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vol VII: Notes

1982

Sunday 18 April 1982 - Saturday 24 April 1982

Sunday 18 April 1982
Monday 19 April 1982
Tuesday 20 April 1982
Wednesday 21 April 1982
Thursday 22 April 1982

notebook DREAMING DB1]

[page 46]

A night in America - maybe Chicago. Started with visit to radio station on occasion of 5oth anniversary (reading about ABC 50th in Herald Yesterday). Sat with 2-3 companions in art nouveau anodised aluminium waiting room, all covered with cobwebs and insect dirt (a bit like the windows in my house). Then we went walking through the building which was multistoried and seemed to be panelled in dark wood like an old courthouse. In one of the rooms my friends saw something horrible (like dead decaying bodies). I did not look and seemed to make light of their discovery although something of their horror rubbed off on me. The dream then assumed the emotional tone of a nightmare but I cannot remember any details. Then I found myself hiding under a wooden bench type seat in the foyer and I think we left the building which appeared to be in Chicago and had the external appearance of a thirties type building.

Friday 23 April 1982
Saturday 24 April 1982

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Further reading

Books

Click on the "Amazon" link below each book entry to see details of a book (and possibly buy it!)

Brown, Dan, Angels and Demons, Corgi Books 2003 From Publishers Weekly 'Pitting scientific terrorists against the cardinals of Vatican City, this well-plotted if over-the-top thriller is crammed with Vatican intrigue and high-tech drama. Robert Langdon, a Harvard specialist on religious symbolism, is called in by a Swiss research lab when Dr. Vetra, the scientist who discovered antimatter, is found murdered with the cryptic word "Illuminati" branded on his chest. These Iluminati were a group of Renaissance scientists, including Galileo, who met secretly in Rome to discuss new ideas in safety from papal threat; what the long-defunct association has to do with Dr. Vetra's death is far from clear. Vetra's daughter, Vittoria, makes a frightening discovery: a lethal amount of antimatter, sealed in a vacuum flask that will explode in six hours unless its batteries are recharged, is missing. Almost immediately, the Swiss Guard discover that the flask is hidden beneath Vatican City, where the conclave to elect a new pope has just begun. Vittoria and Langdon rush to recover the canister, but they aren't allowed into the Vatican until it is discovered that the four principal papal candidates are missing. The terrorists who are holding the cardinals call in regarding their pending murders, offering clues tied to ancient Illuminati meeting sites and runes. Meanwhile, it becomes clear that a sinister Vatican entity with messianic delusions is in league with the terrorists. Packing the novel with sinister figures worthy of a Medici, Brown (Digital Fortress) sets an explosive pace as Langdon and Vittoria race through a Michelin-perfect Rome to try to save the cardinals and find the antimatter before it explodes. Though its premises strain credulity, Brown's tale is laced with twists and shocks that keep the reader wired right up to the last revelation.' Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. 
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Escher, Maurits Cornelius, and John E. Brigham (translator), The Graphic Work: Introduced and explained by the artist, Taco 1989 Introduction: '. . . then there came a moment when it seemed as though scales fell from my eyes. I discovered that technical mastery was no longer my sole aim, for I became gripped by another desire . . . Ideas came into my mind quite unrelated to graphic art, notions which so fascinated me that I longed to communicate them to other people. . . . The ideas that are basic to [my prints] often bear witness to my amazement and wonder at the laws of nature which operate in the world around us. . . . and here is yet another reason for my astonishment - no matter how objective or how impersonal the majority of my subjects appear to me, so far as I have been able to discover, few, if any, of my fellow-men seem to react in the same way to all that they see around them.' pp 5-6 
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Haupt, Robert, Last Boat to Astrakhan: A Russian Memoir 1990-1996, back
Hofstadter, Douglas R, Goedel Escher Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, Basic/Harvester 1979 An illustrated essay on the philosophy of mathematics. Formal systems, recursion, self reference and meaning explored with a dazzling array of examples in music, dialogue, text and graphics. 
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Hughes, Patrick, and Gordon Brecht, Vicious Circles and Infinity: A Panoply of Paradoxes, Doubleday 1975  
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Nin, Anais, Incest: From a Journal of Love: The Unexpurgated Diary of Anais Nin 1932-1934, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 1992 Amazon editorial review: From Library Journal "This second volume of the unexpurgated version of Nin's diary spans the period from October 1932 to November 1934. It draws upon previously unpublished material from the period covered by the first volume of the diary as published in 1966. Incest follows Henry & June ( LJ 10/1/86), focusing not only on Nin's continued relationship with author Henry Miller but also on her physical and emotional attachments to four other men. Nin offers intimate details of disturbing events such as her intense incestuous affair with her father and her abortion during her sixth month of pregnancy. Her diary offers direct insight into a narcissistic, passionate, analytical, and complex mind, but the brief introduction does disappointingly little to explain the editorial process that created this version of Nin's diary, which differs dramatically in style and content from its expurgated counterpart. Nevertheless, this is an important supplement to the 1966 diary and is recommended for most literature collections.' - Ellen Finnie Duranceau, MIT Lib. Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc. 
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Snow, C P, The Masters, Pan Macmillan  
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Wiener, Norbert, Cybernetics or control and communication in the animal and the machine, Hermann et cie / MIT Press 1948 The classic founding text of cybernetics. 
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Papers
Toroczkai, Z, K F Bassler, "Jamming is limited in scale free systems", Nature, 428, 6984, 15 April 2004, page 716. 'A large number of complex networks is scale free - that is they follow a power law degree distribution. Here we propose that the emergence of scale-free networks is tied to the efficiency of transport and flow processing across these structures, In particular we show that for large networks on which flows are influenced or generated by gradients of a scalar distributed on the nodes, scale free structures will ensure efficient processing, whereas structures that are not scale free, such as random graphs, will become congested.'. back
Links
Armageddon - Wikipedia, Armageddon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 'Armageddon is the site of an epic battle associated with the end time prophecies of the Abrahamic religions. back
Donald E Knuth, Knuth: MMIX News, 'On this page I plan to post special announcements about developments related to MMIX, the RISC machine that is rapidly gaining so many aficionados.' back
End time - Wikipedia, End time - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 'The End Time, End Times, or End of Days are the eschatological writings in the three Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) and in doomsday scenarios in various other non-Abrahamic religions. In Christianity, the End Times are often depicted as a time of tribulation that precedes the Second Coming of the Christian “saviour“ or a “hoped-for deliverer”, Jesus, the Christian Messiah, who will usher in the Kingdom of God and bring an end to suffering and evil. In Islam, Yawm al-Qiyāmah "the Day of Resurrection" or Yawm ad-Din "the Day of Judgement", Allah's final assessment of humanity, is preceded by the end of the world. In Judaism the term “End of Days” is taken from the Tanakh, Numbers 24:4, as a reference to the Messianic era and the Jewish belief in the coming of Mashiach. Various other religions also have eschatological beliefs associated with turning and redemption.' back
Eugene Wigner, The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences, 'The first point is that the enormous usefulness of mathematics in the natural sciences is something bordering on the mysterious and that there is no rational explanation for it. Second, it is just this uncanny usefulness of mathematical concepts that raises the question of the uniqueness of our physical theories.' back
Hypercomputation Research Network, Hypercomputation research network, Hypercomputation concerns the study of computation beyond that defined by the Turing machine, and is also known as super-Turing, non-standard or non-recursive computation. It is a multi-disciplinary research area with relevance across a wide variety of fields, including computer science, philosophy, physics, electronics, biology, and artifical intelligence. Jack Copeland has produced some excellent explanatory material which you may find useful: AlanTuring.Net Hypercomputation Page The confusion of Thesis M with the Church-Turing thesis back
John Lennon, Imagine Lyrics - LyricWiki, back

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