Monthly Archives: October 2010

Proverbiorum Arabicorum, 1623- Scaliger my hero, said to be the most erudite man in history. A classicist, he read all ancient languages (including Arabic and Syriac) and compiled and translated Arabic proverbs.

Proverbiorum Arabicorum, 1623- Scaliger my hero, said to be the most erudite man in history. A classicist, he read all ancient languages (including Arabic and Syriac) and compiled and translated Arabic proverbs.


lebanese wines

Benoît Mandelbrot – TIME

Shared by JohnH

NNT’s tribute to Benoit Mandelbrot. Unforunately, the rest of it is behind a pay wall for now.

“Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones … and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a straight line,” wrote Benoît Mandelbrot, contradicting more than 2,000 years of misconceptions. Triangles, squares and circles seem to exist in our textbooks more than they do in reality–and before Mandelbrot, we hadn’t noticed that. Thus was born fractal geometry, the science of “roughness.” Simple rules used by nature (and men), thanks to repetition, generate the seemingly complex and chaotic patterns we call fractals. There, just as branches look like small trees, the small parts resemble the whole.

Self-taught and fiercely independent,…

Benoît Mandelbrot | The Economist

MATHEMATICS is a curious subject. Though often classed as one, it is not really a science. That scientists use it to describe their interpretation of reality is not quite the same thing. Nor, though, is it an art—not, at any rate, in the modern meaning of that word. The aesthetics of the subject, which any mathematician will tell you are the driving force behind his passion, are not obvious to the senses in the way that those of a painting, a symphony or a play are. Yet Benoît Mandelbrot’s celebrity beyond the academy is largely due to art in its modern, sensuous, sense. For the “set” to which he gave his name, when computed, drawn on a complex plane and suitably tinted, appealed greatly to the senses—as a million posters, greetings cards and T-shirts, bought by people who had not the faintest idea what it was, attest.