May 23, 2010
Martin Gardner should not have been possible
The world is less curious, reasonable, fun and awesome now that Martin Gardner has died.
The Nature of Things / Martin Gardner from Wagner Brenner on Vimeo.
Date: May 23rd, 2010 dw
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May 23, 2010 Martin Gardner should not have been possibleThe world is less curious, reasonable, fun and awesome now that Martin Gardner has died.
The Nature of Things / Martin Gardner from Wagner Brenner on Vimeo.
Categories: misc Tagged with: childrens books • debunking • doggerel • games • logic • magic • mathematics • paradox • philosophy • physics • poetry • pseudoscience • puzzles • religion • science • skepticism • wordplay
Date: May 23rd, 2010 dw February 22, 2009 Connected by ambigramsPunya Mishra blogs a “story that connects cognitive scientist Douglas Hofstader, Oriya writer and poet J. P. Das, and the father of non-violence Mahatma Gandhi.” It contains some of my favorite things: Reflections on the nature of the Web, “serendipitous connectability,” and Scott Kim-style ambigrams. Ambigrams are words printed in such a way that they can be read in ambiguous ways. Sometimes they can be read backwards and forwards (even though they’re not palindromes), sometimes they can be inverted or flipped, sometimes they contain other words (e.g., “true” written in such a way that you can also read it as “false”). Scott Kim‘s book Inversions has long been a favorite of mine, and the current issues of the relatively obscure journal WordWays has another bunch.
(Note that I did indeed find this page by ego-surfing my own name, since Punya cites a book of mine. But, rather than attributing this to my own narcissism, let’s just attribute it to what Punya calls serendipitious connectability.)
WowTattoos has ambigrams for over 1,000 names, and a generator for words it doesn’t have. They’re not as beautifully clever as Scott Kim’s — they tend to look like gothic text — but it’s still pretty impressive.
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