Somewhere, most likely Scientific American or Discover, I read the story of a monk who spent a great deal of time calculating and drawing out some sort of fractal pattern (something, the article asserted, assumed to be far too tedious without modern computer calculating power). However, I have forgotten exactly where I read the story, as well as the circumstances of the story and the name of the monk. Searches on Google have revealed little but my own inability to find things using Google.
So, who was this monk? What was the significance of what he did? Or am I imagining this entire story in some weird fever-dream?
I’m sure most of the people reading this realize that the whole Mandelbrot Monk thing is a hoax (note the date on it), but maybe I should mention it since we’re supposed to be fighting ignorance here.
Bob’s right. John Allen Paulos, the ABC News columnist and
Temple U math professor, wrote an article about Udo on April 1st of this year and includes this postscript:
Before I had read this it sounded absolutely convincing to me, but then I started noticing all the weird stuff like “O fröhliche Weihnacht”, which is contemporary High German, used in a 13th century painting or the monk’s friend named Thelonius (famous Jazz pianist).
It’s a hoax, but still damn cool!”
Memo to self: always add “hoax” to the words in a Google search when the data mentions April 1st.
The hoax was presumably inspired by plate C1 in Mandelbrot’s The Fractal Geometry of Nature, which reproduces the frontispiece of a Bible Moralisee, dating from 1220-50 and now in the Austrian National Library. It shows God, armed with a pair of compasses, creating the heavens, with the shapes involved being distinctly reminiscent of fractals. Mandelbrot calls them “wiggles” and doesn’t press the parallel further.