About the LYM

The LaRouche Youth Movement was started around the year 2000 when the economist and statesman Lyndon LaRouche was running a presidential campaign in the United States.  The participation of a certain group of young bright students in campaigning for the LaRouche's Candidacy led to the formation of the most creative political force in the world … Continue reading About the LYM

Mind Over Mathematics: How Gauss Determined the Date of His Birth

By Bruce Director This afternoon, I will introduce you to the mind of Carl Friedrich Gauss, the great 19th century German mathematical physicist, who, by all rights, would be revered by all Americans, if they knew him. Of course, in the short time allotted, we can only glimpse a corner of Gauss's, great and productive … Continue reading Mind Over Mathematics: How Gauss Determined the Date of His Birth

Can There Be Any Linearity At All?

by Phil Rubinstein It is often the case that mathematicians, scientists, and their followers are able to see anomalies, paradoxes, and singularities, but maintain appearances by limiting such incongruities to the moment or the instant or position of their occurrence, only to return immediately to whatever predisposition existed in their prior beliefs, mathematics, assumptions. It … Continue reading Can There Be Any Linearity At All?

Transfinite Principle of Light, Part I: Prologue

by Jonathan Tennenbaum Last week my esteemed colleague Bruce Director poked into a real hornets' nest, when he asked: What makes people so susceptible to the kinds of frauds now perpetrated routinely by the mass media? Is there something {sinister} involved, a vulnerability inside the minds of our fellow-citizens, that leads them to desire a … Continue reading Transfinite Principle of Light, Part I: Prologue

Don’t Vote for Anyone Who Doesn’t Know Kepler

by Bruce Director The foolishness of relying on pure mathematical models for the design and production of automobiles, nuclear weapons, or any other physical device, would be obvious to anyone with a minimal level of knowledge of the discoveries of Cusa, Kepler, Leibniz, Gauss, Riemann, et al. Unfortunately, such knowledge is virtually non-existent among the … Continue reading Don’t Vote for Anyone Who Doesn’t Know Kepler

Incommensurability and {Analysis Situs}, Part I

by Jonathan Tennenbaum The issue of analysis situs becomes unavoidable, when we are confronted with a relationship of two or more entities A and B (for example, two historical events or principles of experimental physics), which do not admit of any simple consistency or comparability, i.e., such that the concepts and assumptions, underlying our notion of ``A,'' … Continue reading Incommensurability and {Analysis Situs}, Part I

Higher Arithmetic as a Machine Tool

by Bruce Director Last week's pedagogical discussion ended with the provocative question: "If there exists no grand mathematical system which can combine and account for the various cycles, then how can we conceptualize the `One' which subsumes the successive emergence of new astronomical cycles as apparent new degrees of freedom of action in our Universe? … Continue reading Higher Arithmetic as a Machine Tool

How The Greeks Measured The Invisible, Part 1 The Discovery Of Principle Of The Thales Theorem

By Pierre Beaudry "The heavens are filled with gods." -Thales of Miletus Let me start with a provocative question: what do the height of the Egyptian pyramids and the distance to the Moon have in common? How did Thales of Miletus (600 B.C.) discover a principle by means of which one is able to determine … Continue reading How The Greeks Measured The Invisible, Part 1 The Discovery Of Principle Of The Thales Theorem

Where Are You?

by Bruce Director After spending the last three months determining where the asteroid Ceres is, it is more than appropriate to ask where you are? The question of determining one's location, while elementary, is not exactly simple. The same principles underlying Gauss' method for the determination of the orbit of Ceres, were applied by Gauss, … Continue reading Where Are You?

An Exploration of the Relationship Among Number, Space, and Mind

By Larry Hecht I can conceive in the mind of six objects, whose relationship to one another I wish to investigate. Their character as real objects does not interest me, but only that quality which makes them distinct, thinkable. They are, thus, objects in thought. I will label them with the number designations 1 to … Continue reading An Exploration of the Relationship Among Number, Space, and Mind

The Epinomis and the Complex Domain: A Fragmentary Dialogue in the Simultaneity of Eternity

by Bruce Director The following is provided to provoke some thinking, with respect to matters raised in previous pedagogical discussions, and to lay a conceptual basis for subjects to be taken up in the near future. Plato's dialogue of the Laws, continues in the short appendix known as the Epinomis: "Let us then first consider … Continue reading The Epinomis and the Complex Domain: A Fragmentary Dialogue in the Simultaneity of Eternity

Leibniz And Dynamics: A Dialogue

by Phil Valenti DRAMATIS PERSONAE {Xena,} a young student. {Academos,} a middle aged professional. {A Philosopher.} {Xena:} Greetings to you, Philosopher! I'm so glad you came along just now. Academos here is trying to convince me of his latest opinions about science, which have me awfully confused. {Academos:} That's right, Sir Philosopher! I've been reading … Continue reading Leibniz And Dynamics: A Dialogue

Demystify The Golden Section!

by Jonathan Tennenbaum Last week's inquiry concerning Leonardo da Vinci's principles of machine-tool design, brought us face-to-face with an old friend: the significance of the so-called Golden Section. Although this topic has been discussed many times in our organization, I think there still exists a residue of mystification, remaining to be cleared away. Often enough … Continue reading Demystify The Golden Section!

Demonstrate the Principle that Measurement is Hypothesis

By Larry Hecht Just as Cusa's principle of {weighing}, the balance, was the basis for progress in chemistry, leading to the 1869 discovery of the Periodic Table, Gauss's 1832 development of the magnetometer is the basis of all later discoveries in physics. This is so in a twofold sense. First, because the determination of the … Continue reading Demonstrate the Principle that Measurement is Hypothesis

Why Kepler Thought Well of Copernicus

by Robert A. Robinson The achievement of Nicholas Copernicus, whom Johannes Kepler so much admired, is often misrepresented in astronomy textbooks, as the "discovery of the heliocentric system." Copernicus never claimed to be the originator of the heliocentric system, that is, the system of placing the sun, rather than the earth, at the center of … Continue reading Why Kepler Thought Well of Copernicus

Circular Action And the Fallacy of “Linearity in the Small”–Part I

Can You Solve This Paradox? by Jonathan Tennenbaum In some of his letters concerning the ``Characteristica Universalis,'' Leibniz notably refers to the virtues of rational methods of entrepreneurial bookkeeping and budget-allocation, as such were originally introduced (according to some credible accounts) by Leonardo da Vinci's collaborator Luca Pacioli. Leibniz remarks, that rational deliberation and discourse … Continue reading Circular Action And the Fallacy of “Linearity in the Small”–Part I

The Circle Is Not Simply Round

by Bruce Director Among the most interesting and provocative investigations of the thinkers of the ancient Greek speaking world, were problems concerning the construction, with straight edge and compass, of certain geometrical figures; specifically, the doubling of the cube, the trisection of the angle, the construction of the regular heptagon, and the quadrature of the … Continue reading The Circle Is Not Simply Round

How Johannes Kepler Changed the Laws of the Universe, Part I

by Jonathan Tennenbaum The following discussion begins a long journey, along a pathway of <astronomical paradoxes> leading from our discussion of "the simplest discovery," via the revolutionary work of Johannes Kepler, to the birth of a physics characterized by non-algebraic, elliptic and hypergeometric functions. In his "Commentaries on Mars" (also known as "Astronomia Nova"), Kepler … Continue reading How Johannes Kepler Changed the Laws of the Universe, Part I

From Cardan’s Paradox To The Complex Domain, Part I

by Jonathan Tennenbaum Contrary to British-authored mythologies, the intense interest on the part of Greek geometers from Pythagoras to Eratosthenes, in so-called "unsolvable problems" of geometry, had nothing to do with an idle fascination in mathematical puzzles. At issue, in the investigation of such problems as doubling a cube, trisecting an arbitrary angle, constructing a … Continue reading From Cardan’s Paradox To The Complex Domain, Part I

Beyond Counting — A Preparatory Experiment

by Bruce Director In previous pedagogical discussions on Higher Arithmetic, we investigated the ordering of numbers with respect to arithmetic (rectilinear) progressions, (as in the case of linear and polygonal numbers) and geometric (rotational) progressions, as in the case of geometric numbers, and prime numbers. (See Doc.#'s 97267bmd01; 97316bmd001; 97326bmd001;) The deeper implications of these … Continue reading Beyond Counting — A Preparatory Experiment

Gauss vs. Empiricism

by Jonathan Tennenbaum Lyn has emphasized, how Carl Friedrich Gauss' 1799 dissertation on the so-called "Fundamental Theorem of Algebra", constituted a devastating refutation of the leading scientific authorities of his day, including Jean-Louis Lagrange and Leonard Euler. Gauss first points out fundamental flaws in purported proofs of the "Fundamental Theorem", put forward by D'Alembert, Euler … Continue reading Gauss vs. Empiricism

The astronomical origins of number theory, Part 1

by Jonathan Tennenbaum Once our prehistoric predecessors created the concept of a day, year, and other astronomical cycles, a new fundamental paradox arose: By its very nature, a cycle is a "One" which subsumes and orders a "Many" of astronomical or other events into a single whole. But what about the multitude of astronomical cycles? … Continue reading The astronomical origins of number theory, Part 1

From Nicolaus Of Cusa To Leonardo Da Vinci: The “Divine Proportion” As A Principle Of Machine-Tool Design, Part I

Can You Solve This Paradox? by Jonathan Tennenbaum The following two-part discussion is intended to prompt a richer reflection on what was presented earlier, concerning Analysis Situs, the paradox of ``incommensurability'' in Euclidean geometry, and Nicolaus of Cusa's discovery of a higher geometry based on ``circular action.'' At the same time, I will set the … Continue reading From Nicolaus Of Cusa To Leonardo Da Vinci: The “Divine Proportion” As A Principle Of Machine-Tool Design, Part I

How To Purge Your Mind of “Artificial Intelligence”: Introduction to a new pedagogical series

by Jonathan Tennenbaum One of the reasons why you don't really understand the significance of Plato's five regular polyhedra, is because you have never questioned your own, completely unfounded assumption, that the sphere is a figure in 3-dimensional space. We all remember the type of horror movie, where the Earth has been invaded by alien … Continue reading How To Purge Your Mind of “Artificial Intelligence”: Introduction to a new pedagogical series

The Twelve Star Egyptian Sphere That Generated The Great Pyramid And The Platonic Solids

by Pierre Beaudry "The history of astronomy is an essential part of the history of the human mind." Jean Sylvain Bailly THE SHADOW OF A DOUBT Over 50 centuries ago, it was the Egyptians, not the Greeks, who invented and built the Five Platonic Solids. This can now be proven with no more than a … Continue reading The Twelve Star Egyptian Sphere That Generated The Great Pyramid And The Platonic Solids

The curvature of “rectangular numbers” Part I

by Jonathan Tennenbaum Our pedagogical discussions concerning the problem "incommensurability" in Euclidean geometry demonstrated, among other things, that the shift from linear to plane, or from plane to solid geometry cannot be made without introducing new principles of measure, not reducible to those of the lower domain. Thus, the relationship of the diagonal to the … Continue reading The curvature of “rectangular numbers” Part I

Science and Life: The Importance of Keeping People in a Healthy, Unbalanced State

By Jonathan Tennenbaum The following three-part series is ostensibly devoted to some crucial paradoxes raised by the discovery of the so-called "mitogenetic" or "biophoton" radiation of living organisms, by the great Russian biologist Alexander Gurwitsch. At the same time, I hope to provoke reflection on one of the unique and so far irreplaceable functions, which … Continue reading Science and Life: The Importance of Keeping People in a Healthy, Unbalanced State

How Archimdedes Screwed the Oligarchy, Part 1

by Ted Andromidas I began my investigation of the implications of the use a minimal surface by Brunelleschi, not merely as a theoretical or experimental investigation of physical principle, but as a "machine tool" breakthrough in constructing the cupola of Santa Maria de la Fiore, by investigating the historic scientific foundations upon which this breakthrough … Continue reading How Archimdedes Screwed the Oligarchy, Part 1

{Dynamis} vs. {Energeia} — A Sketch

by Jonathan Tennenbaum Since at least the time of Plato and Aristotle, and most likely even long before Pythagoras, the struggle between oligarchical and republican conceptions of physics has turned on the relationship between what the Greeks called {dynamis} and {energeia}. To a rough first approximation, the Greek {dynamis} might be rendered, in its broad … Continue reading {Dynamis} vs. {Energeia} — A Sketch

An Incredible Discovery Of Archimedes

by Jeremy Batterson Archimedes' discovery of the method of determination of the volume of a sphere was a discovery of such beauty and with such astonishing implications, that Archimedes, before his death, instructed that it be engraved upon his tombstone. And, yet, almost none, in our day, have ever worked through its proof, although it … Continue reading An Incredible Discovery Of Archimedes

Greece: Child Of Egypt, Pt. I

Lyndon LaRouche recently described classical Greece as the "child of Egypt." The great figures of the sixth century B.C., Solon, Thales and Pythagoras, were, in fact, the children of Egypt, each having travelled to Egypt and studied under the Egyptian astronomer- and geometer-priests. Through them, and others, Egypt transmitted a science -- a method of … Continue reading Greece: Child Of Egypt, Pt. I

On Polygonal Numbers [; And So On]

Larry Hecht Diophantus, who lived probably around 250 A.D., wrote a book called {On Polygonal Numbers,} of which only fragments remain. One of the famous fragments refers to his work on a definition by Hypsicles, an earlier Greek mathematician, concerning polygonal numbers. Working out what Diophantus means in this short fragment proves quite interesting, and … Continue reading On Polygonal Numbers [; And So On]

How Benjamin Banneker Discovered The Principle Of Proportionality In A Mathematical Puzzle: A Peace Of Westphalia Pedagogical

by Pierre Beaudry, Leesburg, October 30, 2003 Some people said that the design for the city of Washington D.C. came from the heavens; that the French architect, Pierre L'Enfant, determined the location of the House of Congress, and the House of the President, in accordance with a divine plan written in the stars, and that … Continue reading How Benjamin Banneker Discovered The Principle Of Proportionality In A Mathematical Puzzle: A Peace Of Westphalia Pedagogical

Living Chemistry

by Brian Lantz Recall that yellowing periodic table, hanging on a wall in your science classroom, or perhaps the color-coded version that appeared at the back of your chemistry textbook. You read it in that textbook: modern science bows in the direction of Dimitri Ivanovich Mendeleyev, and gives him credit for the discovery of the … Continue reading Living Chemistry

The Unseen World Behind The Compass Needle

by Judy Hodgkiss The great scientists of the 19th Century, at the inspiration of Alexander von Humboldt, coalesced around the work of the "Magnetischer Verein," the Magnetic Union, globally coordinating their studies of the varied effects produced by the earth's magnetic field. Two American presidents enthusiastically supported the effort. This grand project to comprehend the … Continue reading The Unseen World Behind The Compass Needle

Dirichlet and the Multiply-Connected History of Humans: The Mendelssohn Youth Movement

by David Shavin When Lejeune Dirichlet, at 23 years of age, worked with Alexander von Humboldt in making microscopic measurements of the motions of a suspended bar-magnet in a specially-built hut in Abraham Mendelssohn's garden, he could hear, nearby in the garden-house, the Mendelssohn youth movement working through the voicing of J. S. Bach's "St. … Continue reading Dirichlet and the Multiply-Connected History of Humans: The Mendelssohn Youth Movement

Understanding Nuclear Power, #3

THE DISCOVERY OF RADIOACTIVITY AND - - THE TRANSMUTATION OF THE ELEMENTS - by Larry Hecht May 12, 2006 [Figures available at http://www.wlym.com/~bruce/radioactive.zip%5D The discovery of radioactivity and its properties in the period from 1896-1903 created a crisis in physical chemistry. The phenomena seemed to challenge several fundamental axioms of science. These were (1) Carnot's … Continue reading Understanding Nuclear Power, #3

Understanding Nuclear Power, #2: THE PERIODICITY OF THE ELEMENTS

Larry Hecht April 21, 2006 [Figures for this pedagogical can be accessed at: http://www.wlym.com/~bruce/periodic.zip%5D Dmitri Mendeleyev discovered the concept of the periodicity of the elements in 1869 while he was in the midst of writing a textbook on inorganic chemistry. The crucial new idea, as he describes it, was that when the elements are arranged … Continue reading Understanding Nuclear Power, #2: THE PERIODICITY OF THE ELEMENTS

SCHILLER INSTITUTE Partial List of Pedagogical Articles on www.schillerinstitute.org

On the Schiller Institute  pedagogical page you will find a partial listing of some pedagogical exercises, designed to help break through the handicap of “sense-certainty”, the unfortunate perspective from which most people view the world these days. If you would like more information on the classes and discussions in your area about this, please call, … Continue reading SCHILLER INSTITUTE Partial List of Pedagogical Articles on www.schillerinstitute.org

A Note: Why Modern Mathematicians Can’t Understand Archytas

A Note: Why Modern Mathematicians Can't Understand Archytas by Jonathan Tennenbaum "As for me, I cherish mathematics only because I find there the traces of the Art of Invention in general, and it seems to me I have discovered, in the end, that Descartes himself did not yet penetrate into the mystery of this great … Continue reading A Note: Why Modern Mathematicians Can’t Understand Archytas

The Narrow Path

kepler

Overview Originally formed in the context of the Year 2000 Presidential Election, the LaRouche Youth Movement has worked for nearly a decade on developing an understanding of the method of thinking employed by LaRouche in his economic forecasts and political activity. Returning to the primary sources of original geniuses, and in particular to the geometry … Continue reading The Narrow Path