Sunday, December 13, 2009

A theory of Math and the Development of Early Man

Okay, this theory has been in my head for a few days. I got to get it out!


Do you know that a baby's perception of numbers are very different from ours? Babyies think of numbers and quantity COMPLETELY different than adults. And children have to be taught how to count. If they are never taught how to count, they would experience numbers logarithmically. The way we think of numbers is sort of... artificial.

Honestly, instead of me trying to explain how babies and an Amazon tribe thinks logarithmically, I'm going to stick this link to RadioLab.

Take a few minutes to listen from 04:00 to the end in order to understand what Robert Krullwich, Jad Abumrad and Lulu Miller can explain much more elegantly than I.

So, almost all children in the world learn this world of numbers from their parents/school/culture. But how did we come to count like this in the first place? Did the gods teach us? Aliens?

First off, let's dance.... with a bird.

A study was done on a bird to figure out if a bird was dancing (moving its body to the rhythm of a song) or just moving to noise or other ques so it just looks like its dancing. It showed that birds can indeed dance because it takes nerves and muscles control in order for a bird to create noise to communicate, dancing might be a side-effect. Sound effects muscles.

Again, I'm not the best to explain this study, Adena Schachner and Bob MacDonald are better at it, so here's a link to Quirks & Quarks. Or just listen to the mp3.


So, imagine the first tribes of man trying to make sense of the world. A shaman has the power to talk to the gods by doing a certain dance. If the shaman, most likely high on the autistic spectrum, does this dance that he created, the rains will come, the hunt will be good, the winter will end.

But the shaman is getting old and knows that some day he will die. If there's no one to do the dance, then the world will end. So he has to teach the next generation to dance this dance properly.

Now, I have personally done stage performance. I loosely call it "choreography" but I did need to learn a few acts.

And what's the easiest way to memorize a specific dance?

one - two - three - KICK
five - six - seven - TURN
nine - ten - eleven - STEP

So, through dance, early man thought of numbers as a sequence in time than as logarithmic quantity. And counting the beats "five - six - seven - eight" we were able to make the abstract connection between quantity and sequence.

And now we have math. The kind that eventually charted the stars and the days and the years. And then we got into measurements and geometry and calculus and physics.

I wonder if it would be easy for mathematician to learn the Cha-Cha?


...okay. I'm sure there might be a good argument against the "Dance Theory" because I wouldn't be surprised if that Amazon Tribe mentioned in RadioLab could dance. BUT dance is temporal. Time is, at least to us, sequential. So counting days might have also been a factor in the way we think of math. Think of it. Early man may have noticed that the Moon goes through its cycles. When the moon is full, its easiest to hunt at night. Then someone might have realized that it takes 28 days for the moon to cycle.

Anyway, these are just theories that might sound interesting in a comic or things I use to sound smart to my friends at a bar.

P.S. If any real scientists think I actually have something here, then put a link to my webcomics on the scientific paper you'll eventually write. www.theorofeverythingcomics.com If some other scientist had already written a paper on this, then it would be cool if you posted a link in the comments.

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Webcomic Beacon - 2 years, 100 episodes



At Webcomic Beacon they celebrated this week, their 2nd year of podcasting. They also featured my interpretation of their mascot, Becky, as this week cover image.

Check out their gallery to see the complete image.

Over the last year or so, they've been supportive of Theory of Everything Comics, so check them out.

Labels: , ,

Monday, August 10, 2009

Facebook Link Dump #2


























LOOKWELL! A failed pilot created by Conan O'Brien and Robert Smigel. Starring Adam West, a has-been actor who thinks he could solve crimes.




Inspirational Superhero Characters
http://mightygodking.com/index.php/2008/06/09/from-the-slushpile/



I want to build a Dreamachine
http://www.interpc.fr/mapage/westernlands/dreamachine.html





I hope I'm related to this guy.


Since most my family is in Bohol, I thought I'd put this up. Its a "nature reserve" (someones backyard) with a giant python and a girl (cross-dresser) as your tour guide. The first & last time I went here I was jetlagged, tired, confused and amused.











































UA (pronounced "ooh-ah") is this pop singer from japan. Her music is pretty eclectic. She started a children's show some years ago, so kids could learn Japanese children's songs.

...but damn!

She's exposing kids to some pretty sophisticated sounds. Those kids are lucky.

--and the parrot look works for her.


According to the New York Times, "The Grass-Mud Horse" is a mythical creature whose name in Chinese sounds like "f*ck your mother". Literally, lyrics are very harmless, but its actually a subversive song reacting to Chinese censorship (or "harmony").




World Science Festival 2009: Bobby McFerrin Demonstrates the Power of the Pentatonic Scale from World Science Festival on Vimeo.



The Death of President Corazon Aquino
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1914125,00.html?cnn=yes















SuperGreg - a staple of my art school memories
http://zmax.org/supergreg/sgdotcom/

This is pretty cool.
http://users.telenet.be/kixx/



Prison Inventions
http://www.sloshspot.com/blog/07-23-2009/The-Wonderful-World-of-Prison-Inventions-191





Photoshop Phriday: Make Fictional Animals Real
http://www.somethingawful.com/d/photoshop-phriday/fictional-animals-life.php?page=1









Radio Lab on the Afterlife
http://blogs.wnyc.org/radiolab/2009/07/27/after-life/























Labels: , , , , ,

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Press stuff

There's a nice little article about this years Eisner Digital Comics Nominees. You might not be eligible to vote for my comic for the Eisners, but you could at least vote for it on their little poll.

Visit suvudu.com and if you feel like voting for the underdog, vote for "Speak No Evil"

Also, at webcomicbeacon.com the mention "Speak No Evil" and "God(tm) (c) 2XX8 *** ***** ****** ******* Incorporated. All rights reserved. God and all related characters, titles, names and documents are trademarks of *** ***** ****** ******* Incorporated. No similarity between any of the names, characters, persons and/or institutions in this deity with those of any living or dead person or institutions is intended and any such similarity which may exist is purely coincidental." This is probably the first bit of press that-- what I wish to be the Theory of Everything Comics flagship (though it probably won't end up that way) has ever gotten.

It's probably because I'm telling everyone that its okay to just call it "God(tm)" and that the entire title would take up a good portion of the podcast.

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, April 13, 2009

Speak No Evil: Winner of a Beaky Award

The thing with Speak No Evil was that it felt like a neglected child who I thought had potential. Sure, the first born got all the attention and I was concentrating a lot of time on the youngest, but I knew that my middle child was special.

I'm proud to say that Speak No Evil: Melancholy of A Space Mexican is the recipient of the Webcomic Beacon Standalone Simplex Beaky Award. I didn't even know I was nominated because I haven't had time to check out the Webcomic Beacon podcast for a while.



Yes, the Eisners Awards are much more established and much bigger and you actually get a physical award. But my problem with Eisner's Best Digital Comics Award is that there should be more than one, like Best Daily Digital Comic or Best Digital Comic Story, etc. etc. I get the feeling that the judges who picked the nominees aren't that familiar with the webcomic world.

I've found a few blogs about the Eisner Digital Comics Nominees, complaining about how they've never heard of them. They talk about how there are much more popular webcomics that deserve an Eisner nomination.

But the Beakys are much more down-to-earth. The judges LOVE webcomics and the podcast helps me keep up with what's out there on the net and how much my website needs to be re-designed.

I like how they think my comic is good, but they seem very uncomfortable explaining why it is good.

I must be doing something right.



Basically, this award means acceptance from the burgeoning and evolving webcomics community. A community that might eventually take over the traditional print comics/comic shop system.

...but it would've been nice if they contacted me.

Hopefully, this might be a good barometer to the Eisner winner.

Check out their podcast.

Labels: , , , , ,

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Radiolab: Parabolas (etc.)

Labels: , ,

Friday, November 21, 2008

RadioLab

WNYC's RadioLab is my favorite radio show. Artistic. Intelligent. I wonder why this hasn't blown up like This American Life yet.

Recommended shows:
Memory and Forgetting

Laughter

Morality
Emergence

Labels: ,

Friday, October 17, 2008

Space Mexican at Webcomics Beacon

At the podcast Webcomics Beacon they did a short review of Speak No Evil: Melancholy of a Space Mexican.

Someones mic goes out in the middle of the review. I'm amused.

So check out their podcast. I'm always entertained by it, therefore, I will not tell you where to fast forward to, just so you can hear the review.

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, October 13, 2008

Who Owns Ideas?

At CBC's Ideas they have a great show about copyright. The history of it, the original intentions of copyright laws, and how that idea has changed/deteriorated over the years.

Basically, copyright was intended as a temporary incentive for artists to contribute to the culture. Nowadays, artists don't always seem to benefit from it.

Obviously, from the long long title of God™ © 2XX8 *** ***** ****** ******* Incorporated. All rights reserved. God and all related characters, titles, names and documents are trademarks of *** ***** ****** ******* Incorporated. No similarity between any of the names, characters, persons and/or institutions in this deity with those of any living or dead person or institutions is intended and any such similarity which may exist is purely coincidental. copyright will be a theme in the comic.


Check it out.

Labels: , ,

Monday, September 29, 2008

"The Devil and the Monk" on Project Shadow/Dash Punk

On the Project Shadow Podcast The Award winning "The Devil and The Monk", winner of the 2008 Elan Rodger Trinidad Award in Comic Book Excellence and Bad-assery, was mentioned.
This is a sort of metaphysical Wily Coyote story, and the end is classic.

According to C. E. Dorsett, Project Shadow guy and blogger on Dash Punk.

This is probably the first response where someone found the story more funny than they found it spiritually enlightening. At least he understood the Wily Coyote part, although he seemed to have remembered the beginning all mixed up. He wasn't a fan of my other comics (and strangely, Speak No Evil doesn't seem to get much attention, even though I feel like it was superior in artwork and story structure, plus the first part of God(tm) (c) 2XX8 *** ***** ****** ******* Incorporated. All rights reserved. God and all related characters, titles, names and documents are trademarks of *** ***** ****** ******* Incorporated. No similarity between any of the names, characters, persons and/or institutions in this deity with those of any living or dead person or institutions is intended and any such similarity which may exist is purely coincidental. has way better art, despite its incompleteness) that means, you ought to fast forward to 40 minutes in the podcast and skip everything else!

Labels: , , ,

Sunday, August 24, 2008

The Devil & The Monk reviewed on Comixetreme.com

At Comixtreme.com the award winning The Devil and the Monk
(winner of The 2008 Elan' Rodger Trinidad Award in Comic Book Excellence and Bad-assery) was Chase's pick of the week.

Check out the podcast. They mention The Devil and the Monk at the end. But this episode is devoted to Plastic Man and I love Plastic Man. So I'm not going to be a douche bag and tell you where to fast forward to.

UNFORTUNATELY

They got the name of the website wrong and their links to my site are wrong.

Oh well, this is what I get for creating very long domain names. Imagine if there was a domain name for my new comic (which I'm coloring at three in the morning-- I abandoned a nice little party in Little Tokyo for this. AND I got a Comics Crit Meetup tomorrow) it would be:

http://www.godtrademarkcopyright2XX8xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxincorporatedallrightsreservedgodandallrelatedcharacterstitlesnamesanddocumentsaretrademarksofxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxincorporatednosimilaritybetweenanyofthenamescharacterspersonsandorinstitutionsinthisdeitywiththoseofanylivingordeadpersonorinstitutionsisintendedandanysuchsimilaritywhichmayexistispurelycoincidental.com

Y'know, it took me a while to delete all the spaces, just for you. I hope you appreciate all my hard work, especially for the thirty or so people who've subscribed to this blog.

They also mispronounced my name, but I'm used to that. Hell, technically my parents mispronounce my name, and they're the ones that randomly picked it from a baby book.

Hopefully, by the time you check out the site, they'd have corrected the links. If not, then we'll start an e-mail letter writing campaign.

Update: They fixed the link.

Labels: , ,