feed-aggregator

Global science equity – towards solutions

Crooked Timber — 4/17/2026

What does it mean to be an academic in different parts of the world? What comes along as the same job description – a bundle of teaching, research, and impact tasks – varies enormously from place to place. Not only the financial conditions of…

Machine Learning and Complexity

Computational Complexity — 4/16/2026

At Oxford I focused my research and discussions on how we can use the tools of computational complexity to help us understand the power and limitations of machine learning. Last week I posted my paper How Does Machine Learning Manage Complexity?, a…

Music break: Baba Yetu

Crooked Timber — 4/15/2026

Do you know Baba Yetu? Take three minutes and listen to this performance of Baba Yetu. (Our ancient blogging platform doesn’t like embedded video, so you’ll have to click through to YouTube. Go ahead and click, nothing bad will happen.) Some…

Double Maths First Thing: Issue 54

The Aperiodical — 4/15/2026

Double Maths First Thing is playing 1D chess. Hello! My name is Colin and I am a mathematician on a mission to spread the delight and joy of doing maths, and trying really hard to communicate that it’s not just about arithmetic. The kids have…

Guest Post from Peter Brass, Former NSF Theory Director, on the NSF budget.

Computational Complexity — 4/14/2026

Guest post from Peter Brass, Former NSF Theory director (though not affiliated with the NSF now) on the White House NSF budget for FY 2027.———————————————Dear ColleaguesA week ago the White House released the NSF…

History Nerd Bucket List: The Jenny Geddes Stool

Crooked Timber — 4/14/2026

Before I depart this world, I would like to visit St. Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh, Scotland, and see the Jenny Geddes memorial. I’m told it’s open to the public. Why? What’s interesting about a stool? Well, it’s probably impossible to point to a…

How many babies do we want? How many will we have?

Crooked Timber — 4/14/2026

Among other things, the unlamented former autocrat Viktor Orban was one of the leading proponents of pro-natalist policies, and more open than most about the racist underpinnings of his view. However, like others who have tried to raise birth…

Afterthoughs on Banach Tarski and the Miracle of loaves and Fishes

Computational Complexity — 4/14/2026

I posted about using the Banach-Tarski Paradox(BT) to explain the miracle of Loaves and Fishes (LF) here.Darling says that whenever I fool my readers or my students then I have to tell them later, so I’ll tell you now: The story about me meeting…

Claude and I

Mathematics and Computation — 4/13/2026

After spending many irritating hours with ChatGPT and Copilot, I finally tried out Claude. I told it to update photos of mathematicians from a derelict Perl script to a shiny new Python script with JSON, face recognition and modern CSS. It worked…

Claude and I

Mathematics and Computation — 4/13/2026

After spending many irritating hours with ChatGPT and Copilot, I finally tried out Claude. I told it to update photos of mathematicians from a derelict Perl script to a shiny new Python script with JSON, face recognition and modern CSS. It worked…

Unusual uses of OEIS sequences on GitHub

Math ∩ Programming — 4/13/2026

I went hunting for references to the OEIS in open source code, and found some weird ones. There are not one, but two live-coding music frameworks that use OEIS sequences as a source for “anything that can be sequenced” in music. I’m guessing that’s…

Carnival of Maths 250

The Aperiodical — 4/13/2026

The next issue of the Carnival of Mathematics, rounding up blog posts from the month of March 2026, is now online at Tom Rocks Maths. The Carnival rounds up maths blog posts from all over the internet, including some from our own Aperiodical. See…

Good news from Hungary

Crooked Timber — 4/13/2026

The news from Hungary’s election is so good that I need to write about it, even if not all the implications are clear yet, and even in a disorganised and way, repeating lots of what others are saying. Although the polls predicted Orban’s defeat,…

Sunday photoblogging: Pézenas, old town

Crooked Timber — 4/12/2026

Aperiodical News Roundup – March 2026

The Aperiodical — 4/12/2026

Here’s a quick round-up of maths internet news this month! Progress has been made on the Lonely Runner problem, which concerns when runners of different speeds going round a track will meet up, and has connections to higher-dimensional geometry. A…

Three books, no toast

Blog - Logic Matters — 4/10/2026

With my mind partly on revising the Study Guide, I have been browsing through three relatively recently published logic books. None of them impress as candidates for self-study. I will be brief (unfairly? life is short …). Robert André’s Set…

Cosmic Alchemy

Crooked Timber — 4/10/2026

The New South Wales gold rush began more than 400 million years ago. It was an age of fire, that ended with ice. Australia was part of the super-continent Gondwana, which was not yet south. By continent standards it was moving fast. By the end of…

The OEIS meta sequence and subway stations

Math ∩ Programming — 4/9/2026

A051070 is a sequence about OEIS sequences. a(n) is the n-th term in sequence A_n (or -1 if A_n doesn’t have enough terms). So the first term in A051070 is 1 because A000001 is the number of groups of order n, and that sequence has 1 as its entry…

Extreme wealth concentration — as strong as ever

Crooked Timber — 4/9/2026

A journalist from the Wall Street Journal wrote to me a week ago to ask what the numbers that I use in the opening pages of my book Limitarianism would look like today. In particular, she asked whether I could calculate for her the “lifetime…

Double Maths First Thing: Issue 53

The Aperiodical — 4/8/2026

Double Maths First Thing could be Rotterdam or anywhere Hello! My name is Colin and I am a mathematician on a mission to spread the joy and delight in doing maths. I’m on a bit of a buzz at the moment – I went to my local open mic on Friday and had…

Deterministic Primality Testing for Limited Bit Width

Math ∩ Programming — 4/7/2026

Problem: Determine if a 32-bit number is prime (deterministically) Solution: (in C++) // Bases to test. Using the first 4 prime bases makes the test deterministic // for all 32-bit integers. See https://oeis.org/A014233. int64_t bases[] = {2, 3, 5,…

Older but not sicker

Crooked Timber — 4/7/2026

(A piece I wrote for the Guardian) A couple of weeks ago, just before my 70th birthday, I completed the Mooloolaba standard distance triathlon (1,500m swim, 40km cycle, 10km run). There was nothing exceptional about my performance, placing 1,509…

Partial functions and Church’s Thesis

Blog - Logic Matters — 4/6/2026

Alex Oliver and Tim Smiley’s magnum opus Plural Logic runs to some 340 pages before the end matter in the second edition. The final chapters are heavy going, involving detailed developments of some cumbersome (indeed, uninviting) formal theories. I…

Fun Little Solutions

Computational Complexity — 4/5/2026

Here are the solutions to the problems I posted last week. Problem 1 A language (L) is commutative if for all (u), (v) in (L), (uv = vu). Show that (L) is commutative if and only if (L) is a subset of (w^*) for some string…

The spectrum of consistency strengths for membership in a computably enumerable set, Notre Dame Logic Seminar, April 2026

Joel David Hamkins — 4/4/2026

This will be a talk for the Logic Seminar at the University of Notre Dame, 14 April 2026, 2pm, Room 125 Hayes-Healey. Abstract After establishing several general features of the hierarchy of consistency strength, we shall consider the possible…

Great expectations

Blog - Logic Matters — 4/2/2026

Well, that all took rather longer than expected … A lot of repairing and filling and preparation (the joys of a late Victorian house). But at last the miniature room that counts as my study is redecorated. A carpet remains to be laid in ten days,…

I helped the Pope’s with his latest Encyclical (His Math Background Helped)

Computational Complexity — 4/1/2026

I blogged about Pope Leo XIV here. Pope Leo XIV has an undergraduate degree in mathematics. He saw my post and asked for my help with his latest encyclical. LEO: Let’s have lunch together at Popeyes.BILL: Why Popeyes?LEO: The name is Pope-yes so I…

Double Maths First Thing: Issue 52

The Aperiodical — 4/1/2026

Double Maths First Thing insists it’s March 32nd Hello! My name is Colin and I am a mathematician on a mission to spread the joy and delight in mathematical thinking. After the clock change and a trip to that London – we chanced on a Rob Eastaway…

The Irrational Decision—A Book Review

Math ∩ Programming — 4/1/2026

It’s the 5th annual April Cools! Here are my previous April Cools articles This year it’s a book review of Ben Recht’s book, The Irrational Decision: How We Gave Computers the Power to Choose For us, released Mar 10, 2026. The publishing industry…

Inquiries-Week 7: EOOEOEEO

Fractal Kitty — 4/1/2026

IntroductionLet’s start with E. Its opposite is O. So if we flip E, we get O. Let’s make a pattern. EE OE O O EE O O E O E E OHow is this pattern constructed? What comes next? Write

Ravens and robots

Crooked Timber — 3/30/2026

As I approach formal retirement from my academic job, I’m still thinking about ideas in my main theoretical field of decision theory. But I’ve largely lost interest in publishing journal articles, leaving the chore of dealing with Manuscript…

Fun Little Problems

Computational Complexity — 3/29/2026

Occasionally I run into what I consider fun problems in complexity, that require just a little bit of out of the box thinking. They require some background in theory, but nothing too deep. Some of these problems have been mentioned before on my…

The Book of Infinity, MIT Press, 2026

Joel David Hamkins — 3/28/2026

I am very pleased to announce that The Book of Infinity is now available for pre-order. Check it out at your favorite booksellers. From the preface: Come, let us explore infinity! We shall visit all my favorite paradoxes and conundrums. The ancient…

Geometry and the Exceptional Jordan Algebra

The n-Category Café — 3/27/2026

Slides for a talk on features of the octonionic projective plane.

Since it is the Feast of the Annunciation …

Blog - Logic Matters — 3/25/2026

Some of my very favourite paintings are Annunciations … the stunning Leonardo and Botticelli in the Uffizi, the lovely small painting from a predella by Domenico Veneziano close to home in the Fitzwilliam, the wonderful Filippo Lippi in the…

My Oxford Term

Computational Complexity — 3/25/2026

High table dinner at MagdalenMy time in Oxford has come to an end and I head back to Chicago this week. I was a visiting Fellow at Magdalen (pronounced “maudlin”) College for the Hilary Term.There’s a six week break between the eight-week Hilary…

Double Maths First Thing: Issue 51

The Aperiodical — 3/25/2026

Double Maths First Thing saw two shooting stars last night Hello! My name is Colin and I am a mathematician on a mission to spread the joy of thinking mathematically, solving problems and generally doing creative things with one’s brain. Such as,…

A $100 gift card could be legit. A $1000 is obviously a Scam. What should scammers do?

Computational Complexity — 3/22/2026

If I get an email offering me a $1000 for I DON”T KNOW SINCE I ignore it and don’t even bother looking for other signs it is a scam. If I get an email offering me $100 I may look more carefully and often they are legit (most common is to give a…

Sunday photoblogging: Pézenas, Porte Faugères

Crooked Timber — 3/22/2026

The Agent That Doesn’t Know Itself

The n-Category Café — 3/20/2026

A large language model has very little self-awareness. But it is easy to give it some rudimentary but useful forms of self-awareness using the “plumbing” language.

A Statement on my Art

Fractal Kitty — 3/20/2026

When I create art, I do so for many reasons. Some of these are:to engage in an expression of beingto explore a concept or experiment with an ideato grow as a person through creativity and struggleto immerse myself in a spiritual actto have a coping

Bennett and Brassard Win the Turing Award

Computational Complexity — 3/18/2026

Gilles Brassard and Charlie BennettCharlie Bennett and Gilles Brassard will receive the 2025 ACM Turing Award for their work on the foundations of quantum information science, the first Turing award for quantum. Read all about it in The New York…

Habermas, democratic discourse, and class

Crooked Timber — 3/18/2026

Jürgen Habermas has died, at the age of 96, and traditional and social media are full of obituaries and memories. For outsiders, it is maybe hard to gauge the omnipresence of his name in West Germany,* but his influence on democratic theory more…

Double Maths First Thing: Issue 50

The Aperiodical — 3/18/2026

Double Maths First Thing is singing powerful songs Hello! My name is Colin and I am a mathematician on a mission to spread the joy, delight and frustration of doing maths. Welcome to episode 50! That’s excitement, not factorial. I enjoyed the…

Hoffmann, Limits of Mathematics

Blog - Logic Matters — 3/16/2026

In the last couple of years, Dirk Hoffmann has published English translations of two of his books which originally appeared in German. In 2024, he gave us Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorems (Springer), which I will discuss in a future post. And then…

For (R^3) the problem is open. That’s too bad. We live in (R^3)

Computational Complexity — 3/16/2026

(If you live in Montgomery County Maryland OR if you care about Education, you MUST read this guest blog by Daniel Gottesman on Scott Aaronson’s blog HERE.) (This post is a sequel to a prior post on this topic that was here. However, this post is…

Sunday photoblogging: shed

Crooked Timber — 3/15/2026

10 years of the “Is this prime?” game – time to analyse more results

The Aperiodical — 3/15/2026

Can you believe it’s been 10 years since I made the “Is this prime?” game? I sort of can, because I set myself a reminder about it in my calendar. Back in 2016, the game had been played 350,000 times and I wrote a post looking at the collected…

Imperia: A European Culture Story, Part 3 (and last)

Crooked Timber — 3/14/2026

Third and last part of an article discussing Imperia, the large concrete statue of a semi-fictional medieval sex worker. Part 1 is here and Part 2 is here. A Clandestine Erection Imperia went up in April 1993, and I won’t even try to explain the…

A Typed Language for Agent Coordination

The n-Category Café — 3/12/2026

A category-theoretic approach to “agent frameworks”: that is, frameworks for coordinating “agents” that are large language models.

Fifteen years after Fukushima

Crooked Timber — 3/12/2026

It’s the 15th anniversary of the Fukushima nuclear disaster, and any lessons from that event seem to have been forgotten by most. Political leaders of all stripes, from centre-left to far right have been keen to promote nuclear power as at least a…

Double Maths First Thing: Issue 4F

The Aperiodical — 3/11/2026

Double Maths First Thing is remembering how icosahedra work. Hello! My name is Colin and I am a mathematician on a mission to spread joy, delight and just satisfaction in doing maths. This week’s excitement was being mentioned (twice!) in a Stand…

Carnival of Maths 249

The Aperiodical — 3/10/2026

The next issue of the Carnival of Mathematics, rounding up blog posts from the month of February 2026, is now online at Tony’s Maths Blog. The Carnival rounds up maths blog posts from all over the internet, including some from our own Aperiodical….

Tony Hoare (1934-2026)

Computational Complexity — 3/10/2026

Turing Award winner and former Oxford professor Tony Hoare passed away last Thursday at the age of 92. Hoare is famous for quicksort, ALGOL, Hoare logic and so much more. Jim Miles gives his personal reflections.Jill Hoare, Tony Hoare, Jim Miles….

How does AI do on Baseball-Brothers-Pitchers

Computational Complexity — 3/8/2026

In my graduate Ramsey Theory class I taught Kruskal’s tree theorem (KTT) which was proven by Joe Kruskal in his PhD thesis in 1960. (Should that be in a graduate Ramsey Theory class? There are not enough people teaching such a course to get a…

Ex America bona quaedam

Blog - Logic Matters — 3/4/2026

Some good things come out of America — Dvořák’s String Quintet Op. 97, for example, written while he was staying with a Czech-speaking community in Iowa for the summer of 1893. And there was a quite joyous performance a few days ago at Wigmore Hall…

The Purpose of Proofs

Computational Complexity — 3/4/2026

In discussions of AI and Mathematics, the discussion often goes to mathematical proofs, such as the the First Proof challenge. So let’s look at the role of proofs in mathematics.Without a proof, you don’t even know whether a theorem is true or…

Goodhart’s law: Ken Jennings and Types of Knowledge

Computational Complexity — 3/2/2026

Goodhart’s law: When a measure becomes a target, it stops being a measure.  I was watching the show Masterminds where Ken Jennings is one of the Masterminds. Here is what happened: Brook Burns (the host): The only vice president in the 20th century…

Gödel, slowly …

Blog - Logic Matters — 2/28/2026

As I said some weeks ago, I am slowly revising my Introduction to Gödel’s Theorems; I am still only about a third of the way through. I haven’t yet spotted any real horrors, but I’ve found some ways of re-arranging the material for the better, and…

A Probability Challenge

Computational Complexity — 2/25/2026

Last week I had the pleasure of meeting Alex Bellos in Oxford. Among other things Bellos writes the Guardian Monday puzzle column. He gave me a copy of his latest book, Puzzle Me Twice, where the obvious answer is not correct. I got more right than…

ChatGPT gets an easy math problem wrong (I got it right). How is that possible?

Computational Complexity — 2/25/2026

A commenter on this post asked for me (or anyone) to solve the problem without AI:A,B,C,D,E are digits (the poster said A could be 0 but I took A to be nonzero) such thatABCDE + BCDE + CDE + DE + E = 20320.(CLARIFICATION ADDED LATER: We allow two…

The Univalence Principle

The n-Category Café — 2/22/2026

Making precise the idea that equivalent structures are indistinguishable.

True and correct

Abuse of Notation — 2/22/2026

In the 19th century, Copernicus, Newton, Galilei et al pushed a revolutionary new idea that reshaped the way we think… but no, it’s not talking about cosmology, but about theology. This idea, (which was also the real reason they were in so much…

A Wittgenstein problem …

Blog - Logic Matters — 2/18/2026

It is time at last to redecorate my small but now rather depressingly shabby study. Already books from the top shelves are piled in a hallway, and the rest are covered in plastic sheeting as I start tackling the late Victorian ceiling (which isn’t…

Joe Halpern (1953-2026)

Computational Complexity — 2/18/2026

Computer Science Professor Joseph Halpern passed away on Friday after a long battle with cancer. He was a leader in the mathematical reasoning about knowledge. His paper with Yoram Moses, Knowledge and Common Knowledge in a Distributed Environment,…

Assigning Open Problems in Class

Computational Complexity — 2/15/2026

I sometimes assign open problems as extra credit problems. Some thoughts:1) Do you tell the students the problems are open?YES- it would be unfair for a student to work on something they almost surely won’t get.NO- Some Open Problems are open…

Book Launch, Substack, and Other News

DEONTOLOGISTICS — 2/14/2026

A couple updates for readers. There will be an impromptu book launch for The Revenge of Reason at Newcastle University on the 25th of February, from 5-7pm in HDB.1.02 in the Henry Daysh Building. I’ll be having a conversation about the book with…

The Future of Mathematics and Mathematicians

Computational Complexity — 2/12/2026

A reader worried about the future.I am writing this email as a young aspiring researcher/scientist. We live in a period of uncertainty and I have a lot of doubts about the decisions I should make. I’ve always been interested in mathematics and…

Truth and paradox in the theory of finite and infinite games, Owens Memorial Lecture, Wayne State University, April 2026

Joel David Hamkins — 2/12/2026

I am honored to be invited to give the Owen G. Owens Memorial Lecture at Wayne State University on 16 April 2026, joining a distinguished list of luminaries giving previous Owens lectures, including Gregory Margulis, John Milnor, Mikhael Gromov,…

Mathematicians do not agree on the essential structure of the complex numbers, ASL/APA Central Division Meeting, Chicago, February 2026

Joel David Hamkins — 2/11/2026

I have been asked by the ASL to fill in as a last-minute substitute speaker for the ASL session at the upcoming 2026 APA Central Division Meeting in Chicago, February 18-21, 2026, due to a late cancellation of one of … Continue reading →

I used to think historians in the future will have too much to work with. I could be wrong

Computational Complexity — 2/9/2026

(I thought I had already posted this but the blogger system we use says I didn’t. Apologies if I did. Most likely is that I posted something similar. When you blog for X years you forget what you’ve already blogged on.) Historians who study ancient…

Filtering Snowflakes

Fractal Kitty — 2/6/2026

Whether you call this triangle Pascal’s triangle, Binomial Expansion Coefficients, Yang Hui’s triangle, or any other name, it is beautiful.Finding patterns in this triangle is fun - from counting numbers, to looking at parity (even/odd-ness), to…

Surreal arithmetic is bi-interpretable with set theory, CUNY Logic Workshop, March 2026

Joel David Hamkins — 2/4/2026

This will be a talk at the CUNY Logic Workshop on 13 March 2026, held at the CUNY Graduate Center. Abstract. I shall introduce the elementary theory of surreal arithmetic (SA), a first-order theory that is true in the surreal field when equipped…

Sampling the Oxford CS Library

Computational Complexity — 2/4/2026

Wandering around maze known as the Computer Science building at Oxford I found the computer science library. Rarely these days do you see a library (and a librarian) devoted to computer science. The librarian found their copy of The Golden Ticket…

Before the ChatGPT-HW debate there were other ``If students use X to do their HW’’ debates

Computational Complexity — 2/2/2026

Lance and I had a blog-debate about What to do about students using ChatGPT to do their Homework.Some commenters pointed out that we’ve been here before. I will now list past technologies that looked like they were a problem for student assignments…

I miss writing

Proses.ID — 1/31/2026

I miss writing. That’s a strange thing to say because I’ve been employed as a full-time writer for the past 14 months. And I have…

What makes a writing human?

Proses.ID — 1/31/2026

I’ve been down a rabbit hole for the past few months, obsessed with a single question: “What makes a writing human?” It started, ironically, because…

Finished! A Jellyroll GenQuilt

Fractal Kitty — 1/29/2026

Have you ever been to a quilt store and bought fabric without a plan? You just saw the pretty colors and patterns and went for it? Well, I did - with a jelly roll of white, beige, grays, and black with mathy patterns (Note: A jelly roll is a roll

The Fighting Temeraire (Re)visited

Computational Complexity — 1/28/2026

The Fighting Temeraire by JWM TurnerA year ago I wrote about an experiment I ran to learn about the modern period of art from ChatGPT. Chatty picked four paintings to discuss and I wrote about Joseph Mallord William Turner’s The Fighting Temeraire….

Gödel, Lean, Fra Angelico, Schubert

Blog - Logic Matters — 1/26/2026

So far — but then I am still in the foothills, tinkering with early chapters — I have found just a couple of minor expositional stumbles in An Introduction to Gödel’s Theorems. I have spotted, though, quite a few places where I can make the text…

Categorifying Riemann’s Functional Equation

The n-Category Café — 1/26/2026

David Jaz Myers has some thoughts about Riemann’s functional equation for the zeta function.

Online Talks on Accessible Theorems!

Computational Complexity — 1/24/2026

Bogdan Grechuk has written a book Landscapes of 21st Century Mathematics that came out in 2021. There is a revised version coming out soon. The theme is that he takes theorems whose statements can be understood and describes them in 5–10 pages. No…

Community

Computational Complexity — 1/22/2026

I once had a provost who felt that academic departments hindered the university as they tended to silo the faculty. He would argue we should eliminate departments and that would increase cross-disciplinary work. That went nowhere of course.He…

Gödel’s Theorems (and logicisms) revisited

Blog - Logic Matters — 1/19/2026

I didn’t at all intend to return to my Introduction to Gödel’s Theorems (which I’ve not really read for a dozen years, apart from correcting a small handful of typos in the PDF). But I had occasion to look something up, and — hey, ho! — I’ve found…

Coxeter and Dynkin Diagrams

The n-Category Café — 1/6/2026

Dynkin diagrams have always fascinated me. They are magically potent language — you can do so much with them!…

Genuary 2026

Fractal Kitty — 1/1/2026

Happy New Year! It’s time for Genuary 2026! I am not sure how many prompts I will do (or combine), but I hope to share my code and progress here. I hope to get at least 5-10 done this year with a mix of different languages and approaches.

Inquiries-Week 6: Beautiful Chords

Fractal Kitty — 12/31/2025

IntroductionIn this inquiry, we explore chords, which are lines drawn across circles, using different rules to create various patterns, curves, and shapes. This inquiry will be different from those in the Inquiries Series in that it will be more…

Fear of the future

Abuse of Notation — 12/24/2025

Everything we do to secure ourselves, every decision we make out of fear of the future, ends up destroying us, ends up making our future a little more bleak — the closer we are to the public ideal of “success”, the farther we go from our own…

When the tower crumbles

Abuse of Notation — 12/24/2025

When the tower crumbles, some will laugh some will cry, some will fall from the top, some will be buried below. When the tower crumbles, better not be around better go all the way down, so you can run away.

Octonions and the Standard Model (Part 13)

The n-Category Café — 12/21/2025

There are two ways to stick SU(2) × SU(3) in Spin(10). One is good for physics; the other, alas, is easily obtained using the octonions.

Octonions and the Standard Model (Part 12)

The n-Category Café — 12/4/2025

An introduction to the bioctonionic plane and the mathematics needed to understand it.

log|x| + C revisited

The n-Category Café — 12/3/2025

A complex-analytic perspective on the indefinite integral of 1/x.

December Adventure Log

Fractal Kitty — 12/2/2025

December Adventure was started by Eli_oat at Oatmeal. I love seeing what others do this month - here is a log of logs.This December, I plan to make a generative quilt, play with origami, doodle some mossy mandalas, set up next year’s journal, and…

I should stop doing category theory

Abuse of Notation — 12/1/2025

I should stop doing category theory. What’s the point?

Beyond the Geometry of Music

The n-Category Café — 11/30/2025

Tymoczko gave a good talk on the math of music theory.

Bicyclic Matrix-Matrix Multiplication in Fully Homomorphic Encryption

Math ∩ Programming — 11/17/2025

In an earlier article, I covered the basic technique for performing matrix-vector multiplication in fully homomorphic encryption (FHE), known as the Halevi-Shoup diagonal method. This article covers a more recent method for matrix-matrix…

The elementary theory of surreal arithmetic is bi-interpretable with set theory, Notre Dame Logic Seminar, November 2025

Joel David Hamkins — 11/12/2025

This will be a talk for the Logic Seminar at the University of Notre Dame, Tuesday 18 November 20215 2pm 125 Hayes-Healy Building. Abstract. I shall introduce what I call the first-order elementary theory of surreal arithmetic, a theory that is…

somewhere here

Fractal Kitty — 11/8/2025

A coded poem and trackThe Track:Initiated on a piano, and realized on an OP-1 Field. somewhere here0:00/101.302857142857151×The Visual:Human coded in p5js with p5sound - enjoy in fullscreen. Click here for the visual with music - (CW: Strobing…

The Inverse Cube Force Law

The n-Category Café — 11/6/2025

Newton’s Principia is famous for his investigations of the inverse square force law for gravity. But he also studied the inverse cube law. Why, and what is so good about this law?

Inquiries-Week 5: Triangles Emerge

Fractal Kitty — 11/6/2025

IntroductionIn this inquiry, nodes are connected one at a time. How many lines can you draw before a triangle emerges?Starting with FourLet’s start with four nodes - draw them on a sheet of paper. How many lines (called edges) can you draw before a…