Sunday, November 30, 2008

Triptychs and triplets.

Place holder for follow up on tonight's discussion about Francis Bacon, his triptychs, the triplet nature of codons, your Cedar allergy, medieval spies, the possibility of para-immunity, parasites, the possibility of expanding on the triplet nature of codons, the wobble position, the number 20, and the fact that the ribosome does wild and wonderful things like frameshifting and shunting, so art is not that far off the mark. More soon.

Meanwhile, in perusing some Bacon triptychs, I found a common theme in many of them that the first two heads are oriented in the same direction with the third facing the other two. Thus it seems that the Bacon triptychs, like codon triplets, also have a wobble position. Three examples below.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Julius F. Jezek Prize

Trevor, congratulations on your prize for Sekka! I'm still looking forward to hearing how your lecture in Cork, Ireland was received.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Boy who "sees" with sound.


Blind Boy That Sees Using Sounds Like Dolphins -

Also from my friend. Thought this one is especially pertinent considering our Austin conversation about dolphin linguistics.

Device for visualizing sound.



Shapes Using Sound Effects - video powered by Metacafe

A friend of mine at the Cavendish shared this after visiting the blog.

Hearing heat motion.

Thoughts on Schrodinger's first lecture in What is Life?

Schrodinger begins his exploration into Life with the question of why our bodies are so big compared to an atom. He cites a common frustration among those of us that study the very small, which is that our human senses are insensitive to them. This, as we discussed in August, necessitates that our observations be indirect. He presents an argument as to why it must be this way by explaining the statistical thermodynamic principle that the ordered phenomena we observe (e.g. paramagnetism and diffusion) result from the averaged behavior of independent atoms. These atoms are influenced by thermal fluctuations (he calls them “heat motion”), each other, as well as the force being tested, such as a magnetic field. Therefore, when observed as an ensemble, particles in a magnetic field align with the field. However, if your level of sensitivity was on a single particle scale, the pattern would seem confusing and chaotic. Our senses are thus tuned to relay to our brains, averages. Thus, a paradox that he highlights is that in the process of achieving the level of complexity required to comprehend the concept of a single atom, a human being has lost the ability to sense a single atom.

The perpetuum mobile project thus, strives to restore to us, through the aid of machines, a level of sensitivity that only our most distant unicellular biological relatives still possess: the ability to “hear” heat motion.