A week or two ago I put up a post called Manifesto. The idea was to ask myself what I - or what Points of Inflection - should be standing for in these serious days. It looks as though my own days are short - but if they were long, if I were writing a manifesto for some kind of gathering or movement, what would I emphasize as centrally important? And in such a document I'd want to bring together both the hard-headed mathematical analysis that I've tried to do, and also the spiritual or even "prophetic" critique which tries to understand the 'principalities and powers' that are in action behind the upheavals of recent times and which we can expect in the future. So, in the first Manifesto post, I revisited the idea that materialism bears responsibility for our woes, and found it misguided: I felt our problem was that we did not revere materiality enough, not that we revered it too much.
Friday, November 24, 2017
Saturday, November 18, 2017
My mission statement
I can't remember, to be honest, when I first got the idea of a personal mission statement. It was quite a while ago - I would say before the word "mission statement" had become part of standard managerial-ese, an idea to dread as much as to welcome. Nowadays it sometimes seems that a highfalutin "mission statement", heavy on jargon and light on content, is a required component of any kind of planning for something new. Dilbert, as usual, neatly satirizes the trend:
But wherever it came from for me - perhaps from Stephen Covey's Seven Habits, perhaps from thinking about my impending duties as department head, perhaps somewhere else - I found the idea of a personal mission statement a helpful one. Not something that would necessarily set objectives for me every day - but something that I could review prayerfully, every day, to remind me what was important. Various versions of this have lived with me over the years - currently it is incorporated into PrayerMate, the excellent iPad app that I use to remind me about daily prayer items. [Splitting it into daily items in this way has allowed me to add comments - "Move out of the comfort zone" has somehow acquired the comment "When was I last in it?"] But while tidying up my desk (actually, while rectifying the consequences of near-disastrously spilling my drink around the router) I found an old copy with the nine points neatly listed. I wondered if I should share them. Please ignore these if they are of no use to you, but here they are:
But wherever it came from for me - perhaps from Stephen Covey's Seven Habits, perhaps from thinking about my impending duties as department head, perhaps somewhere else - I found the idea of a personal mission statement a helpful one. Not something that would necessarily set objectives for me every day - but something that I could review prayerfully, every day, to remind me what was important. Various versions of this have lived with me over the years - currently it is incorporated into PrayerMate, the excellent iPad app that I use to remind me about daily prayer items. [Splitting it into daily items in this way has allowed me to add comments - "Move out of the comfort zone" has somehow acquired the comment "When was I last in it?"] But while tidying up my desk (actually, while rectifying the consequences of near-disastrously spilling my drink around the router) I found an old copy with the nine points neatly listed. I wondered if I should share them. Please ignore these if they are of no use to you, but here they are:
John's Mission Statement
All to the glory of God
Succeed at home first
Communicate every day
Seek the heart of worship
Move out of the comfort zone
Teach from the heart
Prepare the ground for insight
Start with what matters most
Love alone endures
It is hard to write these things without being all too aware of how I have failed to live up to the aspirations they represent; but, as I approach the end of earthly life, I do feel that by and large those aspirations were solid ones, worth aiming for, and worth seeking Grace for when I miss the mark.
Tuesday, November 14, 2017
“Mathematics for Sustainability” sent to Springer
Friends -
I am very excited to share with you the news that Mathematics for Sustainability has been sent off to Springer-Verlag, the publisher, for copy-editing. During the past couple of months we have been responding to comments from Springer’s readers, and from other friends who have reviewed the manuscript for us, and their input has helped us significantly improve the book. Now that work is done.
This is the next-to-final step in the publication process. The copy-editors read the book looking for spelling errors, misplaced punctuation, and things like that. This job will take a couple of weeks. After that, we get to review and incorporate the copy-editors’ corrections (together with any additional minor changes of our own), and then return the final book version to Springer. At that point everything is out of our hands and the physical process of printing can start.
It is so exciting to have reached this point! I would like to take the time to once again acknowledge (split infinitive! Don’t tell the copy-editor!) the enormous gift that my coauthor Russ deForest has made in bringing the project to completion, especially in recent months when illness has limited the amount I can contribute. Thank you!
We were honored to hear a few days ago that as well as listing it in their series Mathematics of Planet Earth, Springer have also chosen our book to inaugurate a completely new publication series, Texts for Quantitative Critical Thinking. This is a strong push from our publisher and helps convey their confidence in the work we have done.
We were also honored by a most gracious and lovely foreword contributed by Francis Su, past president of the MAA. Here is part of what he wrote (addressed directly to students):
Here’s what stands out to me when I read this book: there are many math books that will feed you knowledge, but it is rare to see a book like this one that will help you cultivate wisdom.
There is a deep difference between knowledge and wisdom. A knowledgeable person may be armed with facts, but a wise person considers how to act in light of those facts. A knowledgeable person may think an answer is the end of an investigation, whereas a wise person considers the new questions that result. And a knowledgeable person might ignore the human element of a problem that a wise person deems essential to understand. As the authors illustrate, mathematics that pays attention to human considerations can help you look at the world with a new lens, help you frame important questions, and help you make wise decisions.
Amen! I truly hope and trust that this book will help its readers cultivate wisdom.
Thursday, November 9, 2017
Transforming
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Cover of Transforming |
Tuesday, November 7, 2017
That Amazing Photograph
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John and Liane in the Ahwahnee Dining Room, May 2016 |
We're both quite down-to-earth people. Strange, "touched-by-an-angel" experiences happen to someone else - not to us. Yet we'd both agree that the journey that culminated in this picture was one of the strangest we have ever experienced. There was a message at its heart - a message of grace and tenderness, a message that we were granted at the exact time we needed it.
Saturday, November 4, 2017
Ezer Kenegdo
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John and Liane in the Ahwahnee Dining Room, May 2016 |