Category: Blog

The Sense of Place

As we get old, we review in our minds the places we have called home, and the question arises: how exactly do we relate to them? This conversation was triggered by PEN’s celebration of Cavafi’s 150th birthday, on Nov 18, 2013. It was noted by more than one of the illustrious performers that Cavafi’s poetry … Continue reading

NSA and Global Warming

Today it occurred to me that the spying by the NSA and Global Warming have one thing in common: both happen on a massive scale; we are all affected yet seem powerless in curbing the pernicious development or changing the direction. The change in my habits of consumption and energy use is of so little … Continue reading

Junk of Two Kinds

Toward the end of  today’s lecture about Molecular Biology in the past 60 years (I suppose counting from the discovery of the structure of DNA, in 1953), Sydney Brenner explained the difference between junk kept and junk thrown away.  The latter is called garbage.  For instance, he kept boxes in which chemicals were shipped in … Continue reading

Metaphors have their own lives

This is what I did at 9 am today:  I thought of a metaphor for the time streaming by.  Nobody steps into the same river twice, as the Greeks were saying, but this is not true for the shower.  I find myself in the shower over and over again, each day with the same motions, … Continue reading

The State of the Earth

The state of the earth is documented in a striking photo that shows a surfer in the ocean surrounded by a swirl of trash. We are talking about Java, the group of islands that used to stand for pristine azure-colored ocean, and now stands for coffee and for a software format suitable for apps. How … Continue reading

Supremely Useful Research

Once in a while I get shocked by formulations of our academic leaders that are devoid of  a sense of humanity. This just happened upon reading an essay by May R. Berenbaum, a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and Head of the Department of Entomology at the University of Urbana-Champaign.  The … Continue reading

A Second of Eternity

. There was this fable I heard somewhere about Eternity.  I will do my best to retell it.  A man asks a wise man how long Eternity is.  So the wise man says, picture this high mountain in Farawayastan.  Every hundred years this little bird flies to the top of the mountain and whets its … Continue reading

The Idiosynchrasies of Shape

Claes Oldenburg’s Gun Ray collection, presented together with the Mouse Museum at MoMa, shows a visual thinker at work.  Anything that has the shape of a gun, even objects that happen to encompass a shape made from two cylinders (or rectangles, in projection or roadkill) of different sizes meeting each other in an angle of … Continue reading

Downpour — Excerpt from my Novel “The Observatory”

The journal Works in Progress (WIPs) has published the Prologue of my novel, a selfstanding piece entitled “Downpour.”  Along with it appears an interview with the Editor. Have a look: http://www.wipsjournal.com/?p=1039 (A link to the story is found at the end of the interview).

Amtrak, and the Future of the United States of America

. I boarded the Amtrak train number 69 after waiting in the confines of Penn Station, which has been compared by a very perceptive journalist to a roach motel.  Train number 63 boarded at the same time and was bound for Toronto.  The crowd waiting for trains # 63 and 69 was large and disorganized.  … Continue reading

Reagan, Thatcher, Bush

Two are dead and one is alive, and that is one distinction of significance. But what these people have in common is an undeserved upward mobility in esteem, partially because of amnesia, and partially because of incessant efforts of Republicans to rewrite history. I despise Ronald Reagan exactly as much as I despised him when … Continue reading

The Sound My Dog Invokes

The sound the sight of my dog invokes in some women as she totters along, half-blind and aimless, yet still as beautiful as when she was a puppy, is difficult to render in writing. It is a sound of motherly compassion, otherwise reserved for helpless babies. It starts high-pitched, with a sound like uuu then … Continue reading

Bisons in Wittgenstein

Everything that is is a permutation of what was there before.  (This pronouncement is deliberately modeled after a famous pronouncement of Ludwig Wittgenstein).  It is as if we were sitting in a box along with other people and things, and every now and then somone shakes the box, and everything tumbles around, and a new order … Continue reading

What’s Left in the End

I’m a pessimistic optimist — pessimistic in the long run, optimistic in the short. There is a man, an artist by the name of Hirst, who created an artwork entitled The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living. He rendered it as a giant dead shark immersed in a tank of formaldehyde. … Continue reading

A Life-Preserving Vision

. As I was falling asleep, suspended in a half-awake state, I had a vision, perhaps inspired by being in Japan right then. This was the vision: Two men determined to fight each other tooth and nail, both armed with a weapon, follow a sudden inspiration and decide to empty their guns to retrieve the … Continue reading

Llama tell story bout waterhole

Lion walk to waterhole. Found Zebra drink all water in waterhole. Impala say no water left in waterhole. Elephant say fucking scandal this be. Rhino say there never been waterhole. Lion try eat Zebra but Zebra run away. Zebra spill all water in grass. Lioness wake up. Lioness say where my Lion be? Lioness need … Continue reading

Mining in Space

  “COMPANY SETS PLAN TO MINE ASTEROIDS — A Washington company intends, within a decade or so, to have an unmanned robotic mining mission to the asteroid belt.”Watch Cyberbully (2015) Full Movie Online Streaming Online and Download — New York Times, December 25, 2012 Mining asteroids is going to be fun.  But the mass of … Continue reading

A Good Use for the Ice on Mercury

The volume of frozen water NASA discovered on Mercury is sufficient, according to the New York Times article today, to encase all of Washington, DC in a block of ice one and a half miles thick. I admire the creative, constructive use of the material. Boehner’ s face — frozen along with his tears. Ryan’s … Continue reading

Affidavit

. Voting in the United States is a tedious business.  My vote yesterday took one and a half hours.  It took place in the lobby of an apartment building, one of the Lincoln Towers.  It was a different place from the one I was used to, a school next to my own apartment building.   The … Continue reading

Gutenberg’s Worst Nightmare

Here is a message that I sent out to a listserv of my area of science, reaching approximately 1000 people.  It speaks for itself. “I have become aware of the fact that some inferior copies of my book are still being shipped out.  This is a problem that I brought to the attention of Oxford … Continue reading

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