Category: Blog

The solar system in Denmark

. . Arrived in Copenhagen, we needed to get out of it again, on the second day, to visit the legendary Louisiana Arts Museum, a 30-min train ride away. I will not bore you with the details.  It is a breath-taking collection of art objects, on a sprawling estate situated on a slim peninsula. Wiki: … Continue reading

Regarding the myth of “anti-male discrimination”

. . At a time when the US Supreme Court, stacked by Trump and now entirely out of step with the majority of the American people, is acting to undo decades of progressive legislation regarding reproductive rights, racial discrimination, and affirmative action, it is important to keep watch on the accuracy and, well, appropriateness of … Continue reading

The transcript of the Miami arraignment

. . I had a look at the transcript of the arraignment.  You cannot make this up.  The judge addresses the plaintiffs and defendants as “folks.”  Folks this and folks that.  Trump is bail-free, can keep his passport, he is clearly still a trusted man. But most of the time is spent on the way … Continue reading

Felix Krull

  Thomas Mann’s Felix Krull (from his unfinished book Confessions of Felix Krull) was a Hochstabler, a con-man. My first encounter with a con-man was in my class in elementary school.  My class mate sailed through his day by lying.  He lied about the most mundane things, just for the heck of it.  We were … Continue reading

Tensors and Love

. I found unexpected wisdom in World Scientific’s attempt to define what a tensor is: (https://www.worldscientific.com › doi › pdf) Chapter 1 Confusions: What Are Tensors Exactly?   Chapter 1 starts by posing this profound question: “What do love and tensor have in common?” and then proceeds by trying to find answers to the question … Continue reading

Μελίνα Ασλανίδου — Melina Aslanidou

. . I discovered Melina maybe three years ago. She seemed a true gem, unpretentious.  I loved this scene with her friends.  Since then I have discovered she has made it big.  I saw her all decked up in performances everywhere in Europe. She seemed a true gem, unpretentious. I loved this scene with her … Continue reading

A Universal History of Infamy, Plus One

. . Trump is a unique phenomenon.   To find in the archives of history a similar shady, immoral character, with a similar influence on the affairs of a nation or the world, we might have to go back a millennium or two. We might also want to leaf through Borges’ story A Universal History … Continue reading

Youtube and the “S” word

. . I’m spending some leisure time to navigate in the stream of documentaries and pseudo-documentaries on Youtube.  General Relativity, the Twin Paradox, history of  philosophy, Isaac Newton, lectures by Nabokov on Don Quixote, you name it. This is how I found “Daily Life in Ancient Greece” which attempts to bring ancient Greece alive with … Continue reading

Anderson Cooper and CNN

. . Anderson Cooper was trying to do damage control for his network about the town hall event with Donald Trump two days ago.  It didn’t go well. What Anderson apparently doesn’t understand (and I always thought he is a smart man!) is the psychology of the masses — that the broadcasting of an event … Continue reading

Life-line

. . It often happens that I see emergence of life against all odds. The crack has been carefully sealed, and you would think it should be sterile for some time, perhaps for eternity.  Not so, speaks Life (and we see her here, dreamy-eyed, like a gravure in a seventeen-century book on biology, or botany).   … Continue reading

Cavafy’s “An Old Man”

. . I recently attended, on-line, the symposium commemorating Constantine Cavafy’s 150th anniversary (born April 26, 1863 and died on the same day, April 26, 1933) at Columbia University, on May 1, 2023.  It contained a very interesting general section on translation. I’m in the unfortunate position of admiring Cavafy’s poetry without having a sense … Continue reading

Stones

. . This is series of photographs I took on a beach in Del Mar, California. There is an interesting competition for attention between the shadows, whose direction is determined by the time of the day and the day of the year we were having this picnic, and the direction of the most recent swoop … Continue reading

Chicken crossing Road

Hawkeye   Why did the chicken cross the road?  — a compilation of fictitious answers from renowned physicists by David Morin, Physics Department, Harvard University David Morin: “After finding the first four of the following answers on the web, I figured I’d make up some more, and I got on a roll. Have fun with … Continue reading

199 Universe

. .   We have here a stunning display of an ancient civilization.  It was unearthed by the equivalent of raking — the treatment of an overgrown wilderness with a giant fork-like machine, the ones, or bigger ones than those, employed by Bechtel during the George W. Bush-inspired Iraq War. The presence of oversized boulders, … Continue reading

What’s wrong with America?

. The offense of the blue-hooded minor On Tuesday March 28, 2023 I was on the Amtrak train from New York to Huntingdon, PA to give an invited lecture at Penn State. I say the train since there is only one per day going in that direction. A young Black boy stood before me in … Continue reading

Catch and Kill

. SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF NEW YORK THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK STATEMENT OF FACTS IND-71543-23 -against- DONALD J. TRUMP, Defendant. INTRODUCTION The defendant DONALD J. TRUMP repeatedly and fraudulently falsified New York business records to conceal criminal conduct that hid damaging information from the voting … Continue reading

Intelligent Unmanned Swarms

. This is not a satire.  We have to come to grips with such a world: How to prevent malicious use of intelligent unmanned swarms? . . Abstract With advancements in swarm intelligence, artificial intelligence, and wireless mobile network technology, unmanned swarms such as unmanned aerial vehicles, ground vehicles, ships, and other unmanned systems are … Continue reading

ChatGPT on Joachim Frank’s life

. One of my students tried to find out what ChatGPT had to say about my early life. Below is the answer, annotated by me.   I found 10 major mistakes.  For example, it freely invented names and professions of my parents, and placed the city of Munich into the USA. “Joachim Frank was born on … Continue reading

Myself Everything Everywhere

. Wherever I go I run into another version of myself. Today’s walk out in the cold was interrupted by such unfathomable sightings.   The idea of a movie takes shape. But it might be too late.      

The Shadows Lengthen

. . In a park near Torrey Pines beach, close to sunset, when the last light of the day retreats from miles of beaches, lagunes, roads, parking lots, compounds, shopping malls, forests, zoos, tennis courts, and parks ideally situated to watch the sunset. “The Shadows Lengthen” is also a fantastic horror video game developed by … Continue reading

← Older posts Newer posts →

The Alliance of Independent Authors - Author Member