Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Tech Tuesday: The Man Who Tried to Hold Infinity

A Cold War Episode That's Never Been Told

Dr. Franklin “Sandy” Reeves believed, above all else, that nothing was perfect. Not the meter in Paris. Not the constants in textbooks. Not even the speed of light — though he would never say that out loud in a room full of physicists.

“Nothing is perfect,” he would mutter, tapping a yellow legal pad. “That’s the first fundamental.”


He worked for MITRE, which meant he worked for the Pentagon without quite admitting it. In 1962, the problem on his desk was simple enough: determine how accurately a fighter-bomber could hit its target using a forward-pointed laser and a corner reflector beyond the objective.


The mathematics were straightforward. The field intensity should vary as r⁻⁴. That’s what the textbooks said. That’s what the instructors had said.


But Sandy had a habit of looking more closely.


After the test run, he slipped a 16-inch reel of streak film into a standard projector — not because it was required, but because curiosity had always been his private religion. He watched the beam flare and fade as the aircraft crossed from far field to near field. 


Then he stopped the projector.


The intensity had doubled.


Leaning close with a magnifying glass, he saw. It doubled far too quickly.


He sat back and pondered. If the mathematics were correct, the film was wrong.

If the film were correct, the math would be incomplete.


He went home that night and began scribbling. What if light carried mass — not convertible mass, not E=mc² in the tidy classroom sense, but a companion mass that had to be accelerated from zero at the antenna? What if the outward flow of energy was not merely radiation, but acceleration?


--Mass times distance equals force.

--Energy equals hν.

--Set Planck’s constant equal to one — the convenient dodge. Let grams, centimeters, and seconds collapse into unity. c = g = s = 1.


He circled it twice. If the variables reduced, then the universe reduced. And if the universe reduced, perhaps the equations could be added — mass side and electromagnetic side — into one structure. Two triplets of differential equations. Add them properly and you reach it: A Theory of Everything. 


He wrote it in the margin once. Then crossed it out.


He wasn’t a crank. He worked with hardware. He built a computer for aircraft — a pulser amplifier circuit using a new planar transistor designed by a brilliant MIT graduate. The fall-time problem vanished. The pulses were clean. Too clean.

Some transistors were so fast that the flip-flops double-triggered and canceled themselves out. A machine that thought so quickly it thought nothing at all.

Sandy laughed when he realized it.


“Too perfect,” he said. “And perfection is impossible.”


The solution was human. Three technicians traveled with every unit. He went with them to the high-altitude test chamber so they wouldn’t balk. He passed the test.


Later, the USSR fielded intercontinental missiles and bombers became relics overnight.


The machine he had built — ounces shaved, circuits refined, technicians trained — became unnecessary and irrelevant.


He didn't rage. As usual, he returned to his notes. "Infinity," he had written, "does not mean forever. It means you can always name a number larger than the last. Energy flows from high to low until equilibrium."


Somewhere in the infinity of space, he believed, every extremum existed: 10⁻¹⁰ grams, 10¹⁰ grams; 10⁻¹⁰ seconds, 10¹⁰ seconds. The universe of universes had always been. Would always be.


Late one evening Sandy closed his notebook and looked out the window at a Maryland sky buzzing faintly with unseen transmissions. If mass and energy were twins, if fields rose and fell faster than predicted, if constants were conveniences — then perhaps the universe was not a finished equation but a balancing act of perpetual motion. Never perfect. Never still. Never ending.


Photos by the author. Galileo Museum, Florence


THIS STORY IS A WORK OF FICTION

Sunday, March 1, 2026

When You Gonna Wake Up?

1979 was a dramatic year in Bob-land. Slow Train Coming marked a rather surprising turn in Bob Dylan’s career, kicking off his gospel period. This first of three Gospel inspired and infused albums, Slow Train was produced by Jerry Wexler and featured Mark Knopfler on guitar. The album blends polished blues-rock with overtly Christian themes, earning Dylan a Grammy for “Gotta Serve Somebody” and sparking both acclaim and controversy.

“When You Gonna Wake Up?” is not subtle. It's a jeremiad set to music — urgent, accusatory, and unapologetically moral. (To younger readers: do you know the origin of the word "jeremiad?")

The song functions as a wake-up call to a culture Dylan saw drifting into spiritual and moral confusion. He indicts political ideologies (“Karl Marx has got ya by the throat”), moral compromise (“adulterers in churches”), corrupt institutions, and a society obsessed with wealth and self-gratification. The refrain — “When you gonna wake up and strengthen the things that remain?”— echoes the language of Revelation, reinforcing the song’s prophetic tone.


What makes the song powerful is not its policy commentary but its spiritual urgency. Dylan’s target is not merely government or culture; it's human hearts. He challenges listeners to reconsider their assumptions about God, materialism, and moral responsibility. The line “You think He’s just an errand boy to satisfy your wandering desires” addresses a lot of people's ideas about God. 


My personal feeling is that even if you're put off by the religious iconography, the repetitious refrain is exceedingly relevant in secular applications as well. Does your life feel stale, like you're drifting? When you gonna wake up? Are you drinking too much, partying too hard, eating too much, wasting too much time doing nothing? Ignoring responsibilities? Too absorbed in your self? When you gonna wake up? When are you going to do something about it?


Critics have sometimes faulted Dylan’s Gospel-era songs for their bluntness. And indeed, this is not the elliptical Dylan of “Visions of Johanna” or the ambiguity-laden "All Along The Watchtower." 


“When You Gonna Wake Up?” is both a fierce cultural critique and a personal challenge — less concerned with pleasing listeners than with shaking them. Whether one agrees with its theology or not, its urgency is unmistakable. 


When You Gonna Wake Up?

WRITTEN BY: BOB DYLAN


God don’t make no promises that He don’t keep

You got some big dreams, baby, but in order to dream you gotta still be asleep


Refrain: When you gonna wake up, when you gonna wake up

When you gonna wake up and strengthen the things that remain?


Counterfeit philosophies have polluted all of your thoughts

Karl Marx has got ya by the throat, Henry Kissinger’s got you tied up in knots


Refrain: When you gonna wake up...


(EdNote: Here Dylan frames ideology itself as a kind of captivity. “Counterfeit philosophies” suggests systems of thought that promise liberation but ultimately distort reality, something akin to a fog machine. By invoking Karl Marx and Henry Kissinger, Dylan spans the political spectrum—leftist economic theory on one side, realpolitik power politics on the other. In hindsight I've wondered if the word "realpolitik" was invented to distance the name from what it really is: Machiavellianism.) 


You got innocent men in jail, your insane asylums are filled

You got unrighteous doctors dealing drugs that’ll never cure your ills


Refrain: When you gonna wake up...


You got men who can’t hold their peace and women who can’t control their tongues

The rich seduce the poor and the old are seduced by the young


Refrain: When you gonna wake up...


Adulterers in churches and pornography in the schools

You got gangsters in power and lawbreakers making rules


Refrain: When you gonna wake up...


Do you ever wonder just what God requires?

You think He’s just an errand boy to satisfy your wandering desires


Refrain: When you gonna wake up...


You can’t take it with you and you know that it’s too worthless to be sold

They tell you, “Time is money,” as if your life was worth its weight in gold


Refrain: When you gonna wake up...


There’s a Man up on a cross and He’s been crucified

Do you have any idea why or for who He died?


Refrain: When you gonna wake up...


Copyright © 1979 by Special Rider Music

Saturday, February 28, 2026

A Conflict of World Views

I'm currently reading Thomas Sowell's The Vision of the Anointed, and it packs a punch. Last weekend I mentioned my attraction to contrarians, not for the sake of being contrary, but for the very reasons highlighted in this book. In chapter one Sowell lays out his case:

Different visions, of course, have different assumptions, so it is not uncommon for people who follow different visions to find themselves in opposition to one another across a vast spectrum of unrelated issues, in such disparate fields as law, foreign policy, the environment, racial policy, military defense, education, and many others. To a remarkable extent, however, empirical evidence is neither sought beforehand nor consulted after a policy has been instituted. Facts may be marshalled for a position already taken, but that is very different from systematically testing opposing theories by evidence. Momentous questions are dealt with essentially as conflicts of visions.


The focus here will be on one particular vision—the vision prevailing among the intellectual and political elite of our time. What is important about that vision are not only its particular assumptions and their corollaries, but also the fact that it is a prevailing vision--which means that its assumptions are so much taken for granted by so many people, including so-called "thinking people," that neither those assumptions nor their corollaries are generally confronted with demands for empirical evidence. Indeed, empirical evidence itself may be viewed as suspect, insofar as it is inconsistent with that vision.


For those unfamiliar with Thomas Sowell, he was born in 1930 and raised in Harlem. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps during the Korean War and later earned degrees from Harvard, Columbia, and the University of Chicago, where he studied under Milton Friedman. An American economist, political thinker, and author, his work spans economics, history, education, race, and social policy. He became a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and wrote more than 40 books, including Basic EconomicsA Conflict of Visions, and The Vision of the Anointed. His work emphasizes trade-offs, incentives, and empirical analysis in public policy.


Bottom Line: Reality and Truth are more important than intentions and pipe dreams.


* * *


A little further on Sowell cites examples of various issues in the public square where conflicting visions compete with regard to government policies. 

What all these highly disparate crusades have in common is their moral exaltation of the anointed above others, who are to have their very different views nullified and superseded by the views of the anointed, imposed via the power of government. Despite the great variety of issues in a series of crusading movements among the intelligentsia during the twentieth century, several key elements have been common to most of them:


1. Assertions of a great danger to the whole society, a danger to which the masses of people are oblivious.


2. An urgent need for action to avert impending catastrophe.


3. A need for government to drastically curtail the dangerous behavior of the many, in response to the prescient conclusions of the few.


4. A disdainful dismissal of arguments to the contrary as either uninformed, irresponsible, or motivated by unworthy purposes.


How many times have we seen this show through the years. Same script, different issues, same game.  As Dylan put it "When you gonna wake up?"


Sowell’s warning is simple but bracing. When visions replace evidence, intentions replace results, and elites exempt their assumptions from scrutiny, society drifts from reality. Policies must be judged by outcomes, not moral fervor. Truth is not decided by consensus, urgency, or status—but by facts.

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Curiosity: Another BIG Word

My most recent Marketing Matters column for Business North highlighted four big words, noteworthy for their depth and broad application. The idea was extracted from weekly meetings with the late Dan Hansen as we plotted and developed what we'd hoped would be an epic Wild West novel. 

It wasn't a long list yet, but it was strong. While reading the history of math in James D. Nickel's Mathematics: Is God Silent? it became apparent that curiosity was a major feature of nearly all advances in math, science and human understanding. Why does an apple fall and not go up? Why does the sun rise in the east and set in the west? Why does the Fibonacci sequence keep repeating itself throughout nature?

Curiosity is one of the great engines of civilization. Long before formal science or organized philosophy, human beings were asking questions: What lies beyond the horizon? Why do the seasons change? What causes illness? How do the stars move across the sky? That restless impulse to know more—to look past the obvious and probe the unknown—has propelled nearly every significant advance in human history.

The earliest explorers were driven not merely by necessity, but by wonder. Seafaring cultures pushed into open water without certainty of what awaited them. Their curiosity expanded maps, connected continents, and reshaped economies. The same impulse animated the thinkers of ancient Greece, who refused to explain the world solely through myth and instead sought rational patterns behind natural phenomena. From those inquiries came philosophy, mathematics, and the foundations of democratic thought.

Curiosity also transformed medicine. Questions about the causes of disease gradually replaced superstition with observation and experiment. The scientific revolution emerged from individuals willing to doubt inherited assumptions and test them against evidence. Curiosity drove men to create telescopes and microscopes to explore the skies above and the incredibly tiny phenomenon invisible to the naked eye. Telescopes, microscopes and later the laboratory were tools born of the desire to see more clearly and understand more deeply.

Technological innovation followed the same pattern. The steam engine, electricity, flight, and digital computing all began with someone asking, “What if?” 


Civilizations stagnate when curiosity is suppressed; they flourish when inquiry is encouraged. Businesses and people likewise.


[EdNote: In light of these things, it's a curious thing that we warn people against being too curious by repeating the maxim, "Curiosity killed the cat." Where are the admonitions to be curious?]


Importantly, curiosity is not mere idle speculation. It requires humility—the recognition that we do not yet know—and courage—the willingness to challenge established ideas. It invites risk, but it also opens possibility.

Dan Hansen's fundamental motivational driver was this insatiable curiosity. If you're feeling a measure of deadness inside, it may be because you've become trapped in your routines. Routine dulls the senses; curiosity sharpens them. It pulls us out of autopilot and into engagement.

Curiosity makes us feel more alive because it awakens us to possibility. When we ask questions, explore new ideas, or notice something unfamiliar, the world expands.  To be curious is to lean forward into life rather than drift through it.

Think about it.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

If Plato Existed, Why Not Jesus?

"Ecce Homo" ~ Behold, the Man
Antonio Ciseri
Ideas outlive empires.

Athens has long since fallen, the Roman Empire a ruin. Yet the ideas forged in those civilizations still shape our laws, politics and moral vocabulary. Plato continues to influence philosophy classrooms. Aristotle still frames logic and ethics. No one seriously questions whether they existed.


And yet, from time to time, one still hears the claim: Jesus never existed. That's always struck me as odd.

Consider Plato. He died around 347 BC. Yet the earliest complete manuscripts of his works date to roughly the ninth century AD — about 1,200 years after his death. We possess fragments from earlier centuries, but the substantial copies that survived are medieval. And no one loses sleep over this.


But let's pursue this further.


On a number of occasions over the years I've heard people defend the existence of Jesus by citing the historians Josephus (c. 37-100) and Tacitus (c. 56-120). Both of these scholars lived within a generation or two of those historical first century events, each one making references to Jesus. Josephus wrote of "Jesus who was called Christ" and Tacitus referred to him a "Christus," who was executed under Pontius Pilate. These historic references are widely accepted as genuine by an overwhelming majority of classical scholars.


As for authenticity, the pattern for these ancient historians is identical to the Greek philosophers. Tacitus, the Roman historian who wrote in the early second century, survives in manuscripts dating roughly 800–900 years after he wrote. Josephus, the Jewish historian of the first century, is preserved in copies from roughly 900 years later.


Modern historians accept their existence and their writings without hesitation.


Now compare that with the New Testament. The New Testament documents were written in the first century — roughly between 50 and 100 AD. The earliest fragment of the Gospel of John dates to around 125–150 AD — within decades of composition. Large portions of the Gospels and Paul’s letters survive from the second and third centuries. By the fourth century, we have nearly complete codices of the entire New Testament.


In other words, the manuscript gap for the New Testament is measured in decades and centuries — not nearly a millennium.


From a purely textual standpoint, the New Testament is one of the best-attested bodies of literature in the ancient world. Thousands of Greek manuscripts survive, along with thousands more in Latin, Syriac, and other languages.


None of this proves theology. Nor does it prove miracles. Or the resurrection. But it does make one narrow point very difficult to avoid: Jesus of Nazareth was a real historical person. 


If we accept the existence of Plato based on manuscript transmission, and Tacitus based on later copies, and Josephus based on medieval preservation, then it is inconsistent to deny Jesus’ existence on documentary grounds.


One may reject Christianity, dispute doctrine or argue about interpretation, but to claim that Jesus never lived requires applying a radically different historical standard to him than we apply to every other figure of antiquity. 


Which begs the question, why are people so adamant about denying his existence? 


Empires fall. Manuscripts decay. But ideas endure — and so do the records of the men who first carried them into the world. Denying that Jesus did the same is not bold scholarship. It's simply unreasonable.

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