From Peter J. Cameron's web journal today—
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… Eliot’s Four Quartets has been one of my favourite works of poetry since I was a student…. Of course, a poem doesn’t have a single meaning, especially one as long and complex as Four Quartets. But to me the primary meaning of the poem is about the relationship between time and eternity, which is something maybe of interest to mathematicians as well as to mystics. Curiously, the clearest explanation of what Eliot is saying that I have found is in a completely different work, Pilgrimage of Dreams by the artist Thetis Blacker, in which she describes a series of dreams she had which stood out as being completely different from the confusion of normal dreaming. In one of these dreams, “Mr Goad and the Cathedral”, we find the statements
and
In other words, eternity is not the same as infinity; it is not the time line stretched out to infinity. Rather, it is an intimation of a different dimension, which we obtain only because we are aware of the point at which that dimension intersects the familiar dimension of time. In a recurring motif in the second Quartet, “East Coker”, Eliot says,
and, in “Little Gidding”,
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From this journal on the date of Blacker's death—
what would, if she were a Catholic saint, be called her dies natalis—
Monday December 18, 2006Fade to Black:
Mathematics and Narrative
continued Martin Gardner in the Notices of the American Mathematical Society, June/July 2005 (pdf): “I did a column in Scientific American on minimal art, and I reproduced one of Ed Rinehart’s [sic ] black paintings. Of course, it was just a solid square of pure black.” Click on picture for details. The Notices of the American Mathematical Society, January 2007 (pdf): “This was just one of the many moments in this sad tale when there were no whistle-blowers. As a result the entire profession has received a very public and very bad black mark.” – Joan S. Birman |

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