boo
Steve Smith and Lee Rudolph, and everybody,
Why would I want a PhD to lead a discussion on Literature?
Because, even though I was a participant in the Berkeley dustup of the
sixties, I still think that expertise has its place in the world. As those
of you who have participated in one of o
1. A Course in Miracles, J. Christ, 1975 -- JC through Helen Schucman,
Columbia University Medical Center research psychologist, in 1965-1972, the
foundation for post-Christian Christianity -- as a willing victim of this
relentless subversion of all concepts since August, 1977, I never tire of
Greetings, all --
Great to see all the suggestions and conversations around them. One author with
a Santa Fe (and perhaps an SFI) connection not yet mentioned, I believe, is
Douglas Noel Adams (DNA). I'd recommend the Adams translation of "The
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy".
As to creating
On Oct 9, 2010, at 7:34 PM, Leigh Fanning wrote:
And I (also) say "Why English", why not World Literature or something
more expansive... and for the benefit of the women on this list...
why
do we (mostly) read the words of "dead white men"? Really? Without
going all feminist, I'd really l
Pamela -
Great reference... thanks! A couple of Trollopes! I'll mention it to
my wife, she probably has a copy somewhere or will find one within a
week (really, she is *that good*) ...
Sigh. Not much of an option in Manhattan. You've gotta discard.
Especially when you calculate what it'
I read Lubbock many years ago, and he's got much good to say, as does
E. M. Forster on the novel, and even, if I recall right, Henry James.
But I prefer Wood. Your mileage may vary.
Menand's "The Metaphysical Club" is good stuff too, but dense, I agree.
P.
On Oct 9, 2010, at 8:29 PM, Steph
On Oct 9, 2010, at 6:49 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
Pamela -
When I hear someone say "I never read fiction," I'm a little
saddened. It comes to my ears like "I never look at art." When one
starts getting all hairy-chested about the greater value of non-
fiction over make-believe, please be remi
Pamela & Steve:
Winging their way to me via the magic of the Internet
and Amazon Books are three books: two recommended here:
1. James Woods "How Fiction Works"
2. Zelazny's "Jack of Shadows"
and one recommended by a reviewer of Wood's book (not a happy review)
Percy Lubbock's "The Craft of
> And I (also) say "Why English", why not World Literature or something
> more expansive... and for the benefit of the women on this list... why
> do we (mostly) read the words of "dead white men"? Really? Without
> going all feminist, I'd really like to have more submissions here of
> w
Lee -
/Why would you want to ask a PhD in English to "lead"
you? Ph.D.s in English are to the joy of reading
fiction or poetry as firefighters are to fires./
I think I understand Nick's need for a PhD-person... (something about
establishing credibility in the whole City College thi
On 9 Oct 2010 at 16:04, Nicholas Thompson wrote:
> Perhaps you could gin up a reading group for the City University of Santa Fe
> Spring Coffee House Seminars. Do we know anybody with a PhD in English who
> would lead us?
I know that, being unacquainted as I am with the CVs
of the Friends and
Steph T.
For scifi, my Fahrenheit451 book is "Lord of Light" by Roger Zelazny
I'll see your "Lord" and raise you a "Jack" (of Shadows)... Zelazny (our
own hometown boy) was awesome... I miss him. And his works.
FRIAM Applied Com
Pamela -
When I hear someone say "I never read fiction," I'm a little saddened.
It comes to my ears like "I never look at art." When one starts
getting all hairy-chested about the greater value of non-fiction over
make-believe, please be reminded of the books you pull off your shelf
to make r
Robert,
I hope you are going to compile the list when this is all over.
Perhaps you could gin up a reading group for the City University of Santa Fe
Spring Coffee House Seminars. Do we know anybody with a PhD in English who
would lead us?
Nick
-Original Message-
From: friam-boun...@
It's wonderful to know that somebody somewhere is teaching a course like
that. For years I taught a freshman seminar entitled The Pursuit of an
Inquiry in which they could do book research on any topic and write a paper
about that they found. By the end of the first month many were begging for
as
On 10/9/10 1:27 PM, Victoria Hughes wrote:
and even us lurkers
(10 !? can't even begin to get it down to ten, thus the absence of
presence)
are getting a kick
and
learning a lot
from this all...
And no fair submitting 10 (only 10?) Terry Pratchett Novels... though I
think I have a couple of y
Pamela, thank you for the inquiry into fiction. How does it work? Why does it
move us? Ahhh...the liberation conferred by the art of the storyteller and
imagination!An additional offering to enhance the joy of reading: Ayn Rand's
colorful lectures "The Art of Fiction."Julia
From: pam...@well.c
Nick -
I teach a Junior level course for our Honors Program. Our program is open to
students from all majors, so my "audience" in the class comes from everywhere
-- majors of students in the class this Fall range across Art, English,
History, Math, Biology, Business, Teacher Prep, Psychology
Thanks for the Yeats, Robert. He's one of my favorites, and was even
before I knew there was a tenuous family connection.
P.
On Oct 9, 2010, at 4:56 PM, Stephen Thompson wrote:
Steve:
There are so many good suggestions I despair of finding the
Classic Comics version of all these books - th
Steve:
There are so many good suggestions I despair of finding the
Classic Comics version of all these books - that's the only way
I will get through them all. (An HS teacher said when you get to college,
read the first and last 2 chapters then read the classic comic for the
middle
- its fast
Hi, I get to claim both lurkership and newbie-ship here, and have enjoyed this
thread.
This is an interesting idea, Pamela, that literature has endured, more than
non-fiction. It feels intuitively true as we look back on various canon(s).
It does all sorts of
I come from the opposite direct
Tom,
You wrote
This semester, in a class I am teaching, we're reading (among other
things, including "Pandora's Hope" by Bruno Latour).
Can you say a bit more about the context in which you are reading these
things?
Nick
From: friam-boun...@redfish.com [mailto:friam-boun..
When I hear someone say "I never read fiction," I'm a little saddened.
It comes to my ears like "I never look at art." When one starts
getting all hairy-chested about the greater value of non-fiction over
make-believe, please be reminded of the books you pull off your shelf
to make room for
On Oct 9, 2010, at 3:28 PM, Merle Lefkoff wrote:
Merle Lefkoff wrote:
Have I missed something? I don't recall having seen anything by
Philip Roth on anyone's list. And now that I think about it, I've
been musing for some time about the dearth of neurotic Jewish
intellectuals in Friam
Well, Merle: I'm a neurotic Jewish Intellectual: I just don't happen to be
Jewish.
Nick
-Original Message-
From: friam-boun...@redfish.com [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf
Of Merle Lefkoff
Sent: Saturday, October 09, 2010 1:29 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity C
and even us lurkers
(10 !? can't even begin to get it down to ten, thus the absence of
presence)
are getting a kick
and
learning a lot
from this all...
Tory
On Oct 9, 2010, at 12:41 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
On 10/9/10 11:10 AM, Grant Holland wrote:
Thanks, Steve. I've noticed that the bread
Merle Lefkoff wrote:
Have I missed something? I don't recall having seen anything by Philip
Roth on anyone's list. And now that I think about it, I've been musing
for some time about the dearth of neurotic Jewish intellectuals in
Friam--especially noteworthy given our Complexity forefathers:
Merle Lefkoff wrote:
Thank you for mentioning Richard Powers. And don't forget Powers' "The
Time of Our Singing", an extraordinary imaginative leap into the
complexities of racial identity.
Tom Carter wrote:
All -
10??? Oh, well . . .
When I was a kid, my parents installed this in t
On 10/9/10 11:10 AM, Grant Holland wrote:
Thanks, Steve. I've noticed that the breadth of you reading is
exceptional.
And that is just the stuff I'm willing to admit to on-list I'll save
the really juicy stuff for another forum.
Most places I'm askeered to admit to reading Russel and Whit
Here's some in random order.
The Age of Reason, Jean Paul Sartre
The Tale of Genji, Lady Murasaki
For Whom the Bell Tolls, Ernest Hemingway
The Beautiful and Damned, F. Scott Fitzgerald
Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen
Cervantes, Don Quixote
The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Victor Hugo
Labyrinths, Jor
All -
10??? Oh, well . . .
When I was a kid, my parents installed this in the living room (you can still
sometimes find it in used book stores -- saw one a few years ago for $150,
missing Marx and Freud !). I learned a lot :-):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Books_of_the_We
I make no claims about being among the "10 Best" but here are a few selections
not previously mentioned.
Cat's Cradle - Kurt Vonnegut
Candide - Voltaire
Perhaps something by John Steinbeck? I guess the obvious is The Grapes of
Wrath but I hated it for some reason (perhaps because I grew up in
Thanks, Steve. I've noticed that the breadth of you reading is
exceptional.
Grant Holland
VP, Product Development and Software Engineering
NuTech Solutions
404.427.4759
On 10/9/2010 10:45 AM, Steve Smith wrote:
Grant -
Thanks for the reminder, I haven't visited Castenada since I was in my
Stephen -
Good points all. Most of us went off on a "my favorite reads" jag with
only a minor interest in whether it was "Literature" by any nominal or
not-so-nominal standard.
It doesn't surprise me that most of us have a collective
double-standard. In our own fields of study/expertise
Saul -
I love (most of) your list. Great Ante.
I think you might mean "A Scanner Darkly" by Dick, but there appear to
be as many as 5 novels by the Title "Through a Glass Darkly"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Through_a_Glass_Darkly and then there is
Sheridan le Fanu's 1872 collection of Got
Grant -
Thanks for the reminder, I haven't visited Castenada since I was in my
twenties... perhaps he deserves a revisit. At the time I slogged
through several of his works because everyone was raving so much about
them (not unlike the ravings about Cormac's work)... they just came off
as w
Oops...
I'll mention two. Far from great literature, but I still enjoy reading
it is "Journey to Ixtlan" - Carlos Castaneda. (I know it is advertised
as "Sociology", but I regard it as Fantasy.)
Another great Fantasy (although held by most as mathematical logic) is
Kurt Godel's 1931 paper "
I'd add to Jack's criteria: 9) deep exploration of a particular culture
at a moment in time. Jonathan Franzen's Freedom. Hate to say it
because it's been so over-hyped, but it's that good, right up there with
Huck Finn and Jay Gatsby. I think it will 10) stand the test of time.
Merle
Ro
The situation so far... in case you are not keeping count:
Given some restrictions, like only accepting the first 10 mentioned by
anyone ... so far we have 73 submissions, 4 have been recommended 3
times, 9 have been recommended twice and the rest once. And just to
confirm that my literary
Grant,
James Joyce has been mentioned twice, Woolf once... and your top 10 are?
but you're right about Proust.
Thanks
Robert C
On 10/9/10 8:31 AM, Grant Holland wrote:
What? Nobody mentioned Proust, James Joyce or Woolf? (I'm not going to.)
Grant
Grant Holland
VP, Product Development and S
Somebody did mention "To the Lighthouse," and I'd agree. I mentioned
admiring, without particularly liking (except in parts) "Ulysses." The
Scott-Moncrieff translation of "Remembrance of Things Past" is heavy
weather; a later translation (sorry; it's on a high shelf) lets
Proust's humor sho
What? Nobody mentioned Proust, James Joyce or Woolf? (I'm not going to.)
Grant
Grant Holland
VP, Product Development and Software Engineering
NuTech Solutions
404.427.4759
On 10/8/2010 11:54 PM, Alison Jones wrote:
After 10 years of lurking something I can finally comment on.
In no particlu
Brown recluses thrive in Santa Fe.
On Oct 9, 2010, at 3:23 AM, Nicholas Thompson wrote:
What about the brown recluse, which the furnace man worried about
today as he disappeared into our crawl space. Oh, I guess it
doesn’t live here? Seehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_recluse_spider#Di
Most of you are PhDs and respond to inquiries from the
non-science type to aspects of your field(s). So how about asking
a college in the English Lit or World Lit department?
Robert, you mentioned you are going to improve your literary
education, so the works will generally be older because tho
All great suggestions and timely since my library book is due back
tomorrow. I'll add a couple of other suggestions:
The English Patient (Ondaatje)
Zen and the art of Motorcycle Maintenance (Persig) (not sure if this
counts as fiction)
A Glass Darkly (Philip K Dick)
On the Road (Kerouac)
Unbearabl
What about the brown recluse, which the furnace man worried about today as
he disappeared into our crawl space. Oh, I guess it doesn't live here? See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_recluse_spider#Distribution
From: friam-boun...@redfish.com [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf
Of
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