Tom McCarthy’s Remainder (2005), hysterical realism and a journey that leads to nowhere!

Tom McCarthy’s Remainder (2005), hysterical realism and a journey that leads to nowhere!

I’d grabbed McCarthy’s Remainder (2005) randomly from a row of books in a bookshop in Tokyo and read the summary. Apparently, it’s hero had had some sort of life-threating accident and was trying to reconstruct his life after it, in a new search for identity. Coming from a risky hiking accident in September 2016, when I had almost, literally, rolled into an abyss, that was enough to sell the story for me. I paid and turned the next corner, towards a nearby park, where I sat in a bench and started reading straight away. Now, that I have finished the novel, I can say it was a boring read, yet, I can’t say I am too disappointed. I didn’t read it with any expectations, just wanted to follow the story of a fellow life-threating-accidents club member. And that exactly...

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Einstein’s Magnum Opus, The field equations of general relativity

Einstein’s Magnum Opus, The field equations of general relativity

This article is written as a celebration of the 110th anniversary of the first appearance of one of the most elegant theories that describe our Universe: Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity. After publishing his special theory of relativity (dealing with systems of reference moving with constant velocities), along with other monumental theories in 1905, Einstein would roll up his sleeves to attempt (and succeed) to formulate a more general theory that would include gravitation (and thus, accelerating systems). For that, he had to work with his close friend, the mathematician Marcel Grossmann, who was competent in the mathematics Einstein needed to form his extended theory, differential geometry. On November 25, 1915, Einstein publicly announced that he had...

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Learning to look beyond projections

Learning to look beyond projections

“Who looks outside, dreams. Who looks inside, awakens” Karl Jung   It was a breezy November afternoon as I was rushing to the train station, making my way towards southmost part of Shinjuku,  Tokyo, to meet Y., who had reserved us a couple of seats on the right wing for the biggest projection mapping show in the world. After being postponed due to a typhon in October, it was rescheduled for November 12th. We had a pleasure to view the projection show consisting from 19th finalist coming from all over the world. The projections were dancing all over a castle like structure, creating a surreal environment that immediately made me feel like I had landed in a scene of Blade Runner (1982) or in a rather Murakamiesque universe. I had to look into Y.-s pretty face, to...

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The engineering student who prevented a disaster in the middle of Manhattan

The engineering student who prevented a disaster in the middle of Manhattan

This article goes out for the architects and engineers out there, who sometimes don’t realize how important their work is, but also for everyone else, to point out how doing your best can be enough to make a substantial change in this world. It is about the Citicorp Center Tower building (now called 601 Lexington), which you can distinguish in New York’s skyline, from the triangular shaped top, in the picture above. In 1978, an undergraduate student in the Civil Engineering and Operations Research Department of Princeton University wrote her thesis, titled, “Implications of a Major Urban Office Complex: The Scientific, Social and Symbolic Meanings of Citicorp Center, New York City”. In her thesis, this initially mysterious student, addressed in detail...

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