Posts

A DLDR Ode to Euler: Why I Think the Bridges Problem Is Self-Evident, Ties Into Clairaut's Theorem, Physics, and "Even" AI, Law, And Spirituality

Today's DRLR post is a lengthy ode to Euler, the Bridges problem, and women in math and physics. I am a fan of the science magazine  Quanta Magazine , and recently I heard  a podcast  with an amazing woman mathematician named  Maria Chudnovsky  of Princeton (I mention her gender because women are really underrepresented in math and in STEM, and  women are discouraged from doing math  and pushed out) whose career is dedicated to the study of  “graph theory.”  Graph theory emerged from a Russian town located on an island where the townspeople would take weekend strolls to see if they could cross seven bridges and not cross any bridge twice.        Now, when I first answered, I knew nothing about the layout of the town, or where the bridges are located, but apparently the math supergenius Euler thought (initially) this problem was silly. So did I. In fact, the solution came to me in about two seconds: the numbe...

Problematizing Altruism

              I had a lovely conservation two days ago with an interlocutor who caused me to think more deeply about “what does it mean to be an altruist?” I’ve discussed altruism in a post where I showed the psychological literature indicates that   most adult humans risk their lives to save a child who is drowning instinctively . I hypothesize these individuals don’t even think at all, but if they failed to act, and the child died, they’d be stuck with an incredibly guilty conscience. And ignoring someone who is in pain should strike those   Catholic pangs of guilt , and I know every time I walk by a homeless person and am unable to give money or food. I do volunteer when I have time for the homeless, or I have in the past.             But is altruism so straightforward? Take my career for example. Although neither one of my parents is a lawyer, my Dad was an enrolled actuary and r...

An Ode to Melinda Gates and Listening to One’s “Inner Voice”

I just posted an ode to Bill Gates , noting the similarities I share with him, and particularly his love of games and math. But I equally love Melinda French Gates – who is an incredible badass feminist icon and who knows how to code (I haven’t learned yet and I still need to learn Python, which I fully intend to do). Melinda French Gates’ book  is about life “transitions” and letting go of persons or situations that are no longer right, even if this means a messy divorce. Melinda French Gates discusses in her autobiography how she heard an “inner whisper” – in the sense of  Rumi’s inner whisper  or maybe  Oprah  – and it just started gnawing at her to leave Bill Gates and getting progressively louder, and louder, and louder until she could no longer contain or deny it. I myself have also been guided by an “inner voice” during my spiritual awaking and I have not always obeyed it, and that sometimes saved me from giving into impulses that would have shattered my ...

The Law and Economics of Why Cats Are Better Than Dogs, Though They Aren’t Mutually Exclusive

              Cats or dogs? This is an obvious question with an equally obvious answer: Clearly cats. I’ve explained why cats are better   from the perspective of physics   but now let me explain to explain from the perspective of economics. (This blog is partly humorous and an outlet for some of my zany ideas that probably could never be published in a mainstream journal.) But the “cats versus dogs” debate has existed since, well actually I don’t know how long, but presumably since ancient Egypt, where   pharaohs almost literally worshipped cats  and idolized them and turned them into statues. Whereas  some societies have killed dogs and eaten them . I’m unaware of anyone eating cats, but readers alert me if I’m wrong or leave a comment. My intuition says cats wouldn’t taste very good, but I’m a quasi-vegan animal lover and would never eat either a cat or a dog. Occasionally, once in a  “blue moon”  I have sushi, but...

An Ode To Bill Gates, Games, Thinking Mathematically, And "Gifted" Women

                I have told the story of when I knew I was going to commit my life to social justice – as a   kindergartener when my teacher collectively punished the entire class   and I recognized in my heart and soul that this was wrong. But it was not always my idea to be a lawyer, in fact it was an accident because in middle school, I was deeply into the arts. I was the lead in my 8th grade play, and sung in   a professional children’s choir , and I had intended to try out for the performing arts program at my high school. But I never even made it to the try outs. The school distributed a form about extracurricular activities, and it listed debate. I checked the box, and the rest was history. I went on to finish third in the country at the   Tournament of Champions in high school , and was recruited by multiple colleges, but picked Dartmouth for both debate and academics. (Also, why did my high sch...

The Sunflower: On The “Limits” of Forgiveness

                  Although my scholarship on the Prisoner’s Dilemma stands for “turning the other cheek” (in a pre-print I’m still working on where I need help with a boundary condition, physicists who are interested in game theory and cosmology please contact me) in a symmetric 2-player, 3-player, or 4-player game or over time, I don’t want to generalize beyond my findings. While I personally believe in forgiveness, that doesn’t make it easy, and it’s especially not easy if the wrongdoer fails to take accountability. Should the people of the United States forgive Trump absent Trump doing the right thing? In my “Hollywood” world – or in the view of any dreamer like Dr. King – there are still “limits” on forgiveness.  Even Dr. King himself was stabbed by a woman who claimed she was, in effect, a #MeToo victim before there was a movement, and the Southern Leadership Conference had wronged her . Now, I have no idea if she was telling ...

Cyberbullied for Being a Woman In STEM: Combining the First Amendment with My Law, Math, And Physics Scholarship

  Yesterday, I posted an essay explaining how I had become a “how” person in addition to a “why” person . I posted this essay on LinkedIn, and mentioned it on the LinkedIn page for  Fermat’s library , an incredible math and physics resource that informed me that yesterday was the anniversary of  Hermann Minkowski’s inventing the four-dimensional spacetime matrix  that allegedly helped Einstein , which seemed a lovely synchronicity.  I’m privileged to be able to think mathematically in 3D, and I’m working on thinking in 4D and 5D.  In any event, in response to this essay, I was cyberbullied by a male engineer who mocked my math and feminism and posted an actual skull, which I took as a death threat. (Notably, he did so in direct response to my LinkedIn comment on this math and science forum.) This essay is just to show the extent women who want to do math and science do, in fact, face a “ steep conical hill,”  from some men who seemingly think it s...