This is a brief interview with Ang Lee, where he talks about his latest movie as well as his career and his philosophy. I've been a fan of Lee ever since I saw The Wedding Banquet and have seen most of his movies, including Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, Sense and Sensibility and Brokeback Mountain, all of which illustrate his eclectic interests, extraordinary range and mastery of genres.
I haven't seen The Life of Pi, but I read the book by Yann Martel many years ago, after it won the Booker Prize, and was singularly impressed. Given its philosophical nature, one should not be surprised that Lee was attracted to this story, despite its obvious challenges, both technically and thematically.
This interview reveals, more than most, the relationship between the artist and his art. How his art informs him in the same way it informs his audience. All artists strive for an authenticity that effectively negates the pretentiousness and ego that is so easily obtained, especially with success. Ang Lee demonstrates this better than most.
Addendum: A very good review here.
Philosophy, at its best, challenges our long held views, such that we examine them more deeply than we might otherwise consider.
Paul P. Mealing
- Paul P. Mealing
- Check out my book, ELVENE. Available as e-book and as paperback (print on demand, POD). Also this promotional Q&A on-line.
Tuesday, 18 December 2012
Saturday, 1 December 2012
What’s real?
Eric Scerri, who is a lecturer in chemistry
and the history and philosophy of science at the University of California, Los
Angeles, asks a very basic question in last week’s New Scientist (24 Nov. 2012, pp.30-1): how do we know what’s real?
In the world of physics and chemistry, scientists
deal with lots of unobservables like electrons and photons (we see their
effects) not to mention all the varieties of quarks that can never be seen in
isolation, even in theory. Now an electron, and even a positron, will leave a
track in a cloud chamber which can be photographed, but quantum phenomena are
so anti-intuitive that people are sure to ask: is it real? Where ‘it’ is the
Schrodinger wave function that no longer plays a role once the event in question
is ‘observed’. In fact, an earlier issue of New
Scientist dared to address that very question (28 Jul. 2012, pp.29-31), and
it goes to the heart of the longstanding debate as to what quantum mechanics
really means epistemologically. The truth is that no one really knows.
The fact is that since so much of modern
science, especially the fundamentals that underpin physics and chemistry, is
based on unobservables, it leads people to argue for a form of relativism
whereby anything is valid. This point of view is supported by the belief that
all scientific theories are temporary, given their historical perspective.
The gist of Scerri’s article is a
discussion on the philosophical approach proposed by John Worrall in 1989 (Philosopher
of Science at the London School of Economics) called “Structural Realism”. To quote Scerri: ‘For Worrall, what survives when scientific theories change is not so
much the content (entities) as the underlying mathematical structure (form).’
Scerri gives the example of Fresnell’s
theory of light (involving an aether, 1812) being replaced by Maxwell’s
electromagnetic theory. Worrall
argues that some of Fresnell’s mathematics can be found in Maxwell’s theory,
therefore ‘structurally’ Fresnell’s theory is still sound even if the aether is
not. The same criterion can be applied to Einstein’s theory of relativity
compared to Newton’s mechanics. Newton’s inverse square law for gravity is
still intact in Einstein’s theory and all of Einstein’s equations reduce to
Newton’s when the speed of light becomes irrelevant.
Scerri’s own field of expertise is
chemistry and he’s written books on the periodic table, so, not surprisingly,
that becomes a point of discussion. Dmitri Mendelev published his paper in
1869, when the structure of atoms and all their components were unknown. Most
people are unaware that it wasn’t until the 1920s when Bohr, Heisenberg,
Schrodinger and Pauli were pioneering quantum mechanics that the periodic table
suddenly made sense. It reflects the orbital shells that quantum theory
predicts.
At my country high school, we had a
farsighted science teacher (Ron Gunn) who taught us what all these quantum
shells were (without telling us that it was quantum mechanics) so that we could
make sense of all the properties that the periodic table predicts. As Scerri
points out, the periodic table literally embodies the quantum mechanical
structure of the atom. This is something that Mendelev could never have known
about, in the same way that Darwin didn’t know in 1859 that DNA underpins his entire
theory of evolution.
In fact, Scerri also references Darwin and
DNA as another example of mathematical structure underpinning a theory and
ensuring its continuity a century and a half later. To quote again:
‘But
DNA only takes things so far: to go deeper we need to take a mathematical
direction. DNA determines the sequence of bases, A, T, G and C. This becomes a
question of mathematical combinations… played out during the human genome
project.’
Of course, this does not mean that all
mathematical models determine reality, as Ptolemy’s epicyclic solar system
demonstrates; only the ones that survive scientific revolutions. In this context,
no one knows if string theory will follow Ptolemy or Einstein.
Thursday, 29 November 2012
Stephen Fry proselytises Classical Music
I don't know how anyone can't be a fan of Stephen Fry. In this debate at Cambridge University he's at the top of his form. His analogies are as outrageous as they are comical; his argument is both informative and entertaining. The world is a very lucky place and we are fortunate who live in his time.
I need to acknowledge Sally Whitwell, who embedded it on her site with an appropriate quote taken from his closing words.
I need to acknowledge Sally Whitwell, who embedded it on her site with an appropriate quote taken from his closing words.
Saturday, 17 November 2012
Empirical data confirms climate change already happening for a century
Statistically,
Australia’s temperature has risen approximately 1°C in the last 110 years and the oceans have
risen 15-17 cm in the same period. Spring comes about 2 weeks earlier. If you
don’t believe me then watch this special episode of Catalyst, aired last week
on the ABC: scientific evidence of climate-change, not a left-wing conspiracy.
And if it’s happened here then it’s happened all over the world.
Climate change is only
one symptom of humanity’s unprecedented evolutionary success. The reason so
many people, including numerous politicians, are in denial over this world-wide
phenomenon is because it’s another consequence of infinite economic growth: the
paradigm we are all addicted to, irrespective of political persuasion. Europe
is currently finding out what happens when we reach the limit of consumerism
and it will eventually happen everywhere sometime in the 21st
Century. At some point we can no longer rely on a burgeoning next generation to
maintain a non-sustainable economic growth, yet that’s the great denial; an
even greater denial than the belief that climate-change is a global,
scientifically promoted conspiracy.
Wednesday, 31 October 2012
This is torture and a violation of human rights
About 6 months ago I talked about the need
to change cultural attitudes towards girls from so-called traditional cultures
– specifically, to outlaw arranged marriages without the girl’s consent.
The practice of female genital mutilation, erroneously called female circumcision by those who practice it, is
arguably even more barbaric and more confronting to Western cultural norms.
Even though it is illegal in Australia, many people are reluctant to report it,
such is the cultural divide between those who practice it and those who find it
abhorrent.
If ever there was an argument to be made
against moral relativism, this would have to be one of the most compelling examples.
It also highlights how morality for most people, and most societies, is not
based on objective criteria, as we like to contend, but on long-accepted social
norms.
To prevent this practice requires more than
legal prosecution, but a cultural change of attitude. Fundamentally, it needs
to be recognised for what it is – torture of a pre-adolescent or adolescent
girl. As demonstrated in this video, the people who perpetrate these crimes
justify their actions as fulfilling the girl’s destiny. Like most changes to
social norms this will ultimately be a generational change within the
communities who practice it, not just a change in the law.
Wednesday, 10 October 2012
The genius of differential calculus
Newton and Leibniz are both credited as independent
‘inventors’ of calculus but I would argue that it was at least as much
discovery as invention, because, at its heart, differential calculus delivers
the seemingly impossible.
Calculus was arguably the greatest impetus
to physics in the scientific world. Newton’s employment of calculus to give
mathematical definition and precision to motion was arguably as significant to
the future of physics as his formulation of the General Theory of Gravity.
Without calculus, we wouldn’t have Einstein’s Theory of Relativity and we
wouldn’t have Schrodinger’s equation that lies at the heart of quantum
mechanics. Engineers, the world over, routinely use calculus in the form of
differential equations to design most of the technological tools and
infrastructure we take for granted.
Differential calculus is best understood in
its application to motion in physics and to tangents in Cartesian analytic
geometry. In both cases, we have mathematics describing a vanishing entity, and
this is what gives calculus its power, and also makes it difficult for people
to grasp, conceptually.
Calculus can freeze motion, so that at any
particular point in time, knowing an object’s acceleration (like a free-falling
object under gravity, for example) we can determine its instantaneous velocity,
and knowing its velocity we can determine its instantaneous position. It’s the
word ‘instantaneous’ that gives the game away.
In reality, there is no ‘instantaneous’
moment of time. If you increase the shutter speed of a camera, you can ‘freeze’
virtually any motion, from a cricket ball in mid-flight (baseball for you
American readers) to a bullet travelling faster than the speed of sound. But
the point is that, no matter how fast the shutter speed, there is still a
‘duration’ that the shutter remains open. It’s only when one looks at the
photographic record, that one is led to believe that the object has been
captured at an instantaneous point in time.
Calculus does something very similar in
that it takes a shorter and shorter sliver of time to give an instantaneous
velocity or position.
I will take the example out of Keith
Devlin’s excellent book, The Language of
Mathematics; Making the invisible visible, of a car accelerating along a
road:
x = 5t2 + 3t
The above numbers are made up, but the
formulation is correct for a vehicle under constant acceleration. If we want to
know the velocity at a specific point in time we differentiate it with respect
to time (t).
The differentiated equation becomes dx/dt,
which means that we differentiate the distance (x) with respect to time (wrt
t).
To get an ‘instantaneous’ velocity, we take
smaller and smaller distances over smaller and smaller durations. So dx/dt is
an incrementally small distance divided by an incrementally small time, so
mathematically we are doing exactly the same as what the camera does.
But dx occurs between 2 positions, x1
and x2, where dx = x2 – x1
This means: x2 is at dt duration later than x1.
Therefore x2 = 5(t + dt)2 + 3(t + dt)
And x1 = 5t2 + 3t
Therefore dx = x2 – x1 = 5(t + dt)2 +
3(t + dt) - (5t2 + 3t)
If we expand this we get: 5t2
+ 10tdt + 5dt2 + 3t + 3dt – 5t2 – 3t
{Remember: (t + dt)2 = t2 + 2tdt + dt2}
Therefore dx/dt = 10t dt/dt + 5dt2/dt
+ 3dt/dt
Therefore dx/dt = 10t + 3 + 5dt
The sleight-of-hand that allows calculus to
work is that the dt term on the RHS disappears so that dx/dt gives the instantaneous
velocity at any specified time t. In other words, by making the duration virtually zero, we achieve the
same result as the recorded photo, even though zero duration is physically
impossible.
This example can be generalised for any
polynomial: to differentiate an equation of the form,
y = axb
y = axb
dy/dx = bax(b-1) which is exactly what I did above:
If y = 5x2 + 3x
Then dy/dx = 10x + 3
The most common example given in text books
(and even Devlin’s book) is the tangent of a curve, partly because one can
demonstrate it graphically.
If I was to use an equation of the form y =
ax2 + bx + c, and differentiate it, the outcome would be exactly the
same as above, mathematically. But, in this case, one takes a smaller and
smaller x, which corresponds to a smaller and smaller y or f(x). (Note that
f(x) = y, or f(x) and y are synonymous in this context). The slope of the
tangent is dy/dx for smaller and smaller increments of dx. But at the point
where the tangent’s slope is calculated, dx becomes infinitesimal. In other
words, dx ultimately disappears, just like dt disappeared in the above worked
example.
Devlin also demonstrates how integration
(integral calculus), which in Cartesian analytic geometry calculates the area
under a curve f(x), is the inverse function of differential calculus. In other
words, for a polynomial, one just does the reverse procedure. If one
differentiates an equation and then integrates it one simply gets the original
equation back, and, obviously, vice versa.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)