The Principal Value
A random walk
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Higher Mathematics in Literature
The Library of Babel
Jorge Luis Borges
A remarkable application of mathematics in literary studies. The Library’s structure of hexagonal galleries, filled with books containing every possible combination of characters, serves as a hauntingly beautiful metaphor for the infinite. It evokes the recursive nature of Cantor’s middle-third set and the paradoxical geometry of Escher’s infinite stairs. (It also contains, perhaps, an indirect reference to a set of measure zero.)
While the Library is technically a finite collection, for all practical purposes, it represents the totality of human knowledge. It contains the solution to every open mathematical problem—yet it also contains every possible incorrect solution. In this sense, the Library is effectively useless, but that is precisely how evolution works, isn't it?
Hard-Boiled Wonderland
Haruki Murakami
A fascinating thought experiment: encoding the totality of human knowledge onto a single toothpick. The logic relies on the completeness of the real numbers.
By digitizing the world's knowledge and mapping the resulting data into a single decimal $x \in (0,1)$, one can place an infinitely precise notch on a toothpick representing the interval $(0,1)$. This single dot becomes a complete archive. It serves as a reminder that every irrational real number contains an infinite amount of information; in this sense, such a number is perhaps the simplest, most fundamental form of a fractal. Do they really exist?