Letting go of perfection will not make you lose control of yourself. Perfection is a false control to begin with, and letting go of it is you actually re-centering yourself within your own life. You don’t sum up other people by how perfectly they do every last thing in their lives. It’s their simple presence that makes all of these things beautiful and worthwhile. Could you learn to see yourself the same way?
Emily Riehl’s lecture on the Stable Marriage Problem
In her Perimeter Public Lecture webcast on May 12, 2021, mathematician Emily Riehl will examine the fascinating mathematics providing a solution to the stable marriage problem, including the sexist implications underlying it and some real-world applications. Riehl, an associate professor of mathematics at Johns Hopkins University, has published more than 20 papers and two books on higher category theory and homotopy theory.
Perimeter Institute (charitable registration number 88981 4323 RR0001) is the world’s largest independent research hub devoted to theoretical physics, created to foster breakthroughs in the fundamental understanding of our universe, from the smallest particles to the entire cosmos. The Perimeter Institute Public Lecture Series is made possible in part by the support of donors like you. Be part of the equation: https://perimeterinstitute.ca/inspiring-and-educating-public
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We not only stand on the shoulders of giants but also work alongside them, destroying and collaborating, guided and guiding. And how can I act to make these days memorable, if not in my mind, then in my bones, in all that follows?
The resolution to this tension is that in general, a polynomial is not a function. You can associate a function with a polynomial by evaluating the polynomial for some value of x, but two different polynomials may correspond to the same function.
starting a thread on notable highlights from my @readwiseio reviews (can’t promise it’ll be daily, it’s not a habit yet) — this is one of my all time favourites, this book significantly changed my life: pic.twitter.com/oX6wQNm9Qp— Winnie Lim (@wynlim) April 17, 2021
Tim Gowers’ thread on Adam Wagner’s work using reinforcement learning to close open graphy theory conjectures
And it's also an interesting proof of concept -- it's hard to imagine that this is the end of the story. Maybe it can be worked into a simple "check your conjectures" tool that would be of great help to mathematical researchers. 6/6— Timothy Gowers (@wtgowers) May 1, 2021
They need to realize that, as in a randomized algorithm, occasional failures are the inevitable byproduct of a successful strategy. If you always win, then you’re probably doing something wrong.
“There's always been this kind of unwritten rule at Basecamp that the company basically exists for David and Jason’s enjoyment,” one employee told me. “At the end of the day, they are not interested in seeing things in their work timeline that make them uncomfortable, or distracts them from what they’re interested in. And this is the culmination of that.”
Piper Haywood wrote one of those very good posts last week — a cross-section of personal interests that manages to be both minutely specific and widely resonant.
A world with failing institutions may be survivable by the strong-willed, but a better world will always be one where strong institutions exist. If our surroundings are miserable, perhaps we’re better off acknowledging our malcontents. We should express our distress, and try to work together to change that environment, instead of reorganizing our inner feelings until we decide that the current (less optimal) world cannot possibly bother us. In a way this is a harder task than stoicism: It demands cooperation with others, which demands cultivating a much larger skillset than just willpower. Great empires, communities, and societies are not solo undertakings, they cannot be achieved by inner work. They require the attention of strong persons who refuse to discount the external world.
Buy/stream 'Take Me There': https://anjunabeats.ffm.to/gsgvntmt.oyd
Buy/stream gardenstate's debut album, 'Inspirations': https://anjunabeats.com/inspirations
Follow Anjunabeats New Releases on Spotify: https://anjunabeats.ffm.to/newreleases.oyd/spotify
Release Date: 23rd April 2021
Watch gardenstate 'Inspirations': https://youtu.be/R7EAAezffIo
Buy/Stream gardenstate & Bien's 'The Best Part': https://anjunabeats.ffm.to/gstbp.oyd
Buy/Stream 'The Darkest Light' (gardenstate Remix): https://anjunabeats.ffm.to/tdlrmxs.oyd
Buy/Stream gardenstate's 'By Your Side': https://anjunabeats.ffm.to/gsbys.oyd
Buy/stream gardenstate's 'Surreal' (Bart Skils Remix): https://anjunabeats.ffm.to/gssbsr.oyd
Buy/stream gardenstate's 'Surreal': https://anjunabeats.ffm.to/gssr.oyd
Buy/stream GVN's 'Back To Me / Ethereal': https://anjunabeats.ffm.to/gvnbtme.oyd
Buy/stream GVN's 'I Don't': https://anjunabeats.ffm.to/abr1.oyd
‘Take Me There’ is the debut collaborative single from two breakout Anjunabeats artists: gardenstate and GVN. It is the label’s 700th release.
gardenstate were formed after a chance meeting between Marcus Schössow and Matthew Felner. They’ve become a popular fixture on the label: ‘By Your Side’, ‘Surreal’, plus their raved-up take on Above & Beyond and Zoë Johnston’s ‘No One On Earth’ have all been well received. With a growing underground following and a series of spectacular ‘Inspirations’ livestreams under their belt, Marcus and Matt will be releasing much more music on Anjunabeats in 2021.
The other mind at work on ‘Take Me There’ is Gavin Brown, aka GVN. Marcus Schössow introduced Gavin to Anjunabeats in 2020, and a record deal soon followed. His label debut ‘I Don’t’ was released in January 2021 on the first Anjunabeats Rising EP, quickly followed by ‘Back To Me / Ethereal’. Both ‘Back To Me’ and ‘Ethereal’ were premiered by BBC Radio 1’s Danny Howard and Pete Tong on the same night.
Supported by Above & Beyond, Martin Garrix, Tiesto, Third Party and more, he’s a star in the making. GVN will be joining us on our stage at Creamfields in summer 2021.
Filmed in London by director Klement Brahaj, the official music video for ‘Take Me There’ stars enigmatic skateboard talent Jamie Griffin. Jamie was born in Ireland. With little access to skateparks, Jamie honed his craft in the backyard shed. Posting physics-defying tricks to social media, Jamie built a passionate online community. Today, he's a professional athlete.
gardenstate & GVN’s ‘Take Me There’ is out now on Anjunabeats.
Directed by Klement Brahaj: https://www.klementbrahaj.com
Follow gardenstate:
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Follow GVN:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/officialgvn/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gvnmusic/
Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/gvnmusic
Twitter: https://twitter.com/gvnmusic
Follow Jamie Griffin:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/_jamiegriffin/
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@jamiegriffin321
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Reddit: https://reddit.com/r/AboveandBeyond
Discord: https://www.discord.gg/anjuna
#Anjunabeats #TakeMeThere #Skateboarding
But going back to this Joseph Campbell quote in the beginning. I let go of the life that I’ve been planning. So what’s the life that’s waiting for me? I have no idea. And this is the hardest part. This is the most painful part so far. Because I don’t know what my life is supposed to be about now. I don’t know what I’m supposed to do. And every instinct tells me that I should be working at this, and working to figure this stuff out, but I’m only starting to realize that maybe this is something that I can’t work myself out of. Maybe I just need to be okay with being here right now, and not knowing.
In celebration of lockdown lifting (a bit), it's a high energy show this month, with quite a few classics in there too... Featuring Lis Sarroca, Butch, Shanti Celeste, and Anunaku
I have another birthday, and another bunch of unsolicited advice. • That thing that made you weird as a kid could make you great as an adult — if you don’t lose it. • If you have any doubt at all … Continue reading →
I am a lot more okay with being lacking as a person. To be irrelevant, behind, unseen. For me, that is one of the greatest sources of stability and peace. Because of society conditioning we are always trying to signal something whether consciously or unconsciously, so just plain giving up is really freeing. Sometimes I wonder if this is all something I could have done much earlier in my life, but maybe I had to experience the conventional life to truly know that is something I do not want. I am just thankful to know this early enough.
What if I adopted another story? I’m enjoying building this project, and it will be ready when it’s ready. What exactly am I afraid will happen if I just let it unfold at its own pace? And honestly, how lucky am I to be able to wake up every day and spend my time working on something that I’m incredibly excited about?
As you peak in the middle of the curve, […] you can’t necessarily communicate that information. You’ve integrated it for you, but that doesn’t mean you’ve distilled it down to a meaningful, concise story for someone else, someone still at the left side of the curve. The place you land on the right — the simplicity on the other side of complexity — is often super obvious in retrospect. That’s sort of the point: it’s made obvious to others because you did the heavy lifting of getting through the mess.
Negotiating the ambition of our ideas with the reality of our constraints requires a heightened level of honesty with ourselves, our process, and our work. And the challenge with reality is that we may not like what it has to say, and so learning to respect it takes some time and practice. If you don’t know what it is you want to do, don’t worry about it, and don’t feel like you need to have an answer for everything. People will like you more as a result. Besides, you make your path by walking.
“poetry is the displacement of silence, while prose is the continuation of noise.” Similarly, a poem doesn’t need to tell you the details of what a moment looked like, but it can find ways to show you what it felt like.
I’m just letting my career be what it is and following what is working instead of being bummed about what isn’t. I try to focus on the people listening, not how many aren’t. And she said to me, “the work will always be there, but the people might not be.” And that has stuck with me. I feel like I went way too far in the other direction, I over-corrected this summer where I was so loose and chaotic. And now I feel like I’m coming back to center in a better way.
When you spend all day sitting in your office thinking about difficult abstract problems, it’s wonderful to take a break and do something intensely physical, like aerial acrobatics.
It’s quite uncanny how easily we can put off, and eventually forget about, things that are important to us. How easily we can brush off meaningful tasks, big or small, until they live in this guilty state of consciousness.
She told me that the key to a good meal is matching the chef’s time: take as much time to eat the dish as it took to prepare it. I always filed it away in my head, but never quite knew how to classify the sentiment. It’s just within the past few days that I’ve understood that the reason I liked the thought so much was because of how kind it seemed. To match attention is to be kind.
Let’s talk about the many shapes that reading (and readers) can take. I started this mini-essay by revisiting some old notes about strategies for dealing...