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    October 26

    论读书:读书足以冶情,足以博彩,足以长才

    Studies serve for delight, for ornament, and for ability. Their chief use for delight, is in privateness and retiring; for ornament, is in discourse; and for ability, is in the judgment and disposition of business. For expert men can execute, and perhaps judge of particulars, one by one; but the general counsels, and the plots and marshalling of affairs, come best from those that are learned. To spend too much time in studies is sloth; to use them too much for ornament, is affectation; to make judgment wholly by their rules, is the humour of a scholar. They perfect nature, and are perfected by experience: for natural abilities are like natural plants, that need pruning by study; and studies themselves do give forth directions too much at large, except they be bounded in by experience. Crafty men contemn studies, simple men admire them, and wise men use them; for they teach not their own use; but that is a wisdom without them, and above them, won by observation. Read not to contradict and confute; nor to believe and take for granted; nor to find talk and discourse; but to weigh and consider. Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested; that is, some books are to be read only in parts; others to be read, but not curiously; and some few to be read wholly, and with diligence and attention. Some books also may be read by deputy, and extracts made of them by others; but that would be only in the less important arguments, and the meaner sort of books; else distilled books are, like common distilled waters, flashy things.

    Reading makes a full man; conference a ready man; and writing and exact man. And therefore, if a man write little, he had need have a great memory; if he confer little, he had need have a present wit; and if he read little, he head need have much cunning, to seem to know that he does not. Histories make men wise; poets witty; the mathematics subtle; natural philosophy deep; moral grave; logic and rhetoric able to contend. Abeunt studia in mores. Nay there is no stond or impediment in the wit, but may be wrought out by fit studies: like as diseases of the body may have appropriate exercises. Bowling is good for the stone and reins; shooting for the lungs and breast; gentle walking for the stomach; riding for the head; and the like. So if a man's wit be wandering, let him study the mathematics; for in demonstrations, if his wit be called away never so little, he must begin again. If his wit be not apt to distinguish or find differences, let him study the schoolmen; for they are cymini sectores. If he be not apt to beat over matters, and to call up one thing to prove and illustrate another, let him study the lawyers' cases. So every defect of the mind may have a special receipt.

    On the greenery of protect of choreographic,Is the mood of the fresh and cool dew dropsOn the greenery of protect of choreographic,Is the mood of the fresh and cool dew drops .

    读书足以冶情,足以博彩,足以长才。其冶情也,最见于独处幽居之时;其博彩也,最见于高谈阔论之中;其长才也,最见于处世判事之际。练达之士虽能分别处理细事或一一判别枝节,然纵观统筹、全局策划,则非好学深思者莫属。读书费时过多易惰,文采藻饰太盛则矫,全凭条文断事乃学究故态。读书补天然之不足,经验又补读书之不足;因为天生才干犹如自然花草,读书之后方知如何修剪移接,而书中所示,如不以经验范之,则又大而无当。有手艺者鄙读书,无知者羡读书,唯明智之士用读书,然书并不以用处告人,用书之智不在书中,而在书外,全凭观察得之。读书时不可存心诘难作者,不可尽信书上所言,亦不可只为寻章摘句,而应推敲细思。书有可浅尝者,有可吞食者,少数则须咀嚼消化。换言之,有只须读其部分者,有只须大体涉猎者,少数则须全读,读时须全神贯注、孜孜不倦。书亦可请人代读,摘要也可请人代作,但只限题材较次或价值不高者,否则书经提炼犹如水经蒸馏,淡而无味矣。

    读书使人充实,讨论使人机智,笔记使人准确。因此不常动笔者须记忆特强,不常讨论者须天生聪颖,不常读书者须欺世有术,始能无知而显有知。读史使人明智,读诗使人灵秀,数学使人周密,科学使人深刻,伦理学使人庄重,逻辑修辞使人善辩。凡有所学,皆成性格。人之才智如有滞碍,无不可读适当之书使之顺畅,一如身体百病,皆可借相宜之运动除之。保龄利睾肾,射箭利胸肺,慢步利肠胃,骑马利头脑,诸如此类。如智力不集中,可令读数学,因为演题须全神贯注,稍有分散即须重演;如不能辩异,可令读经院哲学,因为研究经院哲学者吹毛求疵者也;如不善分析论证,不善以一物阐证另一物,可令读律师之案卷。头脑中凡有缺陷,皆有特药可医。

    September 11

    Differential Geometry Books IV

  • Differential Geometry and Topology (Monographs in Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Selected Papers
  • C^\infinity - Differentiable Spaces (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Geometric Analysis and Function Spaces (Cbms Regional Conference Series in Mathematics)
  • Handbook of Finsler Geometry (2 volume set)
  • Einstein's Field Equations and Their Physical Implications: Selected Essays in Honour of Jürgen Ehlers (Lecture Notes in Physics)
  • Geometric Theory of Singular Phenomena in Partial Differential Equations (Symposia Mathematica)
  • Applicable Differential Geometry (London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series)
  • Singularity Theory: Proceedings of the European Singularities Conference, August 1996, Liverpool
  • Nonpositive Curvature: Geometric and Analytic Aspects (Lectures in Mathematics. ETH Zürich)

  • Complex Hyperbolic Geometry (Oxford Mathematical Monographs)
  • Mathematics of Surfaces: 10th IMA International Conference, Leeds, UK, September 15-17, 2003, Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science)
  • Clifford Algebras with Numeric and Symbolic Computation Applications
  • Quantum Geometry (Fundamental Theories of Physics)
  • Nahm and Fourier--Mukai Transforms in Geometry and Mathematical Physics (Progress in Mathematical Physics)
  • New Developments in Differential Geometry (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Proceedings of the Ninth International Colloquium on Differential Equations: Plovdiv, Bulgaria, 18-23 August, 1998
  • Multivariate Analysis: Future Directions 2 (European Materials Research Society Symposia Proceedings)
  • Minimal Surfaces I
  • Nonstandard Analysis in Practice (Universitext)

  • Topology of Manifolds and Varieties (Advances in Soviet Mathematics, Vol 18)
  • Gromov-Hausdorff Distance for Quantum Metric Spaces/Matrix Algebras Converge to the Sphere for Quantum Gromov-Hausdorff Distance
  • Singular Semi-Riemannian Geometry (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Nonlinear Dynamics and Evolution Equations (Fields Institute Communications S.)
  • Topological Modeling for Visualization
  • Branching Solutions to One-Dimensional Variational Problems
  • Variational Problems in Riemannian Geometry: Bubbles, Scans and Geometric Flows (Progress in Nonlinear Differential Equations and Their Applications)
  • Manifolds All of Whose Geodesics Are Closed (Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete. 2. Folge)
  • Introduction to the Theory of Complex Functions (Series in Pure Mathematics)
  • Old and New Aspects in Spectral Geometry (MATHEMATICS AND ITS APPLICATIONS Volume 534)

  • The Language of Shape
  • Variational Methods in Lorentzian Geometry
  • Global Aspects of Classical Integrable Systems
  • Classical Aspherical Manifolds (Cbms Regional Conference Series in Mathematics)
  • A Textbook of Differential Geometry
  • The Breadth of Symplectic and Poisson Geometry: Festschrift in Honor of Alan Weinstein (Progress in Mathematics)
  • Lectures on Geometric Variational Problems
  • The Geometry of Ordinary Variational Equations (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Quantization, Poisson Brackets and Beyond (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Geometry of Phase Spaces

  • Normal Forms and Bifurcation of Planar Vector Fields
  • Twistor Theory (Lecture Notes in Pure and Applied Mathematics)
  • Teichmüller Theory in Riemannian Geometry (Lectures in Mathematics. ETH Zürich)
  • Constant Mean Curvature Surfaces, Harmonic Maps and Integrable Systems (Lectures in Mathematics. ETH Zürich)
  • Mixed Problems for the Wave Equation in Coordinate Domains
  • Differential Geometry: Partial Differential Equations on Manifolds (Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics)
  • Complex Geometry and Lie Theory (Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics)
  • Selected Papers on Harmonic Analysis, Groups, and Invariants (American Mathematical Society Translations Series 2)
  • Current Trends in Transformation Groups (K-Monographs in Mathematics)
  • Complex Differential Geometry and Nonlinear Differential Equations: Proceedings of the Ams-Ims-Siam Joint Summer Research Conference, Held August 12-18, ... (Contemporary Mathematics, Vol 49)

  • Least Action Principle of Crystal Formation of Dense Packing Type & the Proof of Kepler's Conjecture
  • Harmonic Maps, Loop Groups, and Integrable Systems (London Mathematical Society Student Texts)
  • Elementare Differentialgeometrie
  • Theorie Der Konvexen Korper
  • Uniform Rectifiability and Quasiminimizing Sets of Arbitrary Codimension (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • Geometric Evolution Equations: National Center For Theoretical Sciences Workshop On Geometric Evolution Equations, National Tsing-hua University, Hsinchu, ... 15-August 14, (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Analytical and Numerical Approaches to Mathematical Relativity (Lecture Notes in Physics)
  • Local Stereology (Advanced Series on Statistical Science and Applied Probability, Vol 5)
  • Riemannian Geometry Fiber Bundles Kaluza-Klein Theories and All That (World Scientific Lecture Notes in Physics, Vol 16)
  • Control Theory and Optimization I

  • New Trends in Difference Equations: Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Difference Equations Tampico, Chile, January 2-7, 2000
  • Global Differential Geometry: The Mathematical Legacy of Alfred Gray
  • Transformation Groups in Differential Geometry (Classics in Mathematics)
  • Introduction to Combinatorial Torsions
  • H-Principles and Flexibility in Geometry (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society, No. 779)
  • Singularities and Computer Algebra (London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series)
  • The Decomposition and Classification of Radiant Affine 3-Manifolds
  • Basic Concepts of Synthetic Differential Geometry (Texts in the Mathematical Sciences)
  • Riemannian Manifolds of Conullity Two
  • Cr Submanifolds of Kaehlerian and Sasakian Manifolds (Progress in Mathematics (Birkhauser Boston))

  • Holomorphic Curves in Symplectic Geometry (Progress in Mathematics (Birkhauser Boston))
  • Geometric Function Theory: Explorations in Complex Analysis (Cornerstones)
  • Geometric Dynamics (MATHEMATICS AND ITS APPLICATIONS Volume 513) (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Ramified Integrals, Singularities and Lacunas (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Factorizable Sheaves and Quantum Groups (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • A New Construction of Homogeneous Quaternionic Manifolds and Related Geometric Structures (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • Algebraic Integrability of Nonlinear Dynamical Systems on Manifolds: Classical and Quantum Aspects (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Topology II
  • Involutive Hyperbolic Differential Systems (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • Spectral Geometry, Riemannian Submersions, and the Gromov-Lawson Conjecture

  • Affine Flows on 3-Manifolds (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • Complete Minimal Surfaces of Finite Total Curvature (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Differential Geometry and Control: Summer Research Institute on Differential Geometry and Control, June 29-July 19, 1997, University of Colorado, Boulder (Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics)
  • Differential Geometry: Proceedings of the Nordic Summer School, Held Lyngby, Denmark, 1985 (Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol 1263)
  • J-Holomorphic Curves and Quantum Cohomology (University Lecture Series)
  • Floer Memorial Volume (Progress in Mathematics)
  • Isoperimetric Inequalities: Differential Geometric and Analytic Perspectives (Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics)
  • Topics in Differential Geometry
  • Quasiconformal Teichmuller Theory (Mathematical Surveys and Monographs)
  • Modern Differential Geometry in Gauge Theories: Yang-Mills Fields, Volume II (Progress in Mathematical Physics)

  • Differential Equations & Mathematical Physics: University of Alabama, Birmingham, March 13-17, 1994
  • Arithmetic Geometry (Symposia Mathematica)
  • Exterior Differential Systems and Equivalence Problems (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Lagrangian Reduction by Stages (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • The Geometry of Jordan and Lie Structures (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Calculus and Mechanics on Two-Point Homogenous Riemannian Spaces (Lecture Notes in Physics)
  • Digital Sound Synthesis by Physical Modeling Using the Functional Transformation Method
  • Bifurcations and Catastrophes: Geometry of Solutions to Nonlinear Problems (Universitext)
  • Real and Complex Singularities: São Carlos Workshop 2004 (Trends in Mathematics)
  • Infinite Dimensional Kähler Manifolds (Oberwolfach Seminars)

  • Generalized Manifolds
  • Surgery on Compact Manifolds (Mathematical Surveys and Monographs)
  • Harmonic Maps: Selected Papers
  • Mixed Hodge Structures and Singularities (Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics)
  • Advances in the Theory of Riemann Surfaces: Proceedings of the 1969 Stony Brook Conference (Annals of Mathematics Studies)
  • Sub-Riemannian Geometry (Progress in Mathematics)
  • Geometry of groups of transformations
  • Existence Theorems for Minimal Surfaces of Non-Zero Genus Spanning a Contour (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • Surveys on Surgery Theory: Volume 2. Papers Dedicated to C.T.C. Wall. (AM-149) (Annals of Mathematics Studies)
  • Affine Differential Geometry

  • Geometry and Topology of Submanifolds X - Differential Geometryin Honor of Prof S S Chern
  • Classifying Immersions into Ir4 over Stable Maps of 3-Manifolds into Ir2 (Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol 1157)
  • Proper Group Actions and the Baum-Connes Conjecture (Advanced Courses in Mathematics - CRM Barcelona)
  • Anschauliche Geometrie
  • Blow-up Theory for Elliptic PDEs in Riemannian Geometry (MN-45) (Mathematical Notes)
  • Curvature and Betti Numbers (Annals of Mathematics Studies)
  • Non-Riemannian Geometry (Colloquium Publications (Amer Mathematical Soc))
  • Geometry in Partial Differential Equations
  • Relativity and Geometry (Athene Series)
  • Differential Geometry, Calculus of Variations, and Their Applications (Lecture Notes in Pure and Applied Mathematics)

  • Boundary Element Topics: Proceedings of the Final Conference of the Priority Research Programme Boundary Element Methods 1989-1995 of the German Research Foundation, October
  • Global Affine Differential Geometry of Hypersurfaces (De Gruyter Expositions in Mathematics)
  • Geometry and Integrability (London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series)
  • Reduction of Nonlinear Control Systems: A Differential Geometric Approach (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Symplectic and Contact Topology: Interactions and Perspectives (Fields Institute Communications, V. 35)
  • New Directions in Dirichlet Forms (Ams/Ip Studies in Advanced Mathematics, V. 8)
  • Laminations and Foliations in Dynamics, Geometry and Topology: Proceedings of the Conference on Laminations and Foliations in Dynamics, Geometry and Topology ... at Stony Brook (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Almgren's Big Regularity Paper: Q-Valued Functions Minimizing Dirichlet's Integral and the Regularity of Area-Minimizing Rectifiable Currents Up to Codimension ... Scientific Monograph Series in Mathematics)
  • Notes on Seiberg-Witten Theory (Graduate Studies in Mathematics)
  • Global Variational Analysis: Weierstrass Integrals on a Riemannian Manifold# (Mathematical Notes, No 16)

  • Two Reports on Harmonic Maps
  • Geometry, Fields and Cosmology: Techniques and Applications (Fundamental Theories of Physics)
  • Differential Geometric Methods in Mathematical Physics (Mathematical Physics Studies)
  • Lie Groups and Lie Algebras III: Structure of Lie Groups and Lie Algebras (Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences)
  • Dynamics of Foliations, Groups and Pseudogroups (Monografie Matematyczne)
  • Introduction to the $h$-Principle (Graduate Studies in Mathematics, V 48)
  • Symplectic Geometry (Advanced Studies in Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Geometric Analysis: Proceedings of an Ams Special Session Held October 12-13, 1991 (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Clifford Algebras: Applications to Mathematics, Physics, and Engineering (Progress in Mathematical Physics, Vol. 34)
  • Elementare Differentialgeometrie (Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften)

  • Complex Manifolds
  • Calculus of Variations II: The Hamiltonian Formalism (Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften)
  • Representations of Compact Lie Groups (Graduate Texts in Mathematics)
  • Geometry of Classical Fields (Dover Books on Mathematics)
  • Space-Filling Curves (Universitext)
  • The Method of Equivalence and Its Applications (C B M S - N S F Regional Conference Series in Applied Mathematics)
  • Collected Papers of V.K. Patodi
  • Tensor Calculus for Engineers: Analytical and Computational Aspects
  • Differential Geometry
  • Prospects in Complex Geometry

  • Global Geometry and Mathematical Physics
  • Global theory of connections and holonomy groups
  • Semi-Riemannian Maps and Their Applications (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Generators and Relations in Groups and Geometries (NATO Science Series C:)
  • Regularity Theory for Quasilinear Elliptic Systems and Monge-Ampere Equations in Two Dimensions
  • An Introduction to Minimal Currents and Parametric Variational Problems (Mathematical Reports, Vol 2)
  • Elliptic Regularization and Partial Regularity for Motion by Mean Curvature (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • The Structure of Classical Diffeomorphism Groups (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Symplectic Geometry and Mathematical Physics
  • Complex Monge-Ampere Equation and Application on Kähler Geometry

  • Floer Homology, Gauge Theory, and Low Dimensional Topology: Proceedings of the Clay Mathematics Institute 2004 Summer School, Alfred Renyi Institute of Mathematics, Budapest, Hungary, June 5-26, 2004 (Clay Mathematics Proceedings, Vol. 5)
  • The Geometry of Lagrange Spaces: Theory and Applications (Fundamental Theories of Physics)
  • Almost-Bieberbach Groups: Affine and Polynomial Structures (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Lightlike Submanifolds of Semi-Riemannian Manifolds and Applications (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Fredholm Operators And Einstein Metrics on Conformally Compact Manifolds (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • Symplectic Manifolds With No Kahler Structure (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Differential Geometry and Mathematical Physics (Mathematical Physics Studies)
  • Branched Coverings and Algebraic Functions (Research Notes in Mathematics Series)
  • On L-Nonlinear Boundary Eigenvalue Problems (Mathematical Research, Vol 71)
  • Geometry, Analysis and Applications

  • Lectures on Seiberg-Witten Invariants (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Cr-Geometry and over Determined Systems (Advanced Studies in Pure Mathematics)
  • Harmonic Maps and Integrable Systems (Vieweg Advanced Studies in Computer Science)
  • Dirac Operators: Yesterday and Today
  • Complex Analysis and Special Topics in Harmonic Analysis
  • Differential Geometry and Topology: Three-Manifold Invariants Using Symplectic Geometry of Representation Varieties
  • Foliations on Riemannian Manifolds (Universitexts)
  • Mirror Symmetry 1 (Ams/Ip Studies in Advanced Mathematics, V. 9)
  • Lie-Cartan-Ehresmann Theory (Hermann, Robert//Interdisciplinary Mathematics)
  • Fifty Years of Polynomials (Lecture notes in mathematics)

  • Tight Polyhedral Submanifolds and Tight Triangulations (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Seminaire de Probabilites XXIX (Seminaire de Probabilites XXIX)
  • Geometry of Vector Sheaves - An Axiomatic Approach to
  • Differential geometry applied to curve and surface design
  • Attractors of Evolution Equations (Studies in Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Some Nonlinear Problems in Riemannian Geometry
  • Geometry and Topology of Submanifolds, IV: Leuven, Belgium 27-29 June, 1991 (Proceedings of the Conference on Differential Geometry and Vision)
  • Foliations on Riemannian Manifolds
  • Mirror Symmetry and Algebraic Geometry (Mathematical Surveys and Monographs)
  • Differential Geometry, Peniscola 1985: Proceedings of the 2nd International Symposium Held at Peniscola, Spain, June 2-9, 1985 (NATO Asi Series)

  • Submanifolds of Affine Spaces: An Introduction to Affine Differential Geometry
  • Differential geometry (Research notes in mathematics)
  • Seibert Witten and Gromov Invariants for Symplectic 4-manifolds
  • Global Differential Geometry and Global Analysis: Proceedings of a Conference Held in Berlin, 15-20, 1990 (Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol.1481)
  • Differential geometry, group representations, and quantization (Lecture notes in physics)
  • Topics in Differential Geometry
  • Geometry of Geodesics and Related Topics (Advanced Studies in Pure Mathematics, Vol 3)
  • Differential Geometry: A Symposium in Honour of Manfredo Do Carmo (Pitman Monographs & Surveys in Pure & Applied Mathematics)
  • Analysis and Geometry on Complex Homogeneous Domains (Progress in Mathematics S.)
  • Twister Theory for Riemannian Symmetric Spaces (Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol 1424)

  • Symplectic geometry (Research notes in mathematics)
  • Stochastic Calculus in Manifolds
  • Differential Geometry: Proceedings of the Symposium in Honor of Professor Su Buchin on His 90th Birthday : Shanghai China September 17-23 1991
  • Symplectic Geometry: An Introduction Based on the Seminar in Bern, 1992 (Progress in Mathematics (Birkhauser Boston))
  • Complex Differential Geometry (Ams/Ip Studies in Advanced Mathematics)
  • Riemann Solvers and Numerical Methods for Fluid Dynamics: A Practical Introduction
  • Generalized Classical Mechanics and Field Theory (Mathematics Studies)
  • Exponential Sums and Differential Equations (Annals of Mathematics Studies, No 124)
  • Curvature and Topology of Riemannian Manifolds (Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol 1201)
  • Topics in Nevanlinna Theory (Springer Proceedings in Physics)

  • Locally Convex Spaces
  • Differential Geometric Methods in Theoretical Physics (Proceedings supplements, International journal of modern physics A)
  • Complex geometry and analysis: Proceedings of the international symposium in honour of Edoardo Vesentini, held in Pisa (Italy), May 23-27, 1988 (Lecture notes in mathematics)
  • Geometry and Topology of Submanifolds, VI: Belgium 10-13 July 1993
  • Kahler-Einstein Metrics and Integral Invariants (Lecture Notes in Math, Vol 1314)
  • Differential Geometry on Complex Manifolds
  • Algebro-Geometrical Approach to Nonlinear Evolution Equations (Springer Series in Nonlinear Dynamics)
  • Recent Topics in Differential and Analytic Geometry (Advanced Studies in Pure Mathematics, Vol 18 : Part 1)
  • Ads/Cft Correspondence: Einstein Metrics and Their Conformal Boundaries: 73rd Meeting of Theoretical Physicists and Mathematicians .. (IRMA Lectures in Mathematics & Theoretical Physics)
  • Computational Conformal Mapping

  • Minimal Surfaces in R 3
  • Topics in the Theory of Riemann Surfaces (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Geometrie Der Beruhrungstransformationen
  • Classical Analysis: Proceedings of the 6th Symposium 23-29 September 1991, Poland
  • Invariant Manifold Theory for Hydrodynamic Transition (Pitman Research Notes in Mathematics, No 241)
  • Manifolds of Nonpositive Curvature (Progress in Mathematics (Birkhauser Boston))
  • Curve e superfici
  • Seventeen Papers on Topology & Differential Geometry (American Mathematical Society Translations)
  • Generalized Heisenberg Groups and Damek-Ricci Harmonic Spaces (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Differential Geometry & Gauge Fields

  • Cusps of Gauss mappings (Research notes in mathematics)
  • Convexity and Related Combinatorial Geometry (Lecture Notes in Pure and Applied Mathematics)
  • Global Differential Geometry and Global Analysis 1984 (Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol 1156)
  • Minimal Surfaces (Courant Lecture Notes in Mathematics 4)
  • Lectures on Hermitian-Einstein Metrics for Stable Bundles and Kahler-Einstein Metrics: Delivered at the German Mathematical Society Seminar in Dusseldorf in June, 1986 (D M V Seminar)
  • Differential Geometry Applied to Curve and Surface Design: Foundations
  • Lectures on Minimal Surfaces
  • Algebraic Varieties & Analytic Varieties: Proceedings of a Symposium Held in Tokyo, 13-24 July, 1981
  • The Moduli Space of Curves (Progress in Mathematics S.)
  • Dynamical Systems (Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems)

  • Théorie élémentaire et pratique de la commande par les régimes glissants (Mathématiques et Applications)
  • Lectures on the Mean-Value and Omega Theorems for the Riemann Zeta-Function (Lectures on Mathematics and Physics)
  • Symbolic Dynamics and Hyperbolic Groups (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • When does bootstrap work?: Asymptotic results and simulations (Lecture notes in statistics)
  • Holomorphic Vector Bundles over Compact Complex Surfaces (Lecture Notes in Mathematics (Springer-Verlag), 1624.)
  • Differential Geometry and Differential Equations: Proceedings of a Symposium Held Shanghai, 1985 (Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol 1255)
  • Proceedings of the Xxth International Conference on Differential Geometric Methods in Theoretical Physics, June 3-7, 1991, New York City, USA (International ... Methods in Theoretical Physics//Proceedings)
  • Submanifolds and Isometric Immersions (Mathematics Lecture Series)
  • Geometry and Topology of Submanifolds VIII
  • Quasiregular Mappings (Series of Modern Surveys in Mathematics)

  • Kahler Metric and Moduli Spaces (Advanced Studies in Pure Mathematics, Vol 18-II)
  • Dynamical Systems on Surfaces (Topics in Current Chemistry)
  • Geometry and Topology of Submanifolds, VII: Differential Geometry in Honour of Prof. Katsumi Nomizu Belgium 9-14 July 1994
  • Constrained Mechanics and Lie Theory (Hermann, Robert//Interdisciplinary Mathematics)
  • An Introduction to Teichmuller Spaces (Modern Texts in Mathematics S.)
  • Differential Geometry and Complex Analysis: A Volume Dedicated to the Memory of Harry Ernest Rauch
  • Nonlinear evolution equations and dynamical systems (Research reports in physics)
  • Differential Geometry (Colloquia mathematica Societatis János Bolyai)
  • Cubic Forms
  • An Introduction to Isoparametric Submanifolds and Other Topics

  • Twistors and Killinf Spinors on Riemannian Manifolds (Teubner-Texte zur Mathematik)
  • Selected Papers of Kentaro Yano (North-Holland Mathematics Studies)
  • Minimal Surfaces I: Boundary Value Problems (Grundlehren Der Mathematischen Wissenschaften, No. 295)
  • Finsler Geometry and Applications (Ellis Horwood Series in Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Differential Geometry Books III

  • Harmonic Maps between Riemannian Polyhedra (Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics)
  • Noncommutative Structures in Mathematics and Physics (NATO Science Series II: Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry)
  • Surveys in Differential Geometry: Papers dedicated to Atiyah, Bott, Hirzebruch, and Singer (The founders of the Index Theory) (International Press)
  • The First 60 Years Of Nonlinear Analysis Of Jean Mawhin: Sevilla, Spain 4 - 5 April 2003
  • Causal Symmetric Spaces: Geometry and Harmonic Analysis (Perspectives in Mathematics)
  • Differential Geometry and Topology, Discrete and Computational Geometry: Volume 197 NATO Science Series: Computer & Systems Sciences (Nato Science)
  • Differential Geometry: The Interface Between Pure and Applied Mathematics : Proceedings (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Progress in Inverse Spectral Theory (Trends in Mathematics)
  • Harmonic Maps and Minimal Immersions With Symmetries: Methods of Ordinary Differential Equations Applied to Elliptic Variational Problems (Annals of Mathematics Studies)
  • Backlund and Darboux Transformations: The Geometry of Solitons (Crm Proceedings & Lecture Notes, V. 29)

  • Geometric Mechanics
  • Tubes
  • Geometry Seminar "Luigi Bianchi" Ii, 1984: Lectures Given at the Scuola Normale Superiore (Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol 1164)
  • Differential Geometry and Its Applications (Mathematics and its Applications)
  • Geometry and Topology of Submanifolds IX
  • Symplectic Geometry & Mirror Symmetry
  • Symplectic Geometry and Mathematical Physics (Progress in Mathematics)
  • Differential Geometry and Integrable Systems: Proceedings of a Conference on Integrable Systems in Differential Geometry, July 2000, Tokyo University (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Differential Manifolds and Theoretical Physics (Pure and Applied Mathematics, Vol 36)
  • Multi-Interval Linear Ordinary Boundary Value Problems and Complex Symplectic Algebra (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)

  • Nash Manifolds (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Geometry of Manifolds (Perspectives in Mathematics)
  • Further Advances in Twistor Theory, Volume III: Curved Twistor Spaces
  • Homotopy Formulas in the Tangential Cauchy Riemann Complex (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • Algebraic Foundations of Non-Commutative Differential Geometry and Quantum Groups (Lecture Notes in Physics , No 39)
  • Geometries in Interaction: GAFA Special Issue in Honor of Mikhail Gromov
  • Loop Spaces, Characteristic Classes and Geometric Quantization (Progress in Mathematics)
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  • Symmetries (Springer Undergraduate Mathematics Series)

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  • A First Course in Differential Geometry (Pure and Applied Mathematics (Marcel Dekker))
  • Some Questions of Geometry in the Large (American Mathematical Society Translations Series 2)
  • General Theory of Irregular Curves (Mathematics and its Applications)
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  • Plane Networks and their Applications
  • Dynamical Systems IX: Dynamical Systems with Hyperbolic Behaviour (Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences)
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  • Geometry of the Spectrum: 1993 Joint Summer Research Conference on Spectral Geometry July 17-23, 1993 University of Washington, Seattle (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Michael Atiyah: Collected Works: Volume 4: Index Theory: 2
  • Mirror Symmetry III: Proceedings of the Conference on Complex Geometry and Mirror Symmetry, Montreal, 1995 (Ams/Ip Studies in Advanced Mathematics, V. 10)
  • Cycle Spaces of Flag Domains: A Complex Geometric Viewpoint (Progress in Mathematics)
  • Pairs of Compact Convex Sets - Fractional Arithmetic with Convex Sets (MATHEMATICS AND ITS APPLICATIONS Volume 548)
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  • New Developments in Singularity Theory (NATO Science Series II: Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry)
  • Noncompact Problems at the Intersection of Geometry, Analysis, and Topology: Proceedings of the Brezis-Browder Conference, Noncompact Variational Problems ... the State (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • The Kinematic Formula in Riemannian Homogeneous Spaces (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • The Radon Transform and Some of Its Applications
  • An Introduction to Cr Structures (Mathematical Surveys and Monographs)
  • Elliptic and Parabolic Methods in Geometry
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  • Recent Advances in Riemannian and Lorentzian Geometries (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • From Geometry to Quantum Mechanics: In Honor of H. Omori (Progress in Mathematics)
  • Tools for Pde: Pseudodifferential Operators, Paradifferential Operators, and Layer Potentials (Mathematical Surveys and Monographs)

  • Tensoren und Felder
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  • Supermanifolds and Supergroups: Basic Theory (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Non-Semisimple Topological Quantum Field Theories for 3-Manifolds with Corners (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
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  • Compactification of Symmetric Spaces (Progress in Mathematics)
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  • The Interface of Knots and Physics: American Mathematical Society Short Course January 2-3, 1995 San Francisco, California (Proceedings of Symposia in Applied Mathematics)
  • Differential Geometry in the Large: Seminar Lectures New York University 1946 and Stanford University 1956 (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Differentialgeometrie (Die Werke Von Jakob Bernoulli)
  • Aspects of Complex Analysis, Differential Geometry, Mathematical Physics and Applications: Fourth International Workshop on Complex Structures and Vector ... Konstantin, Bulgaria, September 3-11, 1998
  • Global Differential Geometry of Surfaces

  • Noncommutative Differential Geometry and Its Applications to Physics (Mathematical Physics Studies)
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  • Partial Differential Equations With Complex Analysis (Research Notes in Mathematics Series)
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  • L2-Invariants: Theory and Applications to Geometry and K-Theory (Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete. 3. Folge / A Series of Modern Surveys in Mathematics)
  • Discontinuous Groups and Riemann Surfaces: Proceedings of the 1973 Conference at the University of Maryland (Annals of Mathematics Studies)
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  • Analysis and Geometry in Foliated Manifolds: Proceedings of the VII International Colloquium on Differential Geometry, Santiago De Compostela, Spain, 26-30 July, 1994
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  • The Geometry of Higher-Order Hamilton Spaces: Applications to Hamiltonian Mechanics (Fundamental Theories of Physics)
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  • Geometric Mechanics on Riemannian Manifolds: Applications to Partial Differential Equations (Applied and Numerical Harmonic Analysis)
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  • Geometry of CR-Submanifolds (Mathematics and its Applications)
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  • Flow Lines and Algebraic Invariants in Contact Form Geometry
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  • Quantum Gravity: From Theory to Experimental Search (Lecture Notes in Physics)
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  • Geometry of Harmonic Maps (Progress in Nonlinear Differential Equations and Their Applications)
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  • Introduction to Asymptotics: A Treatment Using Nonstandard Analysis
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  • Differential Invariants of Generalized Spaces (CHEL/336)
  • D-Modules and Spherical Representations. (MN-39) (Mathematical Notes, 39)
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  • Transient Tunnel Effect and Sommerfield Problem: Waves in Semi-Infinite Structures (Mathematical Research)
  • Handbook of Normal Frames and Coordinates (Progress in Mathematical Physics)
  • New Developments in Differential Geometry, Budapest 1996
  • Selected Papers of Wilhelm P.A. Klingenberg (Series in Pure Mathematics, Vol 14)
  • High-Dimensional Manifold Topology: Proceedings of the School Ictp, Trieste, Italy 21 May - 8 June 2001
  • Surface Evolution Equations: A Level Set Approach (Monographs in Mathematics)
  • Topics in Analysis and its Applications (NATO Science Series II: Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry)
  • Interpolating Cubic Splines (Progress in Computer Science and Applied Logic (PCS))
  • Finsler Metrics - A Global Approach: With Applications to Geometric Function Theory (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Morse Theoretic Methods in Nonlinear Analysis and in Symplectic Topology (NATO Science Series II: Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry) (NATO Science Series II: Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry)

  • The Geometry of Hamilton and Lagrange Spaces (Fundamental Theories of Physics, Volume 118) (Fundamental Theories of Physics)
  • Differential Geometry: Proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium, Held at Peniscola, Spain, June 5-12, 1988 (Lecture Notes in Mathematics Vol 1)
  • Differential Manifolds (Addison-Wesley Series in Mathematics, 4166)
  • Dynamics on Lorentz Manifolds
  • Kirillov's Seminar on Representation Theory (American Mathematical Society Translations Series 2)
  • Coarse Cohomology and Index Theory on Complete Riemannian Manifolds (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • Algebra VI: Combinatorial and Asymptotic Methods of Algebra. Nonassociative Structures (Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences)
  • Lectures on Hyperbolic Geometry (Universitext)
  • The Penrose Transform and Analytic Cohomology in Representation Theory: Ams-Ims-Siam Summer Research Conference June 27 to July 3, 1992 Mount Holyok (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Dynamical, Spectral, and Arithmetic Zeta Functions

  • Differential Geometric Methods in Mathematical Physics (Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol 1251)
  • The Algebraic Theory of Spinors and Clifford Algebras: Collected Works (Collected Works of Claude Chevalley)
  • The Plateau Problem: The Historical Survey and The Present State of the Theory
  • Advances In Differential Geometry And General Relativity: The Beemfest, Advances In Differential Geometry And General Relativity On The Occasion Of Professor ... May 10-11, 2003 (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Microlocal Analysis and Complex Fourier Analysis
  • Geometry and Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations: Dedicated to Professor Buqing Su in Honor of His 100th Birthday : Proceedings of the Conference ... (Ams/Ip Studies in Advanced Mathematics)
  • Foliations on Surfaces (Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete. 3. Folge / A Series of Modern Surveys in Mathematics)
  • Exotic Structures and Physics: Differential Topology and Spacetime Models
  • Analysis on Real and Complex Manifolds (North-Holland Mathematical Library)
  • Lectures on Discrete Geometry

  • Reconstructive Integral Geometry (Monographs in Mathematics)
  • Surgical Methods in Rigidity (Tata Institute Lectures on Mathematics and Physics)
  • Topics in Almost Hermitian Geometry And Related Fields: Proceedings in Honor of Professor K Sekigawa's 60th Birthday
  • Twenty Years Of Bialowieza A Mathematical Anthology: Aspects Of Differential Geometry Methods In Physics (World Scientific Monograph Series in Mathematics)
  • Nonlinear Semigroups, Fixed Points, And Geometry of Domains in Banach Spaces
  • The Mathematics of Surfaces VI (Institute of Mathematics and Its Applications Conference Series New Series)
  • Asymptotic Theory of Elliptic Boundary Value Problems in Singularly Perturbed Domains: Volume I (Operator Theory: Advances and Applications)
  • Projective Differential Geometry of Submanifolds (North-Holland Mathematical Library)
  • Le probleme mathematique de l'espace
  • Singularities: The Brieskorn Anniversary Volume (Progress in Mathematics)

  • Harmonic Morphisms, Harmonic Maps and Related Topics
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  • Global Theory Of Minimal Surfaces: Proceedings Of The Clay Mathematics Institute 2001 Summer School, Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, Berkeley, ... 25-july 27 (Clay Mathematics Proceedings)
  • The Geometry of Supermanifolds (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Differential Geometry of Submanifolds: Proceedings of the Conference Held a Kyoto, January 23-25, 1984 (Lecture Notes in Mathemaics, Vol. 1090)
  • New Problems of Differential Geometry (Series on Soviet and East European Mathematics, Vol 8)
  • Strange Phenomena in Convex and Discrete Geometry (Universitext)
  • Theories Of Integration: The Integrals Of Riemann, Lebesgue, Henstock-Kurzweil, and Mcshane (Series in Real Analysis)
  • The Two-Dimensional Riemann Problem in Gas Dynamics
  • Facing America's Trash: What Next for Municipal Solid Waste? (Industrial Health & Safety)

  • Elements of the Geometry and Topology of Minimal Surfaces in Three-Dimensional Space (Translations of Mathematical Monographs)
  • Global Properties of Linear Ordinary Differential Equations (Mathematics and its Applications)
  • Differential Geometry in Array Processing
  • Lie Algebras, Geometry, and Toda-Type Systems (Cambridge Lecture Notes in Physics)
  • Conformal Mapping
  • Supersymmetry and Equivariant de Rham Theory
  • Essays in the History of Lie Groups and Algebraic Groups (History of Mathematics, V. 21)
  • Geometric Approaches to Differential Equations (Australian Mathematical Society Lecture Series)
  • Submanifolds and Holonomy (Research Notes in Mathematics Series)
  • Selected Papers on Number Theory, Algebraic Geometry, and Differential Geometry (American Mathematical Society Translations Series 2)

  • Algebraic and Analytic Methods in Representation Theory (Perspectives in Mathematics)
  • Actions of finite abelian groups (Research notes in mathematics)
  • Riemann surfaces (Graduate texts in mathematics)
  • Natural Operations in Differential Geometry
  • The L Squared Moduli Spaces on Four Manifold With Cylindrical Ends (Monographs in Geometry and Topology)
  • Riemann Surfaces: A Primer (London Mathematical Society Students Texts)
  • Strong Rigidity of Locally Symmetric Spaces (Annals of Mathematics Studies)
  • Hyperkahler manifolds
  • Differential and Symplectic Topology of Knots and Curves (American Mathematical Society Translations Series 2)
  • Introduction to Differentiable Manifold

  • Proceedings of the Workshop on Differential Geometry and Topology: Alghero, Italy 20-26 June 1992
  • The Index Theorem for Minimal Surfaces of Higher Genus (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • Numerical Solution of Ordinary Differential Equations for Scientists and Engineers
  • Nonlinear Differential Equation Models
  • Introduction to Linear Shell Theory
  • Hyperbolic Complex Space (Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften)
  • Symplectic Invariants and Hamiltonian Dynamics (Birkhäuser Advanced Texts / Basler Lehrbücher)
  • Affine Differential Geometry: Geometry of Affine Immersions (Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics)
  • Symplectic Geometry (London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series)
  • Geometry of Principal Sheaves (Mathematics and Its Applications)

  • Progress in Differential Geometry/Advanced Studies in Pure and Applied Mathematics Tokyo Japan 22
  • Symmetries of Spacetimes and Riemannian Manifolds (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Bochner Technique in Differential Geometry (Mathematical Reports, Vol 3, Pt 2)
  • Loop Spaces, Characteristic Classes and Geometric Quantization
  • Introduction to Riemann Surfaces (CHEL/313)
  • Mechanics in Differential Geometry
  • Riemannian Foliations (Progress in Mathematics (Birkhauser Boston))
  • Selected Papers of Chuan-Chih Hsiung
  • Ordinary and Stochastic Differential Geometry as a Tool for Mathematical Physics (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Graph Theory Applications

  • Gromov's Compactness Theorem for Pseude-holomorphic Curves (Progress in Mathematics)
  • Symplectic Geometry and Analytical Mechanics (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Topological Theory of Dynamical Systems (North-Holland Mathematical Library)
  • Differential Geometry of Complex Vector Bundles (Mathematical Society of Japan, No 15)
  • Cosmology in (Annals of Mathematics Studies)
  • A.D. Alexandrov: Selected Works Part II: Intrinsic Geometry of Convex Surfaces
  • Seminar on Minimal Submanifolds (Annals of Mathematics Studies)
  • Selberg Trace Formulae and Equidistribution Theorems for Closed Geodesics and Laplace Eigenfunctions: Finite Area Surfaces (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • Pfaffian Systems, k-Symplectic Systems
  • The Global Theory of Minimal Surfaces in Flat Spaces: Lectures given at the 2nd Session of the Centro Internazionale Matematico Estivo (C.I.M.E.) held ... Mathematics / Fondazione C.I.M.E., Firenze)

  • Orthogonal and Symplectic Clifford Algebras, Spinor Structures (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • The Monge-Ampere Equation (Progress in Nonlinear Differential Equations and Their Applications)
  • Canonical Metrics in Kaehler Geometry
  • Geometric Analysis and Lie Theory in Mathematics and Physics (Australian Mathematical Society Lecture Series)
  • Elliptic Genera and Vertex Operator Super-Algebras (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Behavior of Distant Maximal Geodesics in Finitely Connected Complete 2 Dimensional Riemannian Manifolds (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society) MEMO/108/517
  • Perspectives of Complex Analysis, Differential Geometry and Mathematical Physics: Proceedings of the 5th International Workshop on Complex Structures and ... St. Konstantin, Bulgaria, 3-9 September 2000
  • Complex Geometry and Analysis: Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol 1422)
  • The Heat Kernel Lefschetz Fixed Point Formula for the Spin-c Dirac Operator (Progress in Nonlinear Differential Equations and Their Applications)
  • Geometric Control and Non-Holomorphic Mechanics: Conference on Geometric Control and Non-Holomorphic Mechanics, June 19-21, 1996, Mexico City (Conference Proceedings (Canadian Mathematical Society))
  • Differential Geometry Books I

  • Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces
  • Differential Geometry and Its Applications (2nd Edition)
  • Quantitative Models for Performance Evaluation and Benchmarking: Data Envelopment Analysis with Spreadsheets and DEA Excel Solver (International Series ... in Operations Research & Management Science)
  • Introduction to Smooth Manifolds
  • Elements of Differential Geometry
  • Eigenvalues in Riemannian Geometry, Volume 115, Second Edition (Pure and Applied Mathematics)
  • Geometry of Differential Forms (Translations of Mathematical Monographs, Vol. 201) (Translations of Mathematical Monographs)
  • Elementary Differential Geometry, Second Edition
  • Geometry, Topology and Physics, Second Edition (Graduate Student Series in Physics)
  • Schaum's Outline of Differential Geometry (Schaum's)

  • Riemannian Manifolds: An Introduction to Curvature (Graduate Texts in Mathematics)
  • Differential Geometry, Lie Groups, and Symmetric Spaces (Graduate Studies in Mathematics)
  • Singularities of Differentiable Maps: Vol. 2: Monodromy and asymptotic integrals (Monographs in Mathematics)
  • Differential Geometry and Topology (Studies in Advanced Mathematics)
  • Tensor Geometry: The Geometric Viewpoint and its Uses (Graduate Texts in Mathematics)
  • An Introduction to Differentiable Manifolds and Riemannian Geometry, Revised (Pure and Applied Mathematics)
  • Geometrical Methods of Mathematical Physics
  • America in Vietnam
  • Riemannian Geometry
  • Moment Maps and Combinatorial Invariants of Hamiltonian Tn-Spaces (Progress in Mathematics)

  • Introduction to Symplectic Topology (Oxford Mathematical Monographs)
  • Semi-Riemannian Geometry With Applications to Relativity, 103 (Pure and Applied Mathematics)
  • Elementary Differential Geometry
  • Riemannian Geometry (Universitext)
  • Introduction to Topological Manifolds (Graduate Texts in Mathematics)
  • Compact Manifolds with Special Holonomy (Oxford Mathematical Monographs)
  • The Ricci Flow: An Introduction (Mathematical Surveys and Monographs)
  • An Introduction to Frames and Riesz Bases
  • Beyond the Third Dimension: Geometry, Computer Graphics, and Higher Dimensions (Scientific American Library Series)
  • Differential Forms: A Complement to Vector Calculus

  • Geodesic Math and How to Use It
  • Differential Geometry: Curves - Surfaces - Manifolds, Second Edition
  • Lectures on Riemann surfaces, Jacobi varieties, (Mathematical notes)
  • Differential Geometry (Wiley Classics Library)
  • Partial Differential Equations III, Nonlinear Equations (Applied Mathematical Sciences)
  • Differential Geometry
  • Calabi-Yau Manifolds and Related Geometries
  • The Evolution Problem in General Relativity
  • Lectures on Differential Geometry (Conference Proceedings and Lecture Notes in Geometry and Topology)
  • Calculus of Variations I: The Lagrangian Formalism (Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften)

  • Approaches to Singular Analysis: A Volume of Advances in Partial Differential Equations (Operator Theory: Advances and Applications / Advances in Partial Differential Equations)
  • Clifford (Geometric) Algebras With Applications in Physics, Mathematics, and Engineering
  • Singularities of Differntiable Maps Volume 1: The Classification of Critical Points Caustics, Wave Fronts (Monographs in Mathematics)
  • Lectures on Symplectic Geometry (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Topology of Surfaces, Knots, and Manifolds
  • Metric Structures for Riemannian and Non-Riemannian Spaces: Based on Structures Metriques des Varietes Riemanniennes (Progress in Mathematics)
  • Differential Forms and Applications (Universitext)
  • Geometry of Surfaces
  • Relativity: Special, General, and Cosmological
  • The Wild World of 4-Manifolds

  • Foundations of Differential Geometry, Vol. 1 (Wiley Classics Library)
  • Synthetic Differential Geometry (London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series)
  • Gauge Theory and Variational Principles
  • Projective Geometry
  • Elementary Topics in Differential Geometry (Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics)
  • Cartan for Beginners: Differential Geometry Via Moving Frames and Exterior Differential Systems (Graduate Studies in Mathematics)
  • Frobenius Manifolds and Moduli Spaces for Singularities
  • Geometry from a Differentiable Viewpoint
  • Discrete Tomography: Foundations, Algorithms, and Applications (Applied and Numerical Harmonic Analysis)
  • Surveys in Differential Geometry: Proceedings of the Conference on Geometry and Topology Held at Harvard University, April 27-29, 1990 (Supplement to the Journal of Differential Geometry, No. 1)

  • Introduction to Differentiable Manifolds
  • Analysis on Manifolds
  • An Introduction to the Analysis of Paths on a Riemannian Manifold (Mathematical Surveys and Monographs)
  • Collected Papers on Ricci Flow
  • Modern Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces with Mathematica, Third Edition (Studies in Advanced Mathematics)
  • Geometric Control Theory (Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics)
  • Finite Moebius Groups, Minimal Immersions of Spheres, and Moduli
  • Applied Differential Geometry
  • Fundamentals of Differential Geometry (Graduate Texts in Mathematics)
  • Topology and Geometry in Physics (Lecture Notes in Physics)

  • The Geometry of Physics: An Introduction, Second Edition
  • Quantum Field Theory and Noncommutative Geometry (Lecture Notes in Physics)
  • Analysis and Geometry on Complex Homogeneous Domains (Progress in Mathematics)
  • Comprehensive Introduction to Differential Geometry (Comprehensive Introduction to Differential Geometry)
  • Frobenius Manifolds, Quantum Cohomology, and Moduli Spaces (Colloquium Publications (Amer Mathematical Soc))
  • Compact Riemann Surfaces (Lectures in Mathematics. ETH Zürich)
  • Elements of Noncommutative Geometry (Birkhäuser Advanced Texts / Basler Lehrbücher)
  • From Holomorphic Functions to Complex Manifolds
  • Floer Homology Groups in Yang-Mills Theory (Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics)
  • Differential Geometry and Statistics

  • Spacetime: Foundations of General Relativity and Differential Geometry (Lecture Notes in Physics)
  • Differential Geometry: Cartan's Generalization of Klein's Erlangen Program (Graduate Texts in Mathematics)
  • The Geometry of Geodesics
  • Fibrewise Homotopy Theory (Springer Monographs in Mathematics)
  • Riemannian Geometry During the Second Half of the Twentieth Century (University Lecture Series)
  • Integrable Systems: Twistors, Loop Groups, and Riemann Surfaces (Oxford Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 4)
  • Singularity Theory and Gravitational Lensing
  • Basic Structured Grid Generation: With an introduction to unstructured grid generation
  • Algorithmic Topology and Classification of 3-Manifolds (Algorithms and Computation in Mathematics)
  • Topology, Geometry and Gauge fields: Foundations (Texts in Applied Mathematics)

  • Stochastic Geometry: Lectures given at the C.I.M.E. Summer School held in Martina Franca, Italy, September 13-18, 2004 (Lecture Notes in Mathematics / Fondazione C.I.M.E., Firenze)
  • Geometric Analysis on Symmetric Spaces (Mathematical Surveys and Monographs)
  • Gradient Flows: In Metric Spaces and in the Space of Probability Measures (Lectures in Mathematics. ETH Zürich)
  • Dirac Operators in Riemannian Geometry (Graduate Studies in Mathematics)
  • Quantum Field Theory for Mathematicians (Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications)
  • A Geometric Approach to Differential Forms
  • An Introduction to Differential Geometry with Applications to Elasticity
  • Global Analysis: Differential Forms in Analysis, Geometry, and Physics (Graduate Studies in Mathematics, V. 52)
  • Riemannian Geometry: A Beginner's Guide
  • Integral Geometry and Geometric Probability

  • Lectures on Differential Geometry (Series on University Mathematics, Volume 1)
  • Symmetry in Mechanics
  • Modern Differential Geometry for Physicists (World Scientific Lecture Notes in Physics)
  • Lectures on Classical Differential Geometry: Second Edition
  • $J$-holomorphic Curves and Symplectic Topology (Colloquium Publications (Amer Mathematical Soc))
  • Theta Constants, Riemann Surfaces and the Modular Group
  • Relativistic Electrodynamics and Differential Geometry
  • An Introduction to Riemann-Finsler Geometry (Graduate Texts in Mathematics)
  • An Introduction to Noncommutative Differential Geometry and its Physical Applications
  • Foundations of Lie Theory and Lie Transformation Groups

  • Algebraic Topology in a Differential Geometry (London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series)
  • Geometric Partial Differential Equations and Image Analysis
  • Foliations (Graduate Studies in Mathematics)
  • Symmetrization And Applications (Analysis)
  • General Investigations of Curved Surfaces: Edited with an Introduction and Notes by Peter Pesic
  • The Implicit Function Theorem: History, Theory, and Applications
  • Matrix Groups
  • Differential Geometry and Symmetric Spaces
  • Riemannian Geometry
  • Differential Geometry: A Geometric Introduction

  • Comparison Geometry (Mathematical Sciences Research Institute Publications)
  • Lie Theory: Harmonic Analysis on Symmetric Spaces General Plancherel Theorems (Progress in Mathematics)
  • Differentiable Manifolds
  • Lie Sphere Geometry: With Applications to Submanifolds (Universitext)
  • Geometry III: Theory of Surfaces (Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences)
  • Lectures on the Ricci Flow (London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series)
  • Differential Geometry
  • Geometry of Manifolds (AMS Chelsea Publishing S.)
  • Some Nonlinear Problems in Riemannian Geometry (Springer Monographs in Mathematics)
  • Compact Riemann Surfaces: An Introduction to Contemporary Mathematics (Universitext)

  • A Course in Differential Geometry (Graduate Studies in Mathematics)
  • Curves and Singularities: A Geometrical Introduction to Singularity Theory
  • Riemannian Geometry: A Modern Introduction (Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics)
  • Introduction to Foliations and Lie Groupoids (Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics)
  • The Riemann Legacy: Riemannian Ideas in Mathematics and Physics (Mathematics and Its Applications)
  • Geometry of Random Motion: Proceedings (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Differential Geometry and Lie Groups for Physicists
  • Foundations of Classical Electrodynamics (Progress in Mathematical Physics)
  • Differential Forms and Connections
  • An Introduction to Dirac Operators on Manifolds

  • Topics in Symlectic 4-Manifolds
  • Geometry of Foliations (Monographs in Mathematics)
  • Clifford Algebras and their Applications in Mathematical Physics, Vol.1: Algebra and Physics
  • Differential Geometry and Topology of Curves
  • An Introduction to Differential Manifolds
  • Differential Geometry
  • Real Methods in Complex and CR Geometry: Lectures given at the C.I.M.E. Summer School held in Martina Franca, Italy, June 30 - July 6, 2002 (Lecture Notes ... Mathematics / Fondazione C.I.M.E., Firenze)
  • Spectral Theory and Geometry (London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series)
  • Dirichlet's Principle, Conformal Mapping, and Minimal Surfaces
  • Stochastic Calculus in Manifolds (Universitext)

  • Differential Equations on Fractals: A Tutorial
  • The Topology of Fibre Bundles. (PMS-14)
  • Geometry V: Minimal Surfaces (Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences)
  • Lectures on the Topology of 3-Manifolds: An Introduction to the Casson Invariant (De Gruyter Textbook) (De Gruyter Textbook)
  • Conformal Mapping on Riemann Surfaces
  • Extension of Holomorphic Functions (De Gruyter Expositions in Mathematics, 34)
  • A Panoramic View of Riemannian Geometry
  • Riemannian Geometry and Geometric Analysis (Universitext)
  • Handbook of Organizational Design: Volume 2: Remodeling Organizations and their Environments (Handbook of Organizational Design)
  • An Introduction To The Geometry Of Stochastic Flows

  • Symplectic Geometry and Topology (Ias/Park City Mathematics Series, V. 7)
  • Differential Models of Hysteresis (Applied Mathematical Sciences)
  • Gauge Theory of Elementary Particle Physics: Problems and Solutions
  • The Laplacian on a Riemannian Manifold: An Introduction to Analysis on Manifolds (London Mathematical Society Student Texts)
  • Operators, Functions, and Systems: An Easy Reading (Mathematical Surveys and Monographs)
  • Concise Complex Analysis
  • Lie Theory: Unitary Representations and Compactifications of Symmetric Spaces (Progress in Mathematics)
  • A First Course in Geometric Topology and Differential Geometry
  • Pseudodifferential Operators and Spectral Theory (Springer Series in Soviet Mathematics)
  • Modern Geometry - Methods and Applications: Part I: The Geometry of Surfaces, Transformation Groups, and Fields (Graduate Texts in Mathematics)

  • Geodesic Domes
  • Einstein Manifolds (Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete. 3. Folge / A Series of Modern Surveys in Mathematics)
  • Deformations of Singularities (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
  • Surveys in Differential Geometry: Essays on Einstein Manifolds (Surveys in Differential Geometry)
  • From Calculus to Cohomology: De Rham Cohomology and Characteristic Classes
  • Modern Geometry. Methods and Applications: Part 2: The Geometry and Topology of Manifolds (Graduate Texts in Mathematics)
  • Riemannian Geometry in an Orthogonal Frame: From Lectures Delivered by Elie Cartan at the Sorbonne in 1926-27
  • General Relativity (Springer Undergraduate Mathematics Series)
  • Hyperbolic Geometry (Springer Undergraduate Mathematics Series)
  • Schwarz-Christoffel Mapping

  • Lectures on the Geometry of Manifolds
  • A Hilbert Space Problem Book (Graduate Texts in Mathematics)
  • Projective Differential Geometry Old and New: From the Schwarzian Derivative to the Cohomology of Diffeomorphism Groups (Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics)
  • Methods of Information Geometry (Translations of Mathematical Monographs)
  • Integral Geometry And Tomography: Ams Special Session on Tomography And Integral Geometry, April 17-18, 2004, Rider University, Lawrenceville, New Jersey ... V. 405.) (Contemporary Mathematics)
  • Visual Motion of Curves and Surfaces
  • Geometric Differentiation for the Intelligence of Curves and Surfaces
  • Curves and Surfaces (Graduate Studies in Mathematics)
  • Riemannian Geometry: A Modern Introduction (Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics)
  • Geometric Curve Evolution and Image Processing (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)

  • Geometric Methods in Inverse Problems and PDE Control (The IMA Volumes in Mathematics and its Applications)
  • The Statistical Theory of Shape (Springer Series in Statistics)
  • Abelian Functions: Abel's Theorem and the Allied Theory of Theta Functions (Cambridge Mathematical Library)
  • Minimal Surfaces and Functions of Bounded V. (Monographs in Mathematics)
  • Differential Geometry and Analysis on CR Manifolds (Progress in Mathematics)
  • Inversion Theory and Conformal Mapping (Student Mathematical Library, V. 9)
  • Surveys in Differential Geometry (Surveys in Differential Geometry)
  • Real Submanifolds in Complex Space and Their Mappings
  • Geometry VI: Riemannian Geometry (Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences)
  • An Introduction to Integration and Measure Theory (Wiley-Interscience and Canadian Mathematics Series of Monographs and Texts)

  • Modern Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces with Mathematica, Second Edition
  • Global Differential Geometry (Studies in Mathematics, Vol 27)
  • Riemannian Geometry (Graduate Texts in Mathematics)
  • Visualization and Processing of Tensor Fields (Mathematics and Visualization)
  • A Primer of Algebraic D-Modules (London Mathematical Society Student Texts)
  • Cr-Geometry and Deformations of Isolated Singularities (Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society)
  • Dynamical Systems IV: Symplectic Geometry and Its Applications (Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences)
  • Conformal Representation
  • An Introduction to Differential Geometry and Topology in Mathematical Physics
  • Integral Geometry, Radon Transforms and Complex Analysis (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)

  • On the Topology of Isolated Singularities in Analytic Spaces (Progress in Mathematics)
  • An Introduction to Sympletic Geometry (Graduate Studies in Mathematics) (Graduate Studies in Mathematics)
  • Applications of Differential Geometry to Econometrics
  • Heat Kernels and Dirac Operators (Grundlehren Text Editions)
  • Introduction to Differential Geometry with applications to Navier-Stokes Dynamics
  • Smooth Nonlinear Optimization of RN (Nonconvex Optimization and Its Applications)
  • Sources of Hyperbolic Geometry (History of Mathematics, V. 10)
  • Introduction to Complex Hyperbolic Spaces
  • Noncommutative Geometry: Lectures Given at the C.I.M.E. Summer School Held in Martina Franca, Italy, September 3-9, 2000 (Lecture Notes in Mathematics / Fondazione C.I.M.E., Firenze)
  • Geometry I: Basic Ideas and Concepts of Differential Geometry (Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences)
  • August 30

    Differential Geometry

    (idea) by amsaarel (6.2 mon) (print)   ?   Sun Oct 29 2000 at 23:39:41

    A branch of mathematics that studies manifolds, especially their local properties. Useful in general relativity, quantum field theory, string theory, computer graphics and many, many other things.


    (idea) by Swap (6 hr) (print)   ?   8 C!s Mon Nov 21 2005 at 17:13:56

    Differential geometry is the study of smooth curvy things. Allow me to stimulate your imagination. Consider the following situations:

    • Consider a sheet of paper. Let us begin with a very simple idea. It is flat, but bendable, although it has a certain inflexibility. When it is flat on a desk, it has perfectly straight lines along every direction. Now pick it up, and roll up the sheet of paper, but without marking any folds. That is, you're allowed to bend the paper however you wish, but you're not allowed to fold it. Your operations have to be smooth, no edges. You should easily be able to roll into a cylinder or a cone. Observe that however you do this, at every point of your sheet of paper there will always be a direction along which perfectly straight lines exist. It seems as if you can't completely destroy the flatness of your sheet of paper if you aren't allowed to make sharp creases on it.

      There's a reason for this, and there are more general things known as ruled surfaces that share this peculiar property of your humble sheet of paper.

    • Consider your arm. Left or right, doesn't matter; just consider an arm, any arm. In another node, ariels has described a strange situation that occurs in a sphere, but not on the sheet of paper previously considered. The ball-and-socket bone structure in our shoulders gives us a certain rotational degree of freedom in our arms, and the pair of bones in our forearms, the radius and ulna, gives our wrists the necessary rotational freedom for turning doorknobs. Consider the former degrees of freedom, but not the latter. That is, you're allowed to move the joints at your shoulder, but not rotate your wrists.

      Now, try this. Hold out your arm perfectly straight, in front of you, with your hand opened, fingers together, palm down. Keeping everything rigid, rotate your arm until it is pointing straight up, as if you were asking a question in elementary school. Rotate rigidly again until your arm is again horizontal but at your side, as if you were half-crucified. Now bring your arm again in front of you again as in the beginning.

      Your palm should now be pointing sideways instead of down as it originally was. You have rotated your wrist by moving your arm along a spherical triangle, but at no point did you actually use the extra rotational freedom afforded by the pair of bones in your forearm. Use it now. Keeping your arm rigid, rotate your wrist until your palm faces down. Feel the motion of muscles that you didn't use before. Because you moved your hand along a triangle lying on the sphere described by the radius of your arm, the curvature of the sphere turned your hand when you brought it back to its original position, even though you didn't rotate your wrist during these motions and kept your wrist rigid relative to the path of motion. If you had tried the same trick but moving along a zero curvature plane, your hand would have been in the same orientation when you moved it back to its original position in the plane.

      This is an example of what it's like to parallel transport your hand along a spherical triangle.

    • Consider a shapely woman. Specifically, consider her curvatures. Part of the things that makes female curvature so stimulatingly interesting is that it is not all alike, geometrically speaking. To be sure, at breast, belly, and hip her curvatures are all quite similar, looking vaguely spherical and locally extending from her body. But consider her waist. Something interesting happens here. The curve following her waist in the vertical direction curves in a different direction than the perpendicular horizontal curve enclosing her midriff. This is different than a pair of perpendicular curves at a breast, which both curve inwards. This has the effect that at her waist, her curvature somehow bends inwards towards her body instead of away from it as it occurs further down at her hip.

      What happpens, you see, is that at her hip her Gaussian curvature is positive, but at her very interesting waist it is negative. Variety is the spice of life.

    • Consider a cinnamon bagel with raisins. Mm-mm! Cinnamon! Let's talk more about curvature. Your bagel should have a bit of a hole in the middle of it, probably not too big, but a hole at any rate. Maybe we should have considered doughnuts instead, but that's so cliché, and I like bagels better. So, before we munch on this delicious bagel, let us examine that hole more closely. It shares a property with our shapely woman's waist, that is, curvature is negative near the hole. In fact, although our bagel is rather irregular and perhaps lumpy in some portions, it is nevertheless smooth and curvy. It has areas of positive curvature near the edges we're about to bite and areas of negative curvature near the hole.

      The Gauss-Bonnet theorem tells us that the total curvature of our cinnamon bagel adds up to zero, and that this happens with any other sort of pastry (such as doughnuts) that has a hole through it. Most remarkably, a similar result holds for the total curvature of a Tim Hortons timbit (sphere), which is 4π, and the total curvature of any smooth curvy thing only depends on the number of holes the smooth curvy thing has, with each hole subtracting 4π from the total curvature.

    • Consider map-making. Imagine that you were a sixteenth-century cartographer entrusted with the task of giving an accurate depiction of all known Terra Firma on a flat piece of vellum. Given how your perspective of the world has recently become more broad, you are now faced with the challenge of reproducing a mostly spherical Earth on a mostly flat piece of calfskin.

      You will soon run into difficulties, because just as it is impossible to flatten orange peels without tearing them or to wrap a sheet of paper around a sphere without putting creases into it, it's impossible to draw the Earth on your vellum without distorting the picture somehow, changing the apparent size of the Old and New Worlds alike. What a conundrum.

      If you had been working three centuries later, you would have known that your map will be distorted because of Gauss's Theorema Egregium, that most excellent theorem, since your vellum has zero curvature but a sphere does not.

    • Consider the wacky ideas of a patent office clerk later in his life. Y'know, the guy with the wind-swept hair who dreamed of riding light rays. Consider what it would be like to travel across space and time to distant stars, and what it would be like to get close to a massive object such as those mysterious black holes could be.

      Our patent office clerk couldn't quite figure this one out by himself, and had to ask at least one mathematician for help, but it turns out that space itself, the very medium in which we live in, is no longer so well described by the straight lines of Euclidean geometry that have served us so well in the short distances of our humble green planet. No, black holes, bend spacetime itself and give it nonzero curvature. Light always travels along paths of shortest distance, but you'll find that paths of shortest distance in the geometry of massive objects aren't going to be as straight as you might think. There will be parallel lines meeting at a point and such weirdness foreseen by Bolyai and Lobatchevsky a century earlier in a different context. How strange!

      It turns out that the Riemann curvature tensor of the spacetime differential manifold describes much more of what this local black-hole geometry may look like.

    • Consider now the more down-to-earth experience of soap film bubbles. You might be most familiar with the situation of a free spherical bubble, but a little experimentation in a bubble bath in the spirit of childhood exploration when all the world was new is most educational, not to mention recreational and nurturing for your soul.

      What happens is that Mother Nature is a relaxed lady with no interest in exerting more effort than she needs to. In this situation, it means that she absolutely refuses to make soap films experience any more surface tension than what is strictly necessary, which in turn translates into soap films taking on shapes that, at least locally, because Mother Nature doesn't always feel compelled to find the best global solution when one that work locally is good enough, minimise their surface area. You can either minimise surface area when you try to enclose a volume of air, as the soap bubbles are valiantly endeavouring, or you can minimise the surface area of soap films stretched across your hands in your bubble bath, or perhaps more practically yet boringly, stretched across narrow wires defining the boundaries of your soap film bubbles.

      With a little calculus of variations, you can see that these minimal surfaces of soap films obey the remarkable requirement of zero mean curvature.

    • Consider, finally, the free path traced out by one of Mother Nature's creatures in three-dimensional space. Some may like to think of flying insects, avian creatures, or winged mammals, but I am a creature of water and will think of dolphins instead. This dolphin, or Darius as he prefers to be called, is equipped not only with a strong tail for propelling himself forward, but with a couple of lateral fins and one dorsal fin for controlling his direction. These give him a range of motion which he uses for exploring his native waters in the Atlantic Ocean.

      Darius is a playful fellow, and sometimes he likes to see just how much he can move relying entirely on the motions of his tail and without using his fins. He restricts his motion to the vertical strokes of his tail and the accompanying undulations this necessitates in the rest of his body. It turns out that this still gives him quite a broad range of motion, except that the paths he can trace out in this manner, winding as they may be, are restricted to lie within a vertical plane. When he has had enough of this sport, Darius tilts his body his body until his belly now faces sideways, and he swims in a different direction, outside of the plane in which he had originally confined himself for his amusement.

      What Darius has discovered in his sinuous exploration is that if he keeps his torsion zero by not tilting his body with his fins, then the curve traced out by his motion is confined to a plane, just as the three-dimensional Frenet-Serret formulae predicted that it would be.

    Needless to say, the above considerations are all situations proper to differential geometry.

    Affectionately Known as Diffgeo

    Differential geometry is the branch of geometry that concerns itself with smooth curvy objects and the constructions built on them. Differential geometry studies local properties such as measuring distance and curvature in smooth objects, or global properties such as orientability and topological properties.

    But there is so much more to say about it than that. The term "differential geometry" often designates a broad classification of diverse subjects that are difficult to categorise separately, because interaction between these subjects is often too strong to warrant a separate study. Other terms associated with differential geometry, some used as synonyms for "differential geometry", some considered to be subdivisions of the subject, and others simply closely related are surface theory, theory of curvature, differential manifolds, Riemannian manifolds, global geometry, non-Euclidean geometry, calculus of variations, tensor calculus, differential topology, symplectic geometry, Finsler geometry, de-Rham cohomology, and general theory of relativity, to mention a few.

    A first approximation to understanding what differential geometry is about is understanding what it is not about. Differential geometry contrasts with Euclid's geometry. The latter most often deals with objects that are straight and uncurved, such as lines, planes, and triangles, or at most curved in a very simple fashion, such as circles. Differential geometry prefers to consider Euclidean geometry as a very special kind of geometry of zero curvature. Nonzero curvature is where the interesting things happen.

    A historical perspective may clarify matters. Differential geometry has its roots in the invention of differential and integral calculus, and some may say that it started even before that. If you've done mathematics in a lycée, gymnasium, vocational school, or high school, you arguably have already seen some rudiments of differential geometry, but probably not enough to give you a flavour of the subject. The study of conic sections, parabolas, ellipses, and hyperbolas spurs the imagination to ask questions proper to differential geometry. The real fun begins when we introduce the derivative or differential and start wondering about what the various derivatives or differentials of certain objects tell us about these objects.

    Early Trailblazers

    Historically, it might be possible to divide differential geometry into classical and modern, with the line of demarcation drawn somewhere across Bernhard Riemann's inaugural lecture given in Göttingen. Classical differential geometry begins with the study of curved surfaces in space, such as spheres, cones, cylinders, hyperbolic paraboloids, or ellipsoids. A key notion always present in differential geometry is that of curvature. A desire to define a notion of curvature of surfaces leads us to a simpler problem: the curvature of curves. The real defining characteristic of classical differential geometry is that it deals with curves and surfaces as subsets contained in Euclidean space, and almost invariably only considers two and three-dimensional objects.

    Early classical differential geometry is characterised by a spirit of free exploration of the concepts that the invention of calculus now provided mathematicians of the day. The intuition of infinitesimals was used without any restraint for what its real meaning could be. Curves and surfaces were explored without ever giving a precise definition of what they really are (precise in the modern sense). For a modern reader, reading the classical texts therefore presents quite a challenge.

    There are lots of mathematicians whose names are associated with classical differential geometry. There is Olinde Rodrigues (1794 - 1851?), a figure that history has clad in mystery but whose name survives in a theorem that gives necessary and sufficient conditions for a line on a surface to be a line of curvature. There is Jean-Baptiste Marie Meusnier (1754-1793), also a relatively obscure figure in the history of mathematics were it not for his theorem about normal curvatures of a surface. A bit later on, there's Jean F. Frenet (1816-1900) and Joseph A. Serret (1819-1885) of the Frenet-Serret formulae for describing the shape of a smooth curve in space, and there's Pierre Bonnet (1819-1892) of the Gauss-Bonnet theorem and Joseph Bertrand (1822-1900) of the Bertrand curves. The French school tradition of differential geometry extended well into the twentieth century with the emergence of an eminence such as Élie Cartan. And there's Euler (1707-1783), who is associated with every branch of mathematics that existed in the eighteenth century.

    Euler can probably be creditted for much of the early explorations in differential geometry, but his influence isn't quite as profound as the reverbarations that Karl Friedrich Gauss's (1777 - 1855) seminal paper Disquisitiones generales circa superficies curvas (General investigations of curved surfaces) (1827) propagated through the subject. Gauss's paper written in Latin, a practice that was already old-fashioned in the nineteenth century, gives us an almost modern definition of a curved surface, as well as a definition and precise procedures for computing the curvature of a surface that now bears his name. He also defines the first and second fundamental forms of a surface, and the importance of the first has survived to modern-day differential geometry in the form of a Riemannian metric in Riemannian geometry. Using these concepts, and the intrinsic property of the first fundamental form, which only depends on the surface itself, but not in how this surface is placed in the surrounding Euclidean space, he proves the theorema egregium, that remarkable theorem over which, as a beloved professor of mine once colourfully described it, "Gauss lost his pants when he saw this." The theorema egregium points out the intrinsic property of the Gaussian curvature, since it is invariant by isometries such as the folding of our sheet of paper back up there in the examples.

    We have retained much of Gauss's notation to this day, such as using E, F, and G for denoting the coefficients of the first fundamental form when dealing with two-dimensional surfaces immersed in three dimensional space. Perhaps it is also in the spirit of this paper that when doing classical differential, we submerge ourselves in lengthy calculations. Well, scratch that, because modern differential geometry is still chock-full of calculations, especially when doing tensor calculus, and then we have what Élie Cartan has called "the debauch of indices". It's just that calculations in classical differential seem more necessary because nobody had stepped back from the sea of details yet and tried to understand the underlying abstraction.

    I should mention two more important figures in the development of classical differential geometry, although their work was, strictly speaking, not differential geometry at the time, although it can be subsumed under the umbrella of differential geometry with the modern viewpoint. I am speaking of Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky (1792-1856) and János Bolyai (1802-1860), two names associated with the discovery of non-Euclidean geometry. I mention them because their ideas were important in stimulating Bernhard Riemann (1826-1866) to the abstract definition of a differential manifold, where all modern differential geometry takes place.

    An inaugural address promises bold new directions of exploration.

    On June 10, 1854, Bernhard Riemann treated the faculty of Göttingen University to a lecture entitled Über die Hypothesen, welche der Geomtrie zu Grunde liegen (On the Hypotheses which lie at the foundations of geometry). This lecture was not published until 1866, but much before that its ideas were already turning (differential) geometry into a new direction.

    The story of how that lecture was conceived is an interesting one, and I shall summarise it as it appears in Michael Spivak's second volume of his A Comprehensive Introduction to Differential Geometry. Riemann was seeking the position of Privatdocent, a lecturer without a fixed salary whose income is determined by the number of students that attend his lectures. For this purpose, he had to propose three topics from which his examiners would choose one for him to lecture on. The first two were on complex analysis and trigonometric series expansions, on which he had previously worked at great length; the third was on the foundations of geometry. He had every reason to suspect that his examiners would choose one of the first two, but Gauss decided to break tradition (a rare decision for the ultra-conservative Gauss) and instead chose the third, a topic that had interested him for years. At the time, Riemann was investigating the connection between electricity, light, magnetism, and gravitation, in addition to being an assistant at a mathematical physics seminar, and the strain of having to deliver a lecture on a subject he hadn't fully prepared strained him enough to give him a temporary breakdown. He recovered, and delivered his lecture.

    Dedekind (1831-1916) later records how upon hearing Riemann's inaugural address, Gauss sat through the lecture "which surpassed all his expectations, in the greatest astonishment, and on the way back from the faculty meeting he spoke with Wilhelm Weber, with the greatest appreciation, and with an excitement rare for him, about the depth of the ideas presented by Riemann." Riemann was, of course, admitted.

    So what was the lecture about? What could possibly move cold-hearted Gauss to such enthusiasm? There are three major important bits. For a modern reader, Riemann's address is hard to read, especially because he tried to write it for a non-mathematical audience! (A word of caution about trying to dumb down what isn't dumb: generally a bad idea, since neither the dumb nor the smart will understand.) In the preface, he gives a plan of investigation, where he seeks to better understand the properties of space in order to understand the non-Euclidean geometries of Bolyai and Lobachevsky. In modern parlance, what he attempts to do here is to exhort his listeners to separate the topological properties (shape without distance) of space from the metric properties (distance measurements). He says that if we can give space different metric properties, than different versions of the parallel postulate can arise with the same basic underlying topology of space.

    In the first section beyond the preface, Riemann is trying to define the concept of a manifold, which generally speaking is this abstraction of space without distance, but that still looks like Euclidean space when you take out your microscope and peer very closely at it. He sees no particular reason to restrict manifolds to have only three dimensions, and Spivak's translation of Riemann often writes "n-fold extended quantity" to refer to an n-dimensional manifold.

    The next section Riemann defines very verbosely in a complicated way (remember, this is a lecture for non-mathematicians) what a reasonable way to measure length on a manifold can be, but with enough freedom to assign different ways of length measurement that vary locally. He accomplishes this by measuring the lengths of curves by integrating the tangent vectors of these curves and scaling this integration by a function that can change smoothly over each point in the manifold. This is precisely the modern notion of a Riemannian metric, and manifolds equipped with such a metric are known as Riemannian manifolds. He goes on to give some mathematical results of what properties this metric must satisfy, and he restricts himself to a special kind of metric (dropping some of his restrictions lead Finsler in 1918 to the study of so-called Finsler metrics and to modern Finsler geometry, a fertile area of modern research).

    In the third and final section of this brief but dense lecture, Riemann ponders what possible applications his ideas could have for modelling the space we live in, that is, applications to physics. It would be too much to conjecture that Riemann in any way anticipated the way that this geometry would be used in the twentieth century by Albert Einstein during his development of the general theory of relativity, but Riemann did believe that certain physical experiments could be carried out in order to better ascertain what the geometry of space should be like. This is not entirely a novel idea, dropping the assumption that Euclidean geometry is the perfect geometry for describing our universe, since Gauss earlier had already attempted to determine the possible geometry of space by measuring the angles of a triangle formed by three mountaintops, although his results led him to conclude that at least within experimental error, our geometry is Euclidean and the angles of a triangle add up to 180 degrees.

    It took differential geometers close to fifty more years to fully develop Riemann's ideas and cement the notions of a manifold and a Riemannian metric. In a sense, research for describing the geometry of spacetime is still underway by astrophysicists, and Riemann's ambitions in the third section of his inaugural address are not yet completely realised. It is undeniable that Riemann brought differential geometry a modern firm footing on differential manifolds and that his ideas guided research perhaps until this very day.

    The twentieth century: A cornucopia of ideas and the physicists take notice.

    During the twentieth century, areas of study in differential geometry expanded at an explosive rate. During the late nineteenth century, the physicists had developed the theory of electromagnetism to a clear refinement with vector calculus that mathematicians such as the French Élie Cartan (1869-1951) later polished into the abstraction of differential forms and integration on manifolds. Classical integral theorems were subsumed under one roof of generalisation such as the modern and general version of Stokes' Theorem. These differential forms lead others such as Georges de Rham (1903-1999) to link them to the topology of the manifold on which they are defined and gave us the theory of de Rham cohomology. Later on, influential differential geometers such as the worldly Chinese mathematician S. S. Chern (1911-2004) a student of Cartan, refined and spread the ideas of differential geometry across the globe (and is probably largely responsible for the proliferation of differential geometry in Brazil, Argentina, and other parts of Latin America).

    The Italians Luigi Bianchi (1856-1928), Gregorio Ricci (1853-1925). and Tullio Levi-Civita (1873-1941) clarified the notions of differentiation on a manifold and how to move from one tangent space to another in a sensible way via their development of the tensor calculus. The German David Hilbert (1862-1943) has a stab at some theorems of global differential geometry, and proves that a surface of constant negative curvature on which we can model hyperbolic geometry, such as the pseudosphere, cannot fit completely in three-dimensional space without singularities. The American John Milnor (1931- ) realises that differential geometry has something to offer to topology and gives birth to the subject of differential topology. Earlier another American, Marston Morse (1892-1977) had done something similar, but his ideas extended in a different direction.

    From another angle, Albert Einstein (1870-1955) started to see that he needed a new theory of geometry if he was to generalise his theory of relativity to the case of noninertial frames of reference. He recruited the help of mathematician friend and former classmate Marcel Grossmann (1878-1936) who found the necessary tools in the tensor calculus that the Italian school of differential geometry had created earlier. Once physics found applications for the differential geometry that mathematicians had been developing for so long, it started to contribute to the subject and develop its own tradition and schools.

    The intervention of the physicists enriched and complicated the subject immensely, with mathematicians sometimes working in parallel with the physicists' traditions, sometimes intersecting, sometimes not, as if trying themselves to imitate the same variations of the parallel postulate that their study of manifolds now afforded them. Non-definite metrics such as the Minkowski metric that describes the geometry of spacetime gained prominence. From a different direction, classical and analytical mechanics and its study of mechanical system lead to the birth of symplectic geometry. Physics has given a wealth of ideas to differential geometry.

    Yet another tributary to this river of dreams came a little earlier in the late 19th century from the Norweigian Sophus Lie (1842-1899) who decided to carry out the ideas of Felix Klein (1849-1925) and his Erlanger Programm and consider continuous, differentiable even, groups that could tell us something about the symmetries of the manifolds under scrutiny, these groups also manifolds in their own right themselves. His Lie groups are an important area of modern research in themselves.

    There are many, many, many more mathematicians and physicists that contributed to modern differential geometry throughout the twentieth century, and it is impossible to mention them all. Here I have merely attempted to mention some of the most famous figures and their most outstanding contributions. It is even difficult to categorise all of differential geometry, as the subject has grown into many diverse fields, that sometimes it is even difficult to say whether they are related fields or completely different altogether.

    Right. Sorry for all the name-dropping and jargon above. I want to point out that there is still one common thread underlying all of these various currents of thought, though. Differential geometry is the study of smooth curvy things. Remember that. Even if there are many different ways to look at the same curvy thing, it's still a curvy thing in the end.

    Diffgeo for the modern student of mathematics

    If you want to get initiated into the study of differential geometry today, you would do best to first have a good grasp of linear algebra and vector calculus. Knowledge of some modern analysis, enough to understand the fundamentals of metric and topological spaces, will also be quite handy, though sometimes not essential. With such preparation, you should be ready to take an undergraduate course in differential geometry. Typically, a first course presents classical differential geometry in two and three dimensions using various modern lenses in order to better see the development of ideas, and it might dip its toes into more modern subjects such as the abstract definition of a differential manifold.

    These things are of course highly variable, but early on in your studies of differential geometry, you should also see something about integration of differential forms (a twentieth-century topic when done with the proper modern abstraction), differentiation on manifolds, a hint at the connections between the topological properties of a manifold and its curvature (such as the Gauss-Bonnet theorem). You might also see some of the geometrical constructions that can be done on a manifold, such as (tangent) bundles. It's also possible that you'll have to learn some tensor calculus in order to formalise computations on manifolds, especially if you're approaching the subject from a physicist angle, although nothing is set in stone, and mathematicians may be required to know how to deal conveniently with tensors and tensor fields just the same.

    Differential geometry is an attractive object of study. It appeals to our geometric intuition, which some have argued is the true source of all of mathematics, and it's overflowing with beautiful theorems and surprising results. There are lots of abstractions to complement our intuition, and with a little bit of effort they can all be juxtaposed to rather tangible objects that can be used to verify their validity and purpose. It even has applications for people as practical as engineers in control theory, since the configuration space of a mechanical system can be succinctly described as a manifold of dimension equal to the degrees of freedom of the system, and in computer graphics.

    It's quite simply gorgeous. Definitely one of my favourite branches of mathematics.

    Suggested Reading

    If you want to start having a look at what differential geometry has to offer, I propose the following bibliography:

    • Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces. Do Carmo, Manfredo Perdigao. This book introduces differential geometry of two and three-dimensional Euclidean space with relatively little prerequisites. I would call this a presentation of classical differential geometry from a modern viewpoint, since do Carmo practically gives the abstract definitions of a manifold, but by a sleight of hand specialises them to curves and surfaces. This used to be something that bothered me, but now I recognise the importance of having a firm intuitive grasp on classical differential geometry before drowning in the abstraction. Do Carmo was a student of Chern, and his exposition is clear, although it's a little clearer if you understand that he's gearing everything towards the more general study of manifolds without ever explicitly declaring so. This has become a rather standard text in the undergraduate curricula.
    • A Comprehensive Introduction to Differential Geometry. Spivak, Michael. Wow, where to begin. This is a five-volume treasure trove of diffgeo goodness. I consulted portions of the second volume for the brief historical sketch I gave above. Spivak's style is eminently readable, and he covers more ground than anyone else out there does in an introductory textbook. The prerequisites for reading these books may be a little bit higher than other books, but Spivak's other short little book, Calculus on Manifolds should be more than adequate preparation for the wonders of his comprehensive introduction.
    • An Introduction to Differentiable Manifolds and Riemannian Geometry. Boothby, William. I like this book because it presents modern differential geometry with all the formalism and rigour that most pleases a true mathematician. It covers all the basics of manifolds quickly and clearly, plus some more advanced topics, without ever sacrificing precision of mathematical ideas. It's a good book for the upper level undergraduate or beginning graduate student of mathematics.
    • Schaum's Outline of Tensor Calculus. Kay, David. Don't be fooled by the bright and colourful packaging the marketing spooks have chosen in the modern editions of Schaum's Outlines. These books are well worth your (relatively little) money, and they really are mostly all old books from the fifties, sixties and thereabouts but rebound in fancy colours. This one is especially recommended for physicists who need to get down and dirty with tensorial calculations, and for the mathematicians who want to slum with those dirty physicists.
    • An Introduction to Differential Geometry. Willmore, T. J. This book is probably hard to find, but it's one of my favourites. It's an old book first published in 1959 for students of British universities that does modern differential geometry the old-fashioned English gentlemanly way, if you know how I mean. It begins with subjects of classical differential geometry, but soon moves into tensor calculus and Riemannian geometry. Lots of those tensor things all around. If you want to know what Élie Cartan meant with the "debauch of indices" this is the book that best introduces the need for such debauchery and explains it surprisingly clearly. Meet the Einstein summation convention. Love the Einstein summation convention.

    References

    In addition to the books mentioned above which I briefly consulted for writing this node, I also consulted The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive (http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/) which has become a standard online reference for biographies of mathematicians, plus the courses, lectures, workshops, and conferences I have attended in differential geometry, and although I wish I could call myself a differential geometer, I have to admit that I'm still a newbie in the subject.

    August 29

    为什么读博士以及有什么意义

     
    为什么读博士以及有什么意义(zz)
    关键词: 读博士                                          
    这是每一个面临读博的学生甚至开始读博的学生的困惑。
    1.基本概念
    博士:在美国叫A Doctor of Philosophy degree, 简称Ph.D.,是最高学位。
    读一个博士需要做两件事:一是完全掌握一个科研领域,二是在这个领域开创新理论。

    掌握一个科研领域
    要通读所有这个领域的文献。一般开始时是看书,然后要找学术期刊杂志,会议论文和
    研究报告。
    一般在读博之前,学校会有一些方法来考核你对某一个领域地掌握情况。比如要有相关
    专业本科或者硕士学位。然后,为了证明对本专业的了解,你需要修研究生专业课程,
    通过考试并确获得较高的平均分。最后还要通过一个评委会的考核(博士中期考核),
    评委都是博士。
    开创新理论
    博士和其它学位的本质区别就是一个字:科研(Research)。要开创一个理论,学生必
    须探索,调查,思考,总结。学术界用“科研”来表示这种行为。
    “科研”经常暗示着要“实验”。但是科研绝不仅仅实验,还要解释和深层理解。
    以计算机科学专业为例,科研意味着要探索并发现数字计算和通信领域的新法则。必须
    要发现帮助建立和使用计算机制的新技术。要寻找新抽象、新算法、新规则、新机制。

    要获得博士学位,必须要写博士论文,并且通过博士论文口头答辩。
    成果的关系
    科研的成果可能可以开发新产品或者改善现有的。但是,博士论文的价值不是用商业效
    益来评价的。必须要引导将来的研究和知识体系。博士成果的效益常常不会在短期创造
    ,而是在长期才慢慢体现。
    2。问自己几个问题
    决定是否要读博士之前,先问自己几个问题:
    你想做科研工作吗?
    你要考虑你的长期目标。因为PhD是训练你的科研能力。如果将来不做科研,博士不适合
    你。
    你想进高校工作吗?
    博士是进入高校任教的必要条件。
    你有足够的能力吗?
    评价一下自己是否有下述能力。
    智力:显然
    时间:往往比你想想的要长,你能承受吗?
    创造力:读博需要你用新的思路看待问题。问问自己喜欢“脑筋急转弯”吗?你学高数
    时感到有意思吗?
    好奇心:你是不是强烈的想知道周围事物背后的规律?
    适应能力:读博常会出乎意料的困难。你可能会到一个没有人知道答案的领域。你能忍
    受郁闷吗?能忍受住找没人知道的答案时的枯燥吗?
    自我驱动:教授不会告诉你怎么做。你能自己给自己长期科研的动力吗?
    竞争能力:你将与最聪明的人共事,别人会将你与这些人比较。你扛得住吗?
    成熟:读博时间大部分由你自己支配。你要自己安排自己的日程。
    3。警告(博士不是。。)
    让自己有声望:你毕业后,你周围每个同事都是博士。
    保障自己观点正确:博士只在一个领域有权威。这并不代表所有领域的权威。
    自己的目标:如果你只想要个文凭,很多方法都比这容易。
    工作的保障:很多公司不要博士。即使要了,当公司不景气时先把科研部门砍掉。
    让自己和家人更有面子:你妈可以很骄傲的说自己孩子是个博士。但这不是你读博的理
    证明自己的聪明:你要长期从事枯燥的工作,多次面对失败,折磨你的意志。
    将来就研究一个领域:一辈子只吃一碗饭?你将来要不停地科研,学习新方法、新理论

    找工作更容易:搞笑!
    比其它选择好:每个人都要决定自己究竟要什么,什么最能激励自己。
    赚钱更多:至少5年之内你的收入是负的。除非你爱科研,否则这不是最好的赚钱方法。

    4。还有几个好消息
    如果你有能力和兴趣,搞科研将获得与所有其它工作不同的奖励。你能遇到这个星球上
    最聪明的人,甚至与他共事。你将不停的超越自己。你将解决以前从没有人解决的问题
    。你将改变人们的生活方式。
    June 07

    给青年科学家的四点忠告

    要点:
    1. 人生也有涯,而知也无涯, 不必要做到全知全能;
    2. 未知的天地更广阔;
    3. 在平静的海洋中灵感的浪花才能显现;
    4. 以史为鉴,可以知得失
    Scientist: Four golden lessons STEVEN WEINBERG Steven Weinberg is in the Department of Physics, the University of Texas at Austin, Texas 78712, USA. This essay is based on a commencement talk given by the author at the Science Convocation at McGill University in June.
         When I received my undergraduate degree — about a hundred years ago — the physics literature seemed to me a vast, unexplored ocean, every part of which I had to chart before beginning any research of my own. How could I do anything without knowing everything that had already been done? Fortunately, in my first year of graduate school, I had the good luck to fall into the hands of senior physicists who insisted, over my anxious objections, that I must start doing research, and pick up what I needed to know as I went along. It was sink or swim. To my surprise, I found that this works. I managed to get a quick PhD — though when I got it I knew almost nothing about physics. But I did learn one big thing: that no one knows everything, and you don't have to.
          Another lesson to be learned, to continue using my oceanographic metaphor, is that while you are swimming and not sinking you should aim for rough water. When I was teaching at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the late 1960s, a student told me that he wanted to go into general relativity rather than the area I was working on, elementary particle physics, because the principles of the former were well known, while the latter seemed like a mess to him. It struck me that he had just given a perfectly good reason for doing the opposite. Particle physics was an area where creative work could still be done. It really was a mess in the 1960s, but since that time the work of many theoretical and experimental physicists has been able to sort it out, and put everything (well, almost everything) together in a beautiful theory known as the standard model. My advice is to go for the messes — that's where the action is
         My third piece of advice is probably the hardest to take. It is to forgive yourself for wasting time. Students are only asked to solve problems that their professors (unless unusually cruel) know to be solvable. In addition, it doesn't matter if the problems are scientifically important — they have to be solved to pass the course. But in the real world, it's very hard to know which problems are important, and you never know whether at a given moment in history a problem is solvable. At the beginning of the twentieth century, several leading physicists, including Lorentz and Abraham, were trying to work out a theory of the electron. This was partly in order to understand why all attempts to detect effects of Earth's motion through the ether had failed. We now know that they were working on the wrong problem. At that time, no one could have developed a successful theory of the electron, because quantum mechanics had not yet been discovered. It took the genius of Albert Einstein in 1905 to realize that the right problem on which to work was the effect of motion on measurements of space and time. This led him to the special theory of relativity. As you will never be sure which are the right problems to work on, most of the time that you spend in the laboratory or at your desk will be wasted. If you want to be creative, then you will have to get used to spending most of your time not being creative, to being becalmed on the ocean of scientific knowledge.
         Finally, learn something about the history of science, or at a minimum the history of your own branch of science. The least important reason for this is that the history may actually be of some use to you in your own scientific work. For instance, now and then scientists are hampered by believing one of the over-simplified models of science that have been proposed by philosophers from Francis Bacon to Thomas Kuhn and Karl Popper. The best antidote to the philosophy of science is a knowledge of the history of science.More importantly, the history of science can make your work seem more worthwhile to you. As a scientist, you're probably not going to get rich. Your friends and relatives probably won't understand what you're doing. And if you work in a field like elementary particle physics, you won't even have the satisfaction of doing something that is immediately useful. But you can get great satisfaction by recognizing that your work in science is a part of history.Look back 100 years, to 1903. How important is it now who was Prime Minister of Great Britain in 1903, or President of the United States? What stands out as really important is that at McGill University, Ernest Rutherford and Frederick Soddy were working out the nature of radioactivity. This work (of course!) had practical applications, but much more important were its cultural implications. The understanding of radioactivity allowed physicists to explain how the Sun and Earth's cores could still be hot after millions of years. In this way, it removed the last scientific objection to what many geologists and paleontologists thought was the great age of the Earth and the Sun. After this, Christians and Jews either had to give up belief in the literal truth of the Bible or resign themselves to intellectual irrelevance. This was just one step in a sequence of steps from Galileo through Newton and Darwin to the present that, time after time, has weakened the hold of religious dogmatism. Reading any newspaper nowadays is enough to show you that this work is not yet complete. But it is civilizing work, of which scientists are able to feel proud.

    男女之交应淡如水

    文/淡淡白云
        常常看到有人说男女之间没有真正的友情,已婚男女更是难以保持单纯的友情,就连现在被人们所津津乐道的第四类情感,也多少带着点暧昧的色彩,是因为这个世界不再单纯呢,还是男女本身所具有的特色,让男女之间的友情蒙上特殊的面纱?

        男人与男人之间的友情比较粗线条,可以在一起喝酒泡妞,却从来不谈夫妻之间感情矛盾,可以N久不见面也不想念,却又可以在朋友需要的时候为之两肋插刀,在所不辞。而女人与女人之间的友情是细腻,通常是因为交换彼此之间的秘密建立起来的,她们可以除了逛街谈化妆品以外,更乐道于彼此之间夫妻感情培养,儿女教育问题,女人更喜欢与女人倾述感情问题,因为女人觉得只有女人才会懂自己。

        而当男人的粗线条碰到了女人的细腻,这样的友情,它不是夫妻之间亲密无间的感情,也不是普通朋友之间的生蔬。男人的粗线条也同样具备了大度,他可以包容女人间歇性的情绪化,而女人的细腻又同样具备了温柔,她可以包容男人经常性的没记性。

        做为一个聪明的女人,她要懂得与自己所喜欢的男人保持那种半米的距离,因为人都是容易厌倦的,得到的永远不会珍惜,你不能成为他的老婆,但也不要成为他的情人,因为男女之间如果有了身体上的接触,那种质的改变是在所难免的,女人天生感性,当在有好感的情况下,再有了性接触,当初的好感就会慢慢的加深,到无法舍弃,于是你就会不断的向对方要求,要求他不要离开自己,要求他陪伴在自己的身边。

        而男人不然,男人他想要的或者并不仅仅是一种刺激,但也绝不足以让他放弃自己原有安定的生活,爱情在男人的生命中仅仅只是一部分,就算他是真正爱你,但比起亲情甚至友情,爱情都可能需要让步,不要以为他和你上了床,他就会想娶你,他只是因为经不起诱惑而已。而如果这种诱惑开始让他头疼的时候,他就会情愿舍弃,当从来没有发生过。

        男女之间如果从友情,到互相吸引,然后发展到了情人关系,最终只能沦为陌路,可是人是感情的动物,又如何能够常保理性呢?当一对男女互相有了好感,彼此之间已经具有了暧昧的色彩,如果有了天时地利的条件,就很容易出事。

        可是好不容易碰到所谓的红(蓝)颜知已的,又怎能就此放弃呢?我们常说君子之交淡如水,而男女之间更加应该淡如水吧,但不应该是蒸馏水,那样太没味了。已婚男女的更应该只是精神上的交往,你可以对他说感情的事,却不能对他动情,你可以对他有依赖感,却不要以他为支柱,可以在他那里得到同性之间缺少的观点,但在感情上,却应该以同性交往,不可陷入恋爱的泥潭不可自拔。

        男女之间能够相谈甚欢,解决彼此之间的矛盾,这是一种幸运,但是如果由友情走入了爱情,这就是一种劫,或者有人最终相守到了一起,但是由以以往各自的有了背叛的经历,难免给彼此的心中造成一种负担,所以男女之间保持淡如水的感情最宜,当然应该是流动的水才能不腐。
    December 07

    研究工作的几种境界

    from 华罗庚

            照葫芦画瓢的模仿,模仿性的工作,实际上就等于做一个习题。当然做习题是必要的。但是一辈子做习题而无创造又有什麽意思呢?

        利用成法解决几个新问题。这个比前面就进了一步,但是我们在这个问题上也应区别一下。直接利用成法也和做习题差不多。而利用成法,又通过一些修改,这就走上搞科学研究的道路了。

         创造方法解决问题。这就更进了一步。创造方法是一个重要的转折,是自己能力提高的重要表现。

        开辟方向。这就更高了,开辟了一个方向,可以让后人做上几十年,上百年。这对科学的发展来讲就是有贡献。

        我是粗略地分为以上这四种,实际上数学还有许多特殊性的问题。像著名问题你怎样改进它,怎样解决它,这在数学方面一般也是受到称赞的。在20世纪初希尔伯特提出了23个问题,这许多问题,有些会对数学的本质产生巨大的影响。

         研究工作要“攻得进去,还要打得出来”。“世界上有不少数学家攻是攻进去了,但是进了死胡同就出不来了,这种情况往往使其局限在一个小问题里,而失去了整个时间”。 做研究还要知道 “取法于上得其中,取法于中得其下”的道理。

          不急不躁,细嚼慢咽。

        首先应当提出的是不急不躁,细嚼慢咽。一步不懂不轻易走下一步,每一方法都力求运用熟练。读十本八本,不甚了解,反不如把一本书从头到尾读得精通烂熟。所谓烂熟不只是会背会算,而是能掌握基本精神、基本原理,能够灵活运用,并且必须注意它的连贯性,依照深浅,一本一本地学习下去。

     

          “要有速度,还要有加速度。”
          50年代中期,数学研究所中已经有不少年轻人作出较好的结果的,在他们中间滋长着自满情绪,或在同一水平上不断写论文的倾向,华罗庚语重心长地说:“要有速度,还要有加速度。”所谓“速度”就是要出成果,所谓“加速度”就是成果的质量要不断提高。

    October 26

    我喜欢的三首歌词

    1 千百年之后谁又还记得谁
    当时你给我一个笑脸
    让我心跳一辈子
    使我的目光永远融进了你的背影
    岁月老去我已不能爱
    转过身往事突然清晰
    重复你的目光再也难串起我的记忆
    夜深深梦缠绵人憔悴
    既然离别难免今生何必相会
    流星闪过莫须伤悲
    千百年之后谁又还记得谁
     
     
     2 美丽的神话 - 电影《神话》主题曲
    梦中的人熟悉的脸孔,
    你是我守候的温柔,
    就算泪水淹没天地,
    我不会放手,每一刻孤独的承受,
    只因我曾许下承诺,
    你我之间熟悉的感动,
    爱就要苏醒,
    万世沧桑唯有爱是永远的神话,
    潮起潮落始终不悔真爱的相约,
    几番若痛的纠缠多少黑夜掐扎,
    紧握双手让我和你再也不离分,
    枕上雪冰封的爱恋,真心相摇篮才能融解,
    风中摇曳炉上的火,不灭亦不休,
    等待花开春去春又来,
    无情岁月笑我痴狂,
    心如钢铁任世界荒芜,
    思念永相随,
    悲欢负月唯有爱是永远的神话,
    谁都没有遗忘古老,古老的誓言,
    你的泪水化为漫天飞舞的彩蝶,
    爱是翼下之风两心相随自在飞,
    你就是我心中唯一美丽的神话。 
     
    3 感谢
    春雨丝丝淋湿着感受
    离家己有好几个春秋
    青石小巷永远是望不到头
    那里住着我的亲戚和朋友

    岁月悠悠飘走了追求
    回家没有找到合适的时候
    小妹的害羞还是否依旧
    妈妈总惦记我结婚了没有

    许多的事情和许多的问题
    解释显然己不能够
    梦醒的时候
    无助的时候
    我也学会了喝上一杯酒

    感谢亲人
    感谢朋友
    你们总是在为我担忧
    那温柔的妻子可爱的孩子
    一切一切我都会拥有
    一切一切我都会拥有
     
     
    October 07

    数学机械化:用电脑解放人脑

    专家说“数学定理看起来很漂亮,然而要得到一个定理,数学家不知道要做多少计算。”现在脑力劳动机械化逐步地实现,一些数学推理,曾经是不能完成的,现在都可以通过计算机实现,虽然这还是处于初级阶段。973计划《数学机械化与自动推理平台》的研究目标,就是要通过计算机强大的计算功能去为人们解决数学问题。在您的印象里,数学也许是枯燥的、艰深的、令人望而生畏的,但是有这样一些科学家天天与数字、符号打着交道,他们乐此不疲,这期“发现·求索”就让我们和数学家们一起探究数学的美丽与神秘。
     
    何为数学机械化
         计算机是人脑的延伸,电子计算机的飞速发展,为人类实现脑力劳动的机械化创造了物质条件。部分实现脑力劳动的机械化,将为科学研究与高新技术研究提供有力工具、使科研工作者摆脱繁琐的甚至是人力难以胜任的工作,进行更高层次的创新性研究,从而提高我国知识创新的效率。数学是对现实世界数与形的最简洁有效的描述,是高新技术的理论基础。实现数学机械化是实现脑力劳动机械化的理论基础。数学机械化理论和方法的建立,是深层次的知识创新,将极大地推动相关学科的发展。数学机械化研究,不仅为数学的发展提出了一种战略构想,也将为我国信息技术的创新发挥重要作用。
         数学机械化是我国学者开创的研究领域,是中国古代数学机械化思想在信息时代的复兴,在国际上产生了重要影响。数学的机械化就是将数学的主要内容,方程求解与定理证明,转变为计算机可以接受的形式并利用计算机强大的计算功能解决数学与高新技术中的理论问题。具体讲,即发展方程求解与定理证明算法,并以此为基础解决相关高新技术中的基础理论问题。
    August 16

    数学研究方向

    数学研究方向
    作者:不详  来源于:数学之家(凌世春个人主页)  发布时间:2005-6-18 11:50:01

    基础数学

    数论 解析数论代数数论丢番图分析, 超越数论, 模型式与模函数论, 数论的应用.

    代数学 群论, 群表示论, 李群, 李代数, 代数群, 典型群, 同调代数, 代数K理论, Kac-Moody代数,

            环论, 代数(可除代数), 体, 编码理论与方法, 序结构研究.

    几何学 整体微分几何, 代数几何, 流形上的分析, 黎曼流形与洛仑兹流形, 齐性空间与对称空间,

    调和映照及其在理论物理中的应用, 子流形理论, 杨--米尔斯场与纤维丛理论, 辛流形.

    拓扑学 微分拓扑, 代数拓扑, 低维流形, 同伦论, 奇点与突变理论, 点集拓扑.

    函数论 多复变函数论, 复流形, 复动力系统, 单复变函数论, Rn中的调和分析的实方法,

    非紧半单李群的调和分析, 函数逼近论.

    泛函分析 非线性泛函分析, 算子理论, 算子代数, 泛函方程, 空间理论, 广义函数.

    常微分方程 泛函微分方程, 特征与谱理论及其反问题, 定性理论, 稳定性理论、分支理论,

                 混沌理论, 奇摄动理论, 复域中的微分方程, 动力系统,

    偏微分方程 连续介质物理与力学、及反应, 扩散等应用领域中的偏微分, 非线性椭圆(和抛物)方程,

    几何与数学物理中的偏微分方程, 微局部分析与一般偏微分算子理论,

    研究中的新方法和新概念, 调混合型及其它带奇性的方程,

    非线性波、非线性发展方程和无穷维动力系统.

    数学物理 规范场论, 引力场论的经典理论与量子理论, 孤立子理论, 统计力学,

    连续介质力学等方面的数学问题.

    概率论 马氏过程, 随机过程, 随机分析, 随机场, 论, 极限理论, 平稳过程,

    概率论在调和分析、几何及微分方程等方面的应用, 在物理、生物、化学管理中的概率论问题.

    数理逻辑与数学基础 递归论, 模型论, 证明论, 公理集合证,

    数理逻辑在人工智能及计算机科学中的应用.

    组合数学 组合计数, 组合设计, 图论, 线性计算几何, 组合概率方法.

    应用数学

    数理统计 抽样调查与抽样方法, 试验设计, 时间序列分析及其算法研究, 多元分析及其算法研究,

    数据分析及其图形处理, 非参数统计方法, 应用统计中的基础性工作, 统计线性模型,

    参数估计方法, 随机过程的统计理论及方法, 蒙特卡洛方法(统计模拟方法).

    运筹学 线性与非线性规划, 整数规划, 动态规划, 组合最优化, 随机服务系统, 对策论, 不动点算法,

    随机最优化, 多目标规划, 不可微最优化, 可靠性理论.

    控制论 有限维非线性系统, 分布参数系统的控制理论, 随机系统的控制理论, 最优控制理论与算法,

    参数辨识与适应控制, 线性系统理论的代数与几何方法, 控制的计算方法, 微分对策理论,

    稳健控制.

    若干交叉学科 信息论及应用, 经济数学, 生物数学, 不确定性的数学理论, 分形论及应用.

    计算机的数学基础 可解性与可计算性, 机器证明, 计算复杂性, VLSI的数学基础,

    计算机网络与并行计算.

    计算数学与科学工程计算

    偏微分方程数值计算                                 初边值问题数值解法及应用

    非线性微分方程及其数值解法                     边值问题数值解法及其应用

    有限元、边界元数值方法                         变分不等式的数值方法

    辛几何差分方法                                     数理方程反问题的数值解法

    常微分方程数值解法及其应用 二点边值问题, STIFF 问题研究, 奇异性问题, 代数微分方程.

    数值代数 大型稀疏矩阵求解, 代数特征值问题及其反问题, 非线性代数方程,

    一般线性代数方程组求解, 快速算法.

    函数逼近 多元样条, 多元逼近, 曲面拟合, 有理逼近, 散乱数据插值.

    计算几何 曲面造型, 曲面光滑拼接, 曲面设计, 体素拼接, 几何问题的计算机实现.

    新型算法 并行算法, 多重网格技术, 自适应方法, 区间分析法及其应用.

    读博士的一点感受

    读博士的一点感受(zz)- -

                                          

    转自smth  PhD

    浙江大学 oldfly  

    评:oldfly的这篇文章平淡却有深意,听上去很简单的道理要是真正放在脑子中时刻指导自己的行动,还有比较困难。oldfly说得只是李开复说的东西的子集,一个普通人淡淡的说出来的事情,似乎比大牛们更有说服力。  

     博士论文写完后,开始写致谢时,才发现原来一个人可贵的三年生命旅程,竟然悄然接受了那么多无私的帮助。
        透过密密麻麻的文字,似乎是一颗颗真诚的心灵。人生前行的过程中,有时候前行目标,是与你在实现这个目标过程中所拥有的朋友与友谊,一样重要的。
        我记起硕士毕业时,当我好奇问起硕士导师什么是生命中的牵引力量时(我硕士导师是文革后,国门打开后首批留美学子,后来他在美国名校拿到了博士学位,然后回国效力了),一头银发,又总是慈祥,很有学者风度的硕士导师只是淡淡而言:"随遇而安,随心所欲"。
        我开始不是很理解这句话,若干年后,我才发现,原来这句话并不是"无为而无不为"的消极,而是将人生与奋斗融为了一体,一个很自然的过程。其实,仔细想想,我们读书,不也是这样的,本科-硕士---博士,象上楼梯似的,一步一步的,按部就班而已。
        但是,博士阶段的学习,又不是象上楼梯这么简单的。在这个人生不断提升的过程中,既需要有种上楼梯的平常心态,更需要有种上楼梯持之以恒的毅力。博士阶段最艰苦时候,就是一个人的去探索的时候。因为,自己研究方向的深入,不可能由人家来代替你,只能靠自己感性和理性去感受。所以,获取博士学位的过程,就是对自己心智、毅力与体力的全面挑战。
        以前自己写了点读博士的感受,目前博士论文已经完成,对读博士另外有了些感受,然后写下来,请大家指正。浙江大学博士生渐渐多起来,其中里面有一批是从本科直接进入博士学习阶段的,对于他们,由于没有经过研究生阶段的学习,很希望能够多了解博士阶段的学习方法,我鼓起勇气写下点感受,恳请大家交流和指正。下面是我自己感觉对读博士很重要的几点:
        一是网络的重要性。在我自己的博士论文致谢部分,我感谢了Internet,因为通过Internet,可以在自己的研究领域发现一批与你研究相近和相似的研究小组。然后,就可以通过Email向这些教授或PHD学生要他们发表的论文、他们的程序代码,甚至是请教他们。如果自己不知道所钻研领域情况,可以使用"google"键入关键字,先搜寻一把,心里大概有个数。很多时候,通过Internet,自己可以很快知道目前研究方向最新进展与面临的主要问题,加快自己研究的步骤,而不是在闭门造车。
        一篇博士论文如果只是自己孤军奋战去完成,是难以想象的。即使身边没有可以讨论的对象,大多数时候,通过网络,从知名学校、知名研究机构或知名会议上,可以发现与自己研究有关的资料,对自己的研究产生启发性效果。
        二是共同成长的重要。一般而言,博士生都会在一个包括本科生和研究生的研究小组中。如果是这样,与本科生和研究生的共同成长就很重要了。因为为了更加顺利与本科生和研究生交流,就要督促自己去看更多的资料,在方向上一直把握住。从这个角度上讲,交流是为了帮助自己的成长,与大家共同的成长,就是自己成长。
        并且,看到自己组里的同学能够发表文章,能够每天很投入愉快从事你工作的一部分,这是一种很快乐的感觉。
        三是博士论文的重要。一般情况,读完博士后,无论留校还是去公司,很多工作是自己博士论文的继续。尤其是留校,面临课题申请(尤其是纵向课题),那么自己的博士论文里面的东西,可能就是自己要去申请的第一个课题。所以,博士论文的撰写与选题,就十分重要了。记得国外很多学校应聘时,就是要求博士来讲自己的博士论文。可以说,博士论文的选题和撰写,可能是你以后学术生涯最重要的
    一个资本了。
        读书期间,你自己所做的课题,会在你毕业时候结题或签定,因此需要用你的博士论文里面的东西去申请新的课题,用自己所研究的课题来养下一个新的课题,这是一个很自然的循环过程。
        因此,写博士论文需要时间的投入,需要专注。我想,每个人可以用指头来算算,自己一天、一周或一月中,花了多少时间在从事研究工作,就可以度量自己的专注程度了。
        四是写Proposal的重要。这里的Proposal指申请课题所写得东西,这个方面我不是很擅长。但是我自己感觉,所谓课题申请,是自己研究的继续,也就是有了些研究积累,然后去申请。如果完全是一个全新的东西,自己没有相关研究经历,一般申请成功是很困难的。这也是为什么强调博士论文的重要。因为,博士论文是你学术研究生涯的第一起点,甚至对很多人而言,一辈子的研究均与此有关的。
        五.导师与科研环境的重要。在导师和科研环境方面,与很多博士生相比,我觉得自己很幸运。不过,我自己刚开始读博士时,并不是在目前课题指导教授手下的。一次博士生讨论班时,授课老师给了我一篇与当时自己研究完全不相关的英文论文,让我给全班同学讲出来。可能是自己认真准备了,也查阅了不少资料,把这篇文章讲的很透彻与清楚,于是,这个教授便向我介绍了自己的研究课题。于是,
    在博士阶段第二个学期中叶,我从其他课题组转入了这个教授的课题组。回想这次转课题组,我觉得自己很幸运,而且萌发了人生很偶然的感叹。但是,事后想想,人生就是一场不会结束的战斗,需要
    自己时刻准备着,做一个主动的人,或许某天机会就来到了。
        好的导师一般给你很宽松的环境,一个明确的方向,然后修行看个人了。博士论文也是开始做点很小的东西,然后慢慢积累,慢慢对所研究方向越来越明确。在这个过程中,导师对你的信任,一个交流(无论是你与Internet交流,还是与课题组)的环境,是你研究顺利开展的稳定剂。
        选择导师前,最好还是与导师目前在带的学生有个交流,这样会得到导师的第一首资料,而不仅仅局限于招生手册上面的宣传。
        六.个人的心态很重要,给别人表示的心态也很重要。读博士会遇到很多挑战、压力与困难,自己的心态要摆正。读博士不是仅仅选择了一个读书阶段,而是选择了一个人生。每当遇到挫折时,要多想想自己最适合做这样的人,而读博士是否可以为自己人生目标的实现起到促进作用。"坚定、坚韧、坚强",去承受生活。其实,人生的很多困难,当你咬牙切齿克服,回望之后,这些困难不过是沟沟壑壑。

        一个人自己的心态很重要,向别人表达的心态也很重要。在BBS上,尤其是博士生版,很多同学不经意流露出很多对现实的感叹和悲观。个人认为,这样对新来的博士生(尤其是刚刚从本科阶段直接读博士的学生)负面影响很大。我觉得给人家多讲个人思考的理由,比只是讲讲结果,要有益多,因为这样可以让别人增加选择的能力。人生不是很复杂的,"以出世的精神从事入世的工作",如此而已。社会
    虽然复杂,但是自己心里有个良心的杠杆,就不太会迷失。
        博士阶段的生活,自己学会了很多。导师、老师和朋友,对我的影响,难以表达,虽然他们没有注意。
        在我即将要从事自己所喜爱的教育与科研事业之际,我写这篇感受,也很要感谢我在远方的亲爱的妻子。几年博士学习生活,她自己也在期盼与等待中,默默承受与分担我的压力。春夏秋冬,长长的铁轨与悠悠电波,是我们生活乐章的一部分。
        记得结婚那天,迎亲路上一直在下雨。在结婚典礼上,主持人突然让我这个最高兴的新郎讲点什么,于是,我说:应当感谢我自己生于一个崇尚正直的家庭,应该感谢岳父岳母,应当去爱护自己的家庭。末了,我很激动地对我妻子说,"风平凡,雨平凡,我对你的爱将永远不平凡"!
        衷心希望我无愧我的妻子、家庭与选择!




    - 作者: Frozen 2005年05月7日, 星期六 18:53 加入博采

    August 12

    几何颂

    几何颂

     

    穹苍广而善美兮何天理之悠悠

     

    先哲思而念远兮奚术算之久留

     

    形与美之交接兮心与物之融流

     

    临新纪以展望兮翼四力以真求

     

    岂原爆之非妄兮实万物之始由

     

    曲率浅而达深兮时空坦而寡愁

     

    曲率极而物毁兮黑洞冥而难求

     

    相迁变而规物兮几何雅其远谋

     

    扬规范之场论兮柘朴衰而复留

     

    时空荡而物生兮新数学其始流

     

    惟对称之内薀兮类不变而久悠

     

    道深奥而动心兮惟精析之能图

     

    质与量之相成兮匪线化之能筹

    August 09

    只要开始,其实都不晚

    只要开始,其实都不晚

    只要您想开始,任何时间都不晚。

    八十几岁的画坛耆宿刘其伟先生,三十八岁才开始无师自通拿起画笔,四十岁就开了生平第一次画展。

    习画两年就可以开画展,这样的成绩,实在够惊人了,而且刘其伟从未拜师学画,他完全靠自修学习。为了绘画,他深入原始世界调查研究,没想到,这么做的结果是,使他多了人类学家的身分。

    丘吉尔曾经说过:"人生最好有一个正当娱乐,纵使这个正当娱乐不能成为财富,但也可以拥有一个丰富的人生。"

    很多人的心中,都有一个梦想和愿望,梦想之所以是梦想,是因为,很多人,都把梦想真的放在梦中,没有在真实的世界中实现,其实,人生只要能够开始,结果都会是很美的。

    很多人常会觉得过去很美,未来很美,回忆过去,期望未来,却很少人思考现在,我们常会听到有人说,等我赚够了钱、等我四十岁以后、等我退休以后等等借口,也许,到了白发苍苍,梦想依然只是梦想,却没有行动力来完成,让理想成为梦幻泡影,而没真实的丰富。

    与其让生命在虚耗中度过,不如选择清醒的活着,只要你愿意,开始去尝试,凡事都有可能发生。

    Evolution

          我一直在寻找一种能够贴近自己灵魂、自由自在的生活方式。所以,不断的远离及疏离,并选择持续的流浪,不管是实际上或心灵上。在不断试图解脱世俗枷锁的冒险历程中,我对未来充满了未知,冀望追求认同,却无处寻觅。漂泊的灵魂,希望彻底的自由解脱,成为唯一可追索的目标。然而人世的无常、生命的飘浮,总在人类的追求过程中,放下一道道的栅栏,于是有些人都在栅栏边徘徊;但是有些人却经过不断的努力,跳过重重难关,开发人生的另一片新天地。
    August 06

    天问

    天问 来源: 作者: 屈原 类型: 其他 发表: 2005-4-16 浏览: 85

       曰:遂古之初,谁传道之?上下未形,何由考之?冥昭瞢闇,谁能极之?冯翼惟像,何以识之?明明闇闇,惟时何为?阴阳三合,何本何化? 圜则九重,孰营度之?惟兹何功,孰初作之?斡维焉系,天极焉加?八柱何当,东南何亏?九天之际,安放安属?隅隈多有,谁知其数? 天何所沓?十二焉分?日月安属?列星安陈?出自汤谷,次于蒙氾。自明及晦,所行几里?夜光何德,死则又育?厥利维何,而顾菟在腹?女歧无合,夫焉取九子?伯强何处?惠气安在?何阖而晦?何开而明?角宿未旦,曜灵安藏? 不任汩鸿,师何以尚之?佥曰“何忧”,何不课而行之?鸱龟曳衔,鲧何听焉?顺欲成功,帝何刑焉?永遏在羽山,夫何三年不施?伯禹愎鲧,夫何以变化?纂就前绪,遂成考功。何续初继业,而厥谋不同?洪泉极深,何以窴之?地方九则,何以坟之?河海应龙?何尽何历?鲧何所营?禹何所成?康回冯怒,坠何故以东南倾? 九州安错?川谷何洿?东流不溢,孰知其故?东西南北,其修孰多?南北顺堕,其衍几何?昆仑县圃,其尻安在?增城九重,其高几里?四方之门,其谁从焉?西北辟启,何气通焉?日安不到?烛龙何照?羲和之未扬,若华何光?何所冬暖?何所夏寒? 焉有石林?何兽能言?焉有虬龙、负熊以游?雄虺九首,鯈忽焉在?何所不死?长人何守?靡蓱九衢,枲华安居?灵蛇吞象,厥大何如?黑水、玄趾,三危安在?延年不死,寿何所止?鲮鱼何所?鬿堆焉处?羿焉彃日?乌焉解羽? 禹之力献功,降省下土四方。焉得彼嵞山女,而通之於台桑?闵妃匹合,厥身是继。胡为嗜不同味,而快朝饱? 启代益作后,卒然离蠥。何启惟忧,而能拘是达?皆归射鞠,而无害厥躬。何后益作革,而禹播降?启棘宾商,《九辨》、《九歌》。何勤子屠母,而死分竟地? 帝降夷羿,革孽夏民。胡射夫河伯,而妻彼雒嫔?冯珧利决,封豨是射。何献蒸肉之膏,而后帝不若?浞娶纯狐,眩妻爰谋。何羿之射革,而交吞揆之?阻穷西征,岩何越焉?化为黄熊,巫何活焉? 咸播秬黍,莆雚是营。何由并投,而鲧疾修盈? 白蜺婴茀,胡为此堂?安得夫良药,不能固臧?天式从横,阳离爰死。大鸟何鸣,夫焉丧厥体?蓱号起雨,何以兴之?撰体胁鹿,何以膺之?鼇戴山抃,何以安之?释舟陵行,何之迁之? 惟浇在户,何求于嫂?何少康逐犬,而颠陨厥首?女歧缝裳,而馆同爰止。何颠易厥首,而亲以逢殆?汤谋易旅,何以厚之?覆舟斟寻,何道取之? 桀伐蒙山,何所得焉?妹嬉何肆,汤何殛焉?舜闵在家,父何以鱞?尧不姚告,二女何亲?厥萌在初,何所意焉?璜台十成,谁所极焉?登立为帝,孰道尚之?女娲有体,孰制匠之?舜服厥弟,终然为害。何肆犬豕,而厥身不危败?吴获迄古,南岳是止。孰期去斯,得两男子? 缘鹄饰玉,后帝是飨。何承谋夏桀,终以灭丧?帝乃降观,下逢伊挚。何条放致罚,而黎服大说? 简狄在台,喾何宜?玄鸟致贻,女何喜, 该秉季德,厥父是臧。胡终弊于有扈,牧夫牛羊?干协时舞,何以怀之?平胁曼肤,何以肥之?有扈牧竖,云何而逢?击床先出,其命何从? 恆秉季德,焉得夫朴牛?何往营班禄,不但还来? 昏微遵迹,有狄不宁。何繁鸟萃棘,负子肆情?眩弟并淫,危害厥兄。何变化以作诈,而後嗣逢长? 成汤东巡,有莘爰极。何乞彼小臣,而吉妃是得?水滨之木,得彼小子。夫何恶之,媵有莘之妇?汤出重泉,夫何罪尤?不胜心伐帝,夫谁使挑之? 会晁争盟,何践吾期?苍鸟群飞,孰使萃之?列击纣躬,叔旦不嘉。何亲揆发,何周之命以咨嗟?授殷天下,其位安施?反成乃亡,其罪伊何?争遣伐器,何以行之?并驱击翼,何以将之? 昭后成游,南土爰底。厥利惟何,逢彼白雉? 穆王巧挴,夫何周流?环理天下,夫何索求? 妖夫曳衒,何号于市?周幽谁诛?焉得夫褒姒? 天命反侧,何罚何佑?齐桓九会,卒然身杀。 彼王纣之躬,孰使乱惑?何恶辅弼,谗谄是服?比干何逆,而抑沉之?雷开何顺,而赐封之?何圣人之一德,卒其异方:梅伯受醢,箕子详狂? 稷维元子,帝何竺之?投之於冰上,鸟何燠之?何冯弓挟矢,殊能将之?既惊帝切激,何逢长之? 伯昌号衰,秉鞭作牧。何令彻彼岐社,命有殷国?迁藏就岐,何能依?殷有惑妇,何所讥?受赐兹醢,西伯上告。何亲就上帝罚,殷之命以不救?师望在肆,昌何识?鼓刀扬声,后何喜?武发杀殷,何所悒?载尸集战,何所急?伯林雉经,维其何故?何感天抑坠,夫谁畏惧?皇天集命,惟何戒之?受礼天下,又使至代之? 初汤臣挚,後兹承辅。何卒官汤,尊食宗绪? 勋阖、梦生,少离散亡。何壮武历,能流厥严? 彭铿斟雉,帝何飨?受寿永多,夫何久长? 中央共牧,后何怒?蜂蛾微命,力何固?惊女采薇,鹿何祐?北至回水,萃何喜?兄有噬犬,弟何欲?易之以百两,卒无禄? 薄暮雷电,归何忧?厥严不奉,帝何求?伏匿穴处,爰何云?荆勋作师,夫何长?悟过改更,我又何言?吴光争国,久余是胜。何环穿自闾社丘陵,爰出子文?吾告堵敖以不长。何试上自予,忠名弥彰?

     

        关于《天问》的篇名,王递说:“《天问》是屈原的作品,为什么不直书问天,因为天是万物之尊,不能随便质问,故名天问。”这说法并不为后世学者所接受。游国恩说:“天问”就是天的问题。……天统万物,无所不包。一切天文地理人事的纷然杂陈,变化莫测的现象都可以统摄于天象天道之中,所以名曰“天问”。
       关于《天问》的写作,王逸又说:“屈原在流放过程中,心力憔悴,步履艰难,看到楚先王神庙和公卿饲堂的壁上,图画着天地山川,神灵圣贤和许许多多的怪物奇象。屈原仰天长叹.一边向老天提出疑问,一边写在壁上,因而有了《天问》这首长诗。”这说法也不为后世学者所赞同。郭沫若说:“这完全是揣测之辞。任何伟大的神庙,我不相信会有这么多的壁画,而且画出了天地开辟以前的无形无像。据我的了解,应该是屈原把自己对于自然和历史的批判,采取了问难的方式提出。他是受着强烈的创造欲所驱遣,存心作出一首奇特的诗。”郭老又说:“原作的奇妙是中国文学作品中所绝无仅有的。一口气提出170多个问题,从天地开辟以前问到天体的构造,地上的布置,从神话传说时代问到有史时代,从身外的一切问到作者自己,而问得那样参差历落,圆转活脱,一点也不呆滞,一点也不重复,这真表示了屈原的大本领。……通过这篇,可以看出屈原思想的博大和它的性质。屈原毫无疑问,是一位唯物的理智主义者,现实的人道主义者。他的宇宙观和人生观,代表着他所处的时代的进步一面。”《天问》是中国文学史上“空前绝后的第一等奇文字。……单就它替我们保存下来的真实的史料而言,也足抵得过五百篇《尚书》。”
        从《天问》中流露出来的愤怒和激情可以断定,《天问》是屈原在流放过程中的作品。在宫廷,他对楚国上流社会的腐败烂熟于心;流放途中,他对百姓的疾苦、思想、前途、命运有了更深刻的了解,这一切根源何在?罪魁祸首是谁?他要呐喊,要发问,要穷本溯源。可向谁呢?只有问天,问上帝,因为上帝是天的象征,是主宰一切的。上帝能回答他的提问吗?显然不能。于是去问历史人物,去从人生道路上寻找答案。历史人物早已盖棺定论,道德品行管不了卑鄙龌龊。往下只能问他自己了,而他自己正需要别人回答呢。尽管问了个痛快淋漓,却没有任何人回答他,只留下一篇奇特瑰伟的作品。这就是屈原,这就是《天问》。

    July 31

    许多看来不相关的事情其实都是相互关联的。

    “剥开表层后,保持好奇心,继续抽丝剥茧,也许会有意想不到的发现。”

                      “许多看来不相关的事情其实都是相互关联的。”