In “Jesus & the Walnuts,” a hapless English professor invokes fragments of mathematical thought to integrate his hunger for a knowable world with his affection for the logician with whom he shares an office. While “not even wrong” and horribly clumsy, his aspirations are iterations of the drive for order and meaning that are shared across disciplinary knowledge . . . and the hungers of the heart
Successive iterations of the Sierpinski carpet fractal are used to explore how we---our history, exp...
This is a word-search puzzle based on the contents page of the previous (Volume 4 Issue 1-January 20...
Jesus frequently used parables in His ministry, usually short narratives illustrating the outcomes o...
Boundary systems take many forms: personal, historical, mathematical, and in the case of an elderly ...
In this lighthearted piece of mathematical fiction, the heroine/detective is a mathematician who tra...
In a series of letters to a faraway lover, an unnamed narrator attempts to make sense of his own int...
This work positions Isaac Newton's three areas of inquiry---Natural Philosophy, alchemy, and theolog...
Various heroes of Christianity have been celebrated by Protestants for centuries. From followers to ...
John Wallis, Savilian Professor of Geometry at Oxford, is primarily known for his contributions to s...
On a bright spring day, the ancient building housing the English and Logic Departments begins to slo...
An innovative grant-funded general adult audiences international speaker series on connections betwe...
With all the brokenness in the world, is the study of the mathematical aspects of Creation worthwhil...
The metaphor of the ‘fall of man ’ (at least in Christian traditions), the story of the origin...
The mathematician Georg Cantor, the writer Jorge Luis Borges, and the protagonist of Borges\u27 shor...
The Rubbish Researchers Puzzle is a humorous short story about the Blue-Eyed Islanders Puzzle, cultu...
Successive iterations of the Sierpinski carpet fractal are used to explore how we---our history, exp...
This is a word-search puzzle based on the contents page of the previous (Volume 4 Issue 1-January 20...
Jesus frequently used parables in His ministry, usually short narratives illustrating the outcomes o...
Boundary systems take many forms: personal, historical, mathematical, and in the case of an elderly ...
In this lighthearted piece of mathematical fiction, the heroine/detective is a mathematician who tra...
In a series of letters to a faraway lover, an unnamed narrator attempts to make sense of his own int...
This work positions Isaac Newton's three areas of inquiry---Natural Philosophy, alchemy, and theolog...
Various heroes of Christianity have been celebrated by Protestants for centuries. From followers to ...
John Wallis, Savilian Professor of Geometry at Oxford, is primarily known for his contributions to s...
On a bright spring day, the ancient building housing the English and Logic Departments begins to slo...
An innovative grant-funded general adult audiences international speaker series on connections betwe...
With all the brokenness in the world, is the study of the mathematical aspects of Creation worthwhil...
The metaphor of the ‘fall of man ’ (at least in Christian traditions), the story of the origin...
The mathematician Georg Cantor, the writer Jorge Luis Borges, and the protagonist of Borges\u27 shor...
The Rubbish Researchers Puzzle is a humorous short story about the Blue-Eyed Islanders Puzzle, cultu...
Successive iterations of the Sierpinski carpet fractal are used to explore how we---our history, exp...
This is a word-search puzzle based on the contents page of the previous (Volume 4 Issue 1-January 20...
Jesus frequently used parables in His ministry, usually short narratives illustrating the outcomes o...