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A Topologist’S Broken Heart, Josh Hiller
A Topologist’S Broken Heart, Josh Hiller
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
A poem about a topologist's broken heart.
Spurious Correlation Sestina, Jules Nyquist
Spurious Correlation Sestina, Jules Nyquist
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
This is a sestina poem about Spurious Correlations with a magical realism angle for beginning students learning statistics for the first time during the COVID pandemic.
Doughnut At The End Of Space, Deborah Coy
Doughnut At The End Of Space, Deborah Coy
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
No abstract provided.
For The Women Who Wear Pi Day Shirts, Jacqui Weaver
For The Women Who Wear Pi Day Shirts, Jacqui Weaver
Honors College
This project, entitled To The Women Who Wear Pi Day Shirts, is a poetry manuscript that explores a journey of a women in STEM. While taking college English courses, I read about characters such as the creature in Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, who had intelligence, yet was physically hideous, an outsider from the human population. The creature was an outsider to the normal human, much like how I feel as a woman in STEM, which gave me the idea to write about my own journey. The poetry in this manuscript is a reflection from being in elementary school learning mathematics …
So Long My Friend, Bryan Mcnair
So Long My Friend, Bryan Mcnair
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
No abstract provided.
Wrong Way, Joseph Chaney
What's So Great About Non-Orientable Manifolds?, Michael Mccormick
What's So Great About Non-Orientable Manifolds?, Michael Mccormick
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
No abstract provided.
Intersection Cographs And Aesthetics, Robert Haas
Intersection Cographs And Aesthetics, Robert Haas
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Cographs are complete graphs with colored lines (edges); in an intersection cograph, the points (vertices) and lines (edges) are labeled by sets, and the line between each pair of points is (or represents) their intersection. This article first presents the elementary theory of intersection cographs: 15 are possible on 4 points; constraints on the triangles and quadrilaterals; some forbidden configurations; and how, under suitable constraints, to generate the points from the lines alone. The mathematical theory is then applied to aesthetics, using set cographs to describe the experience of a person enjoying a picture (Mu Qi), poem (Dickinson), play (Shakespeare), …