Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Ikarus

You said "Let's fly"
And to the sky
You sprung on fledgling silver wings

I followed you
Into the blue
And held on to your precious hand

Your wings shone bright
You held me tight
And holding still to you I flew

My wings were dross
My flight was lost
As wings of wax melted away

Loving, holding
Still the falling
Me, you struggled with my dross as well

You still loved
Wings that melted
And clutched onto my breaking heart

My wings wax glossed
In waves were tossed
And you, still holding on, were lost

The dross I knew
Before we flew
Would bring us to this deadly fate

To let love win
Gone must be sin
'Til then, in patience love must wait

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

The Death of High Culture, Part 1

Google killed the analogy.

I was conversing with some friends of mine about a week ago, and some rather obscure connections were made during the conversation. I let it go at first, but since it was a serious conversation, I decided to step up and say something about staying on topic. Their reply? They thought that what they were saying was related to our conversation. The conversation then turned to analogies, and I found that their concept of an analogy was very general and broad.

Then they name dropped Google.

Google, a search engine, has become just as much of a literary authority, it seems, as Wikipedia has with miscellaneous information (this is an analogy). Say I search "black" on Google, and I come up with a picture of an actor, a dog, and a can of paint. Does that mean that they are related? Yes, but only loosely due to rather general external factors. Consequently, I do not see why people think that connections made through Google hold any weight, especially as analogies.

I thought about it a good deal, and I realized that most people probably learned what an "analogy" was just for college entrance exams. Additionally, the world that I live in is dominated by science. Cold, hard science. There is not much interest in the true beauty of words and how the interact with each other. As a result, I decided that I would try to explain analogies through some extended analogies one can find in mathematics and science.

Linear graphs show the strength. Say that there is a scatter plot of some data that has been collected, and you find that the correlation of the data is close to one. What does this say about the graph? It means that the data elements are very well related. I could give an entire tutorial on this, but that is not the point of the blog. Basically, all the points of the data plot are all very close to the linear graph that they generate if the correlation is "good" or "strong". If the correlation is "weak," the points are very loose about the line, and tend to be more scattered and random than like a line. A strong analogy is like a data plot with a strong correlation: the elements of the analogy are very closely related to each other, not scattered and random. Analogous thoughts are very close in what they share in common, not distant. They will have some separate elements, but what they hold in common, they hold very closely.

Everyone has also heard the expression "off on a tangent." For the lay people, a tangent is a line that shares one point with a circle and is completely separate everywhere else. According to my friend's logic, the tangent is closely related to the circle because it shares one point. Those who know math know that they are not. They do not have the same shape or slope. The formulas for both are different. However, if lines were parallel, they would have the same slope and shape. Their formulas would be exactly the same except for the x and y intercepts. The same thing goes for shapes. You can have shapes that are similar, or you can have shapes that are congruent. The definition of congruent is "coinciding at all points when superimposed." Few analogies are quite that strong, but they are very close to this. Most analogies are like similar shapes: a square is a square is not a circle. A circle is not similar to a square just because they are both shapes. Saying a square is a circle is a horrible connection to draw and a defective analogy. Similarly, a line is not a circle because it shares a point.

Consider that the circle is a conversation. It is enclosed, and centers around some central topic. Consider a point in the circle to be a thought. Now, consider that the tangent is another conversational topic that has one thought or element in common with original conversation. If you pursue this thought, then you are leaving the conversation. That only makes sense.

If the second conversation that is produced is more like a concentric circle than a tangent, then people usually do not notice, whether it smaller and more focused or broader. It has the same central topic, and people do not see expanding the topic or being more specific as changing the conversation.

Another example of an analogy is a conversion factor. One foot is to one inch as twelve is to one. Fractions are analogies. Equations are analogies. An engineer would not be able to work well without strong analogies. If one foot was to an inch as about ten is to a little more than zero, the world would be chaotic. I feel the same way with analogies. People need to keep their connections tight and orderly. "Random" has become a praised character trait. Not "orderly" or "creative" or "innovative." Just random. Random is not as good as people think it is, but I shall perhaps speak more on that another day.

Using Google is more or less like trying to fish in the Maelstrom. Chaos will get the better of you. I should not have to explain. Chaos does not make good analogies. Clean, precise, even scientific connections make good analogies.

-V

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Beginnings

One of the most difficult things for a writer to do is to start something. The first line sets the tone and the rhythm, then the pen steps to the music of the free flowing thought. Here I try to break the dam that has held back my thought.

The reason I created this blog is to unshackle thoughts that I suppress because I find myself already talking to much in class, not just my discussion based classes, but also my lectures. This is a weird problem I have not experienced before. I just want to get those thoughts out for some fresh air so they do not fester in my head. I also want to continue to explore some ideas I have had and hear what some people think on certain issues.

I also wish to use this blog to practice writing. I wish to be a profession writer someday, but I do not know which field. I most likely would do best at writing articles, but I do not really want to be a journalist. Mostly, I want to write poems and novels. I have ideas for several novels right now, and I plan to put samples of my work in this blog for you, my readers, to enjoy. I also will put up poems from time to time. In addition to this, I want to write some exploratory essays (I do not know what form they will take, so that is what I will call them for now. They also may very.) as I have described earlier.

This blog is not a forum to discuss topics. If you have something to say, keep it brief or contact me. I want my blog to be a gallery of thought, not a rude coffee house of intellect. I will not be a stickler about this, but I do request that you respect my wishes. One other thing I request: do not reveal my identity. Please, please do not refer to me by my given name. For this blog, and all my writing, my name is V. Just V. I want to write under a pseudonym, and I want to remain unknown. I do not predict or desire fame, so whether it comes or whether it stays, I choose the cloak of obscurity.

That will be all for my first posting. Orginally, I intended to make it interesting and philosophical, but I believe a nice introductory posting will suffice. Best of luck to you all!

-V