Monthly Archives: January 2009

Archimedes Sort of Discovered Calculus

Archimedes kindasorta discovered calculus:

Archimedes wrote his manuscript on a papyrus scroll 2,200 years ago. At an unknown later time, someone copied the text from papyrus to animal-skin parchment. Then, 700 years ago, a monk needed parchment for a new prayer book. He pulled the copy of Archimedes' book off the shelf, cut the pages in half, rotated them 90 degrees, and scraped the surface to remove the ink, creating a palimpsest—fresh writing material made by clearing away older text. Then he wrote his prayers on the nearly-clean pages.

What they're finding as they try to recover the underlying text is hard to summarize, but it sounds calculus-like,

Archimedes developed rigorous methods of dealing with infinity—still used today—in which he followed Aristotle's injunction. For example, Archimedes proved that the area of a section of a parabola is four-thirds the area of the triangle inside it (shown in red in the diagram below). To do so, he built a straight-lined figure that's an approximation of the curvy one. Then he showed that he could make the approximation as close as anyone could ever demand to both the section of the parabola and to four-thirds the area of the triangle.

Critically, Archimedes never claimed that by adding triangles forever, you could make the straight-line construction exactly equal to the section of the parabola. That would require an actual infinity of triangles. Instead, he just said that you can make the approximation as good as you like, so he was sticking with potential infinity.

Modern historians and mathematicians have always believed whenever Archimedes dealt with infinities, he kept strictly to the potential kind. But Netz, who transcribed the newly found text, says that the recent discoveries show that Archimedes indeed used the notion of actual infinity.

There's more…

Posted in Science/Medicine | 1 Comment

Small World Dept.

Nick Katzenbach, guest blogging at TPMCafe, Respect for Law and the Constitution Is Also Good Politics, writes a whole load of interesting stuff, but I was especially taken with this aside:

Nor do I think that when I confronted George Wallace to get Vivian Malone admitted to the University of Alabama anyone imagined that her brother in law, Eric Holder, would be attorney general of the United States for its first black president.

Posted in Politics: US | Comments Off on Small World Dept.

UM Law Election Law Symposium

This Saturday, Jan. 31, the University of Miami Law Review will host an election law symposium: How Far Have We Come Since 2000?

David Boies, attorney who argued Bush v. Gore on behalf of Vice President Al Gore; Bob Bauer, General Counsel to Barack Obama's presidential campaign; and Trevor Potter, General Counsel to John McCain's presidential campaign, are among some of the speakers for this year's University of Miami Law Review Symposium to be held Saturday January 31, 2009.

The event will be held at the School of Business Administration in the Storer Auditorium with breakfast beginning at 8:30 a.m. The morning panels will run from 9:15 a.m. to 10:45 am and 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., respectively. Lunch and the keynote address by Mr. Boies will follow at 12:30 p.m. There will be two additional panels in the afternoon, concluding with a cocktail reception in the Law School's courtyard at 5:30 p.m.

The Symposium will be devoted to current topics in Voting Rights and Election Law including the Supreme Court's recent decision in Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, the Democratic Party's handling of the Florida and Michigan delegate dispute, as well as a review of election reforms since 2000 with an eye on what still needs to be done to ensure every vote is counted.

All are invited to attend.

Register here or view the program (pdf).

Posted in U.Miami | Comments Off on UM Law Election Law Symposium

Kristol’s Done

stick a fork in himKrisol's NYT column, Will Obama Save Liberalism?, finishes with this note,

This is William Kristol’s last column.

I can't say “another national nightmare” just ended, because he's too small beer for that. Maybe “our national stomachache is over”?

I just hope they don't replace him with Karl Rove.

Posted in Discourse.net | 2 Comments

The Incompetence of Evil

Gitmo: There Are No Files.

The Bush people told us over and over that the people held at Gitmo were super-dangerous. That's why they couldn't release them, or even try them in the US. (Judges who reviewed selected cases in the main didn't agree, but put that aside.)

Now we learn the farcical basis on which decisions to hold people were being made:

“President Obama's plans to expeditiously determine the fates of about 245 terrorism suspects held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and quickly close the military prison there were set back last week when incoming legal and national security officials — barred until the inauguration from examining classified material on the detainees — discovered that there were no comprehensive case files on many of them.

Instead, they found that information on individual prisoners is “scattered throughout the executive branch,” a senior administration official said. The executive order Obama signed Thursday orders the prison closed within one year, and a Cabinet-level panel named to review each case separately will have to spend its initial weeks and perhaps months scouring the corners of the federal government in search of relevant material.

Several former Bush administration officials agreed that the files are incomplete and that no single government entity was charged with pulling together all the facts and the range of options for each prisoner.

Beyond my darkest imaginings.

Posted in Guantanamo | 2 Comments

NSA Snooped on All of US — Especially Journalists

It's important to get to the bottom of this one.

Threat Level from Wired.com, Whistleblower: NSA Targeted Journalists, Snooped on All U.S. Communications,

Just one day after George W. Bush left office, an NSA whistleblower has revealed that the National Security Agency's warrantless surveillance program targeted U.S. journalists, and vacuumed in all domestic communications of Americans, including, faxes, phone calls and network traffic.

Russell Tice, a former NSA analyst, spoke on Wednesday to MSNBC host Keith Olbermann. Tice has acknowledged in the past being one of the anonymous sources that spoke with The New York Times for its 2005 story on the government's warrantless wiretapping program.

After that story was published, President Bush said in a statement that only people in the United States who were talking with terrorists overseas would have been targeted for surveillance.

But Tice says, in truth, the spying involved a dragnet of all communications, confirming what critics have long assumed.

“The National Security Agency had access to all Americans' communications,” he said. “Faxes, phone calls and their computer communications. … They monitored all communications.”

For those who came in late, the Wikipedia article on Russel Tice makes interesting reading.

Posted in Civil Liberties | 2 Comments