DISCOVER Magazine. Science, Technology and The Future
Current Issue
Subscribe Today »
  • Renew
  • Give a Gift
  • Archives
  • Customer Service
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Newsletter
  • Health & Medicine
  • Mind & Brain
  • Technology
  • Space
  • Human Origins
  • Living World
  • Environment
  • Physics & Math
  • Video
  • Photos
  • Podcast
  • RSS
Cosmic Variance
« Bad news continues to mount for administration
Culinary Dreaming »

Categorically Not! – Attraction

by cjohnson

The next Categorically Not! is next Sunday (26th Feb.). You may recall my post on the Categorically Not! series of events held at the Santa Monica Art Studios. They’re fantastic, and I strongly encourage you to come to them.

This one is about “Attraction”. I suppose that it is appropriate to do this announcement today, as it’s Valentine’s day. (I remembered this not because anyone sent me a Valentine’s day card (sigh… sniff), but because today almost every street corner I passed in the city has someone standing there with a sea of supposedly cute white bears with pink/red hearts, balloons with hearts, and other weird things with hearts on. What’s wrong with just selling some nice flowers, I wonder?)

Anyway, here is K.C. Cole’s teaser:

Birds do it; bees do it; so do molecules, magnets and stars. The force of attraction is one of the most complex and mysterious influences in the universe. Why do people fall in love? Why is electromagnetism trillions upon trillions of times stronger than gravity? For that matter, why does peanut butter stick to the roof of your mouth? Poetry, theater, and music all are moved (and move us) by the force of attraction one way or another.

For this month’s Categorically Not! Robert Winter—the first Presidential Chair in Music and Interactive Arts at UCLA—will tell (and show) how Western music developed “rules” governed by principles of attraction (whether voice leading, harmonic motion, rhythmic design, or overall structure)—and how this “language of attraction” has come to express its core values. An accomplished pianist in several styles, Robert is equally renowned as an author of scholarly works on Beethoven, a multimedia performer, the creator of digital outreach programs for Carnegie Hall, and the force behind music festivals from Malibu to Aspen (where he serves on the faculty of the Aspen Festival).

Getting physical, chemists Robin Garrell and Kendall Houk—whose labs at UCLA investigate how molecules recognize and attract each other, stick or slip, grab or let go—will use a PowerPoint “tag team” approach to describe the physical origins of attractive phenomena—including gravity, magnetism and electrostatics. They’ll draw from their own studies to explain how mussels adhere to ship hulls and also how computational studies allow chemists to “see” molecules reacting—revealing, for example, how pharmaceuticals are attracted to biological receptors.

For drama, Nancy Linehan Charles will explore manifestations of attraction to God, goats and even people as seen through the eyes of poets and playwrights. A two-time winner of the L.A. Drama Critics Circle Award and recipient of the Ovation Award for Toys in the Attic, Nancy’s TV appearances include 24, The West Wing, E.R., Joey and recurring roles on Huff and Six Feet Under; she played the bad guy’s wife in Spielberg’s Minority Report, and has adapted four Shakespeare plays for middle schoolers. Nancy’s currently performing in Ayckbourn’s Woman in Mind at the Pacific Resident Theatre (until 2/26).

As usual, it is held at the Santa Monica Art Studios, come at 6:00pm for drinks, cookies and a look around the space, and there’s a 6:30 start. For more information, visit the Categorically Not! website.

Hope to see some of you there!

-cvj

Share

February 14th, 2006 1:38 PM
in Arts, Entertainment, Science | 6 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

6 Responses to “Categorically Not! – Attraction”

  1. 1.   Alejandro Says:
    February 14th, 2006 at 2:28 pm

    The Categorically Not! website has February 26th as the date for “Attraction”, not this coming Sunday.

    Hopefully the Categorically Not! website is right and I don’t miss this by not showing on the 19th.

  2. 2.   Clifford Says:
    February 14th, 2006 at 2:56 pm

    Whoa! I’m a week early…… thanks….. modifying post!

    -cvj

  3. 3.   Science Says:
    February 14th, 2006 at 4:10 pm

    Things don’t attract, they get pushed together …

  4. 4.   Quibbler Says:
    February 14th, 2006 at 6:28 pm

    Things don’t attract, they get pushed together …

    Whatever.

    Cliff: happy Valentine’s day!

    –Q.

  5. 5.   Clifford Says:
    February 14th, 2006 at 7:07 pm

    Quibbler… Thanks! Same to you!

    -cvj

  6. 6.   Plato Says:
    February 14th, 2006 at 10:04 pm


    a community museum dedicated to awareness

    I like this “open invitation” to the public. Great.

    It’ll have to suffice though with a follow up Clifford/ website? Anyone else who does visit, would be great to hear from you too when it comes time. When and if you have time.

    Thanks





    • Cosmic Variance Cosmic Variance is a group blog by people who, coincidentally or not, all happen to be physicists and astrophysicists:
      • Daniel Holz
      • JoAnne Hewett
      • John Conway
      • Julianne Dalcanton
      • Mark Trodden
      • Risa Wechsler
      • Sean Carroll
      Our day (and night) jobs notwithstanding, the blog is about whatever we find interesting — science, to be sure, but also arts, politics, culture, technology, academia, and miscellaneous trivia. We have similar outlooks on many things, widely disparate opinions about others, and will do our best to keep the discourse reasonably elevated.
    • Recent Posts

      • Metaphysics Matters
      • How To Think About Quantum Field Theory
      • A 3.8-Sigma Anomaly
      • Boycott Elsevier
      • Mind = Blown
      • Unsolicited Advice XIII: How to Craft a Well-Argued Proposal
      • Your Favorite Deep, Elegant, or Beautiful Explanation
      • Good News/Bad News: Nobel Edition
      • Do I Not Live?
      • Noisy Systems and Wandering Canines
      • Happy Birthday, Stephen Hawking
      • Predictions for 2012
      • A Year Well Blogged
      • Happy Holidays!
      • Last-Minute Shopping List
    • Recent Comments

      • jammer on Mind = Blown
      • Kaleberg on How To Think About Quantum Field Theory
      • David Brown on How To Think About Quantum Field Theory
      • Andrew on How To Think About Quantum Field Theory
      • steven johnson on How To Think About Quantum Field Theory
      • Albert Z on How To Think About Quantum Field Theory
      • Phillip Helbig on How To Think About Quantum Field Theory
      • Marko on How To Think About Quantum Field Theory
      • Marko on How To Think About Quantum Field Theory
      • JoeTurpin on Your Favorite Deep, Elegant, or Beautiful Explanation
      • Valdis Kletnieks on A 3.8-Sigma Anomaly
      • Bob Kirshner on A 3.8-Sigma Anomaly
    • Facebook

    • Archives By Date

    • Archives By Category

    • Useful Pages

      • Home
      • RSS Feed
      • Comments Feed
      • About
      • Links (Blogroll)
      • Guest Bloggers
      • Equations Using LaTeX
      • Facebook page and group
      • Twitter
      • Goodies Store
      • Google Blog Search
      • Technorati Profile
      • Bloglines citations
    • Site Meter



  • Kalmbach Publishing Co.

    Copyright © 2012, Kalmbach Publishing Co.

    Privacy - Terms - Reader Services - Subscribe Today - Advertise - About Us