If you didn't know already, the author of "A Wrinkle In Time" and several other classic young adult books, Madeleine L'Engle, died last week. (the NY Times did a nice article.)
With that one book, she managed to have more of a profound impact on my life than any other author in current memory. Although the science was extremely fuzzy in the interests of fiction, I credit this novel with my first exposure to concepts of genetics and higher dimensional physics. Thus began a long happy time reading science fiction and noodling around in avenues of real science.
As for that esoteric fourth dimension, NPR recently produced a segment that does a good job of explaining the basics. I still wish there were better methods for building tesseract models as 3D projections than I can find online...
Posted by rick at September 11, 2007 03:17 PM | More Geeky Stuff