Tag Archives: 2013

Self-similarity

Animation: circles within circles

From the poster depicting a few von Neumann natural numbers, I created this animation. The moving image no longer depicts natural numbers in the sense of the poster, since there is no infinite descending chain of natural numbers. There is an infinite ascending chain of them; but the poster does not actually depict such a chain as nested circles. So running the animation in reverse would not give a correct suggestion of the original poster, even if it were of infinite size. Continue reading

The von Neumann natural numbers: a fractal-like image

See the next article, “Self-similarity,” for an animation of the image here.

I have long been fascinated by von Neumann’s definition of the natural numbers (and more generally the ordinals). In developing axioms for set theory, Zermelo used the sets 0, {0}, {{0}}, {{{0}}}, {{{{0}}}}, and so on as the natural numbers. Here 0 is the empty set. Zermelo’s method works, but is not so elegant as von Neumann’s later proposal to consider each natural number as the set of all natural numbers that are less than it is, so that (again) 0 is the empty set, but also n + 1 = {0, 1, …, n}.

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Similar images of different saints

I have been impressed by the similar depiction of the two saints here; first, St John Chrysostom, from the Byzantine collection of Dumbarton Oaks:

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and then St Cyril of Alexandria, in an image taken from Wikipedia, though apparently the original image is in Chora, here in Istanbul.  (I visited Chora once, maybe 14 years ago, but hope to visit again soon.)

Image

I was originally impressed by how the blue and red crosses of the vestments of Chrysostom were repeated in his halo; then I happened upon the image of Cyril, with crosses similar in form, though not color, again repeated about the head.