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The right way to write 100,000,000,000,000 poems – Numberphile


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The way to write 100,000,000,000,000 poems – Numberphile
The way to , How to write 100,000,000,000,000 poems - Numberphile , , 9RvqE1CQXfI , https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RvqE1CQXfI , https://i.ytimg.com/vi/9RvqE1CQXfI/hqdefault.jpg , 74990 , 5.00 , Marcus du Sautoy on the clever use of mathematics to generate poetry... Episode sponsored by Backblaze online back-up - extra ... , 1651594339 , 2022-05-03 18:12:19 , 00:16:12 , UCoxcjq-8xIDTYp3uz647V5A , Numberphile , 3523 , , [vid_tags] , https://www.youtubepp.com/watch?v=9RvqE1CQXfI , [ad_2] , [ad_1] , https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RvqE1CQXfI, #write #poems #Numberphile [publish_date]
#write #poems #Numberphile
Marcus du Sautoy on the intelligent use of arithmetic to generate poetry... Episode sponsored by Backblaze online back-up - extra ...
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47 thoughts on “

  1. I remember reading an N+7 which begins "Call me islander. Some yeggs ago…".

  2. please more of "mathematics co-working with other directions of science and art and mankind" !

  3. It's interesting this video should come out as I'm starting to code something with a similar concepts for a game I want to make 🤔

  4. I mean, all of music? All of painting? Literally all of art? Isn't the act of trying to understand art mathematically, itself an act of art influencing mathematics?

  5. well, that's nothing new… remember surrealists ant their automatic texts?

  6. Using the sonnet thing as a kind of spring board to treat writers block is kind of like how tarot cards can be used to have a randomized way to look at a quandary from a different perspective to jog your brain out of the way you have been thinking which can lead you to a new understanding of the problem and potentially a solution

  7. This reminds me of a beautiful poem from the game Outer Wilds!
    But in that game it's only 4 different lines, which generate 4! = 24 different poems.

    – "It's always dark"
    – "In the ancient glade"
    – "The quiet shade"
    – "Across old bark"

    This poem also introduces you to one of the game's core mechanics, where "Quantum" objects move around when you aren't looking, so the lines change order when the poem moves.
    You find this poem in a glade together with trees which also move around when you aren't looking.

  8. There is a long and ongoing tradition of “generative music,” especially in the realm of electronic music. Highly recommend looking into that if any of these concepts are interesting to you.

  9. Related to the author Italo Calvino, he wrote a novel essentially in the same style of the method described in the video. The book is called: "Il castello dei destini incrociati" (could be translated into : "The castle of interconnected fates"). It tells the story of a group of people that have to invent new stories based on the order of selection of Tarot cards. The book is very funny to read

  10. When I saw this video I assumed it was some reference to NFTs, but they didn't mention NFTs once.

  11. There is a curious kind of spammy YT comment consisting of seemingly random, but vaguely relevant words. I have put it down to someone trying out some kind of AI bot. I wonder if watchers here have any idea what they are. I have not researched on the grounds of not wanting my time wasted by an obvious nonentity.

  12. The first thing that came to mind, although less complex, is the lyrical technique I first heard of as used by David Bowie, previously Wm. S. Burroughs, and originally Brion Gysin in the 1950s. That is, Cut-up. Basically, paragraphs are written about the subject, then cut up into phrases, shuffled, and recombined to generate either usable or inspirational new sentences.

  13. Intellectuals really need to descend to earth instead of dealing with ludicrous stuff like this. It's the stratification instead of cooperation that's causing our descent into global fascism.

  14. "Most people have heard of this group of French mathematicians and writers…" ….suuuuuuuuuuuuuuure.

  15. I remember watching Marcus du Satoy's presentations of some historical sciences stuff on BBC, and I've been a fan since. Great to have him on Numberphile as well!

  16. Actually, a sonnet is made of two quatrains (four lines each) and two tercets (three lines each). It is not three quatrains and then two lines, as you show it in the video.

  17. Wonder if the generator story itself was generated and didn't even happen…or did it?

  18. I can't pretend to have understood this video but it was still fascinating

  19. Reminds me of Kirnberger's dice minuet. We learned about this in first semester at Uni (in discrete math). You use dice to generate random numbers which will then be used to pick music phrases which stitched together will generate a random minuet.

  20. As a French native speaker, I’ve known and loved OuLiPo since I was a teenager. Other fields than literature have been inspired by OuLiPo and other Ou-X-Po were then created, like OuBaPo (Ouvroir de Bande dessinée Potentiel) which did an excellent job experimenting how comic strips can be created with mathematical or playful constraints.
    OuLiPo still exists today and still produces great and/or absurd works. Georges Perec and many others are in fact still members of OuLiPo, because once an author enters the OuLiPo, there is no way for them to quit the club! Each time there is a gathering of OuLiPo, some members are excused for cause of death.

  21. Love the fact that the letter to the diplodocus about the overdue library book is from Keith.

    (Keith Moore from the Objectivity channel.)

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