On a flight to Phoenix, I was captivated by what looked like interesting spines pushed up together on the landscape. I later google-mapped the route and found it to be a landform called Ship Rock, outside of Ship Rock New Mexico.
The idea that "nature abhores straight lines, right angles" sounds definitive....made by high potentiate scholars in the know...but it turns out to be stupid.
It was made before the knowledge of how embedded fractals are to most nature events, life processes. Before quantum mechanics showed underlying linearity. Before physics showed straight line energy and forces exerted on matter, space/time throughout the universe.
Rivers don't naturally become straight lines in all cases.
A river can constantly dig out sediment from one bank and deposit it on the opposite bank. Over time, that causes the river's course to curve.
Further downstream, the sediment can be switched in the other direction, resulting in the river taking a wiggly course--a so-called "meandering river."
"actually, rivers naturally seek to become straight lines."
This is an important insight, and it led me to a sub-insight: For the river, that is the straight line. If you don't see it as straight, adopt river mind and look again.
There's all sorts of "order" that doesn't involve straight lines.
Also, some fields are circles instead of rectangles and some fields are terraces.
The difference in the pattern in the photograph is very striking, of course. Much more interesting than a picture that was simply the river would be because of the contrast.
actually, rivers naturally seek to become straight lines.
It would be more characteristic to say that rivers flow in the area of least resistance, always downhill. That can be a straight line, a curve, etc.
They are also ever changing entities. If a river ever finds itself flowing in a straight line, that is only a temporary thing as erosion and sedimentation will alter that course from straight to curved.
To the perspective of a river, rather than think of 'lines' as being straight or curved. Think 3 dimensionally, mainly, Downhill.
As a fossil hunter I find ammonites and giant oysters (Exogyra Ponderosa) here in central Texas mostly by looking for their curved shells, which grow in something like a Fibonacci sequence.
Their curves are quite natural but absolutely unlike anything else, such as a worn river rock or a crystal of gypsum in limestone.
The river may wander not in a straight line, but in a chaotic function of such complexity that to the casual observer it is random.
I did a 1000-piece puzzle of Peaceable Kingdom by Edward Hicks over the break. It features bear, cheetahs, a bay, mountains, many other animals, and a tiny section of Penn and his men negotating with Native Americans. And there are some young women in very ornate blouses.
It was so easy to find the civilized parts because there were straight lines in all the pieces even within the costumes and hair of the American Indians. The hardest part were the wildest animals: the lion's mane, and the bear's back end were really difficult because you couldn't line up lines. Everything was aswirl.
I did a 1000-piece puzzle of Peaceable Kingdom by Edward Hicks over the break. It features bear, cheetahs, a bay, mountains, many other animals, and a tiny section of Penn and his men negotating with Native Americans. And there are some young women in very ornate blouses.
It was so easy to find the civilized parts because there were straight lines in all the pieces even within the costumes and hair of the American Indians. The hardest part were the wildest animals: the lion's mane, and the bear's back end were really difficult because you couldn't line up lines. Everything was aswirl.
Support the Althouse blog by doing your Amazon shopping going in through the Althouse Amazon link.
Amazon
I am a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for me to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
Support this blog with PayPal
Make a 1-time donation or set up a monthly donation of any amount you choose:
15 comments:
Man's eternal struggle has been to bend Nature to his will.
Curves are nicer - but not as practical for farming and driving.
On a flight to Phoenix, I was captivated by what looked like interesting spines pushed up together on the landscape. I later google-mapped the route and found it to be a landform called Ship Rock, outside of Ship Rock New Mexico.
Shiprock is one word, AA, and it is a volcanic intrusion that the surrounding terrain of previous ages has eoded away from.
actually, rivers naturally seek to become straight lines.
The idea that "nature abhores straight lines, right angles" sounds definitive....made by high potentiate scholars in the know...but it turns out to be stupid.
It was made before the knowledge of how embedded fractals are to most nature events, life processes.
Before quantum mechanics showed underlying linearity. Before physics showed straight line energy and forces exerted on matter, space/time throughout the universe.
Rivers don't naturally become straight lines in all cases.
A river can constantly dig out sediment from one bank and deposit it on the opposite bank. Over time, that causes the river's course to curve.
Further downstream, the sediment can be switched in the other direction, resulting in the river taking a wiggly course--a so-called "meandering river."
"actually, rivers naturally seek to become straight lines."
This is an important insight, and it led me to a sub-insight: For the river, that is the straight line. If you don't see it as straight, adopt river mind and look again.
There's all sorts of "order" that doesn't involve straight lines.
Also, some fields are circles instead of rectangles and some fields are terraces.
The difference in the pattern in the photograph is very striking, of course. Much more interesting than a picture that was simply the river would be because of the contrast.
actually, rivers naturally seek to become straight lines.
It would be more characteristic to say that rivers flow in the area of least resistance, always downhill. That can be a straight line, a curve, etc.
They are also ever changing entities. If a river ever finds itself flowing in a straight line, that is only a temporary thing as erosion and sedimentation will alter that course from straight to curved.
To the perspective of a river, rather than think of 'lines' as being straight or curved. Think 3 dimensionally, mainly, Downhill.
As a fossil hunter I find ammonites and giant oysters (Exogyra Ponderosa) here in central Texas mostly by looking for their curved shells, which grow in something like a Fibonacci sequence.
Their curves are quite natural but absolutely unlike anything else, such as a worn river rock or a crystal of gypsum in limestone.
The river may wander not in a straight line, but in a chaotic function of such complexity that to the casual observer it is random.
Didn't civilization begin with man's carving irrigation ditches into man approved shapes?
Too bad hexagonal farms never caught on.
I did a 1000-piece puzzle of Peaceable Kingdom by Edward Hicks over the break. It features bear, cheetahs, a bay, mountains, many other animals, and a tiny section of Penn and his men negotating with Native Americans. And there are some young women in very ornate blouses.
It was so easy to find the civilized parts because there were straight lines in all the pieces even within the costumes and hair of the American Indians. The hardest part were the wildest animals: the lion's mane, and the bear's back end were really difficult because you couldn't line up lines. Everything was aswirl.
I did a 1000-piece puzzle of Peaceable Kingdom by Edward Hicks over the break. It features bear, cheetahs, a bay, mountains, many other animals, and a tiny section of Penn and his men negotating with Native Americans. And there are some young women in very ornate blouses.
It was so easy to find the civilized parts because there were straight lines in all the pieces even within the costumes and hair of the American Indians. The hardest part were the wildest animals: the lion's mane, and the bear's back end were really difficult because you couldn't line up lines. Everything was aswirl.
Post a Comment