ThenDoBetter Grant winner: Lorenzo Evans

Lorenzo has won a grant award for:

“Learning physics and mathematics in public, while fostering a community for like minded enthusiasts”

Lorenzo writes:

“….If you were to ask most people who are extremely enthusiastic about Mathematics and Physics, they would tell you that it has always been this way. In my case, it was the other way around- I avoided Maths as much as possible and thus never really looked at Physics as anything but "the science I think is cool, but can't do, because I don't like math". 


So how did I get into these fields? By chance, via programming, and since then, an entire world has opened up, that I'm excited to continue exploring, and hope to entice more people to do this exploring with me!


One of the main methods I'm using to do so are social media, having started a twitter account for like-minded enthusiasts, through which I will be broadcasting Interintellect event links, and posting coworking links for people who want to see what the real work of learning Mathematics and Physics looks like (spoiler alert, it involves much paper and many pens).

What I'm doing so far is rather sprawling, currently I'm hosting public events via the Interintellect, through an internal community, called The Olympia Academy, currently doing a three part series on Quantum Computing,  which is happening in tandem with QubitByQubit's Quantum Computing course, and I will be chronicling my learning in a set of public facing notes.

My Twitter: https://twitter.com/0xLEDev

Salons: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/quantum-computing-1-history-plank-turings-brainchild-ii-salon-tickets-136265747519#

Also:

What is something you understand, but think few people appreciate?

What I think I understand, that few people appreciate, is the sheer vastness of technological and scientific advancement lost to our civilization, because of the disenfranchisement of potential scientists, via the dilapidation of social (and scientific, in some cases) systems. I say this as someone who went from vehemently hating mathematics, none of those words chosen lightly, to being in love with it. Mathematics has not changed, and thus it must be me, and particularly, it was my perspective on these things, that changed: from the one I was given, to the one I was both given and instrumental in fashioning for myself. I think I am trying to prevent society from suffering from the full brunt of the loss it has set upon itself. I am aware, that others are well aware of it, but I have lived it. Quite frankly, with regards to the ability of society to direct minds to work they're suited for, it failed me greatly: I should have been a physicist.

More information on the microgrants here.

Madeline Kripke- kept one of the world’s largest private collection of dictionaries

From the NYT:

“…Madeline Kripke, who kept one of the world’s largest private collection of dictionaries, much of it crammed into her Greenwich Village apartment, could be defined this way: liberal [adj., as in giving unstintingly], compleat [adj., meaning having all the requisite skills] and sui generis [adj., in a class by itself].

Beginning with the Webster’s Collegiate that her parents gave her in the fifth grade, she accumulated an estimated 20,000 volumes as diverse as a Latin dictionary printed in 1502, Jonathan Swift’s 1722 booklet titled “The Benefits of Farting Explained,” and the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s 1980 guide to pickpocket slang….”

Seems to have been a wonderful life well lived, Kripke recently passed away. Full Obit here is written in hommage, and gives an insight into a quirky and well lived life - of someone in the pinnacle of her field.

NYT Link.

Mark Ravenhill in conversation (April 2020), Impro and Schaubühne

Thomas Ostermeier, director of the Schaubühne and playwright Mark Ravenhill in conversation with Peter M. Boenisch (Aarhus University and The Royal Central School of Speech and Drama) on why the Schaubühne matters and the role it plays in the German and wider international theatre landscape.

I’ve met Mark on a handful of occasions and I think his work is required reading/seeing for playwrights today. This conversation touches on other notable works and writers such as the impact of Sarah Kane’s Blasted (another writer who is performed in Europe widely). It’s of April 2020 so touches on theatre and the world as of now.

This is Mark talking about the importance of Improvisation, and notably Keith Johnstone’s book, Impro. Impro is an important and classic text for story tellers of all sorts but theatre thinkers in particular. Keith’s book Impro here and for story tellers here.