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[patterns-discussion] Lecture on Patterns by Richard Gabriel "The Nature of Order" VUB 23/02/2010


Chronological Thread 
  • From: Pascal Costanza <pc AT p-cos.net>
  • To: Patterns-Discussion <patterns-discussion AT cs.uiuc.edu>
  • Subject: [patterns-discussion] Lecture on Patterns by Richard Gabriel "The Nature of Order" VUB 23/02/2010
  • Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 13:03:27 +0100
  • List-archive: <http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/patterns-discussion>
  • List-id: General talk about software patterns <patterns-discussion.cs.uiuc.edu>

Dear Patternites,


I forward the following announcement by Charlotte Herzeel to you. The event
is going to take place at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Pleinlaan 2, 1050
Brussels, Belgium.

************

The Software Languages Lab cordially invites you to attend a lecture on
Patterns by Richard Gabriel, Distinguished Engineer at IBM Research, founding
member of the patterns community, and widely known for his work on Artificial
Intelligence, object-oriented programming and the OOPSLA conferences, Common
Lisp and the Common Lisp Object System, and his drive to push computer
science forward into radical new directions.

Date: February 23rd 2010 (Tuesday), from 2-5 pm.
Location: Software Languages Lab, VUB, room 10F720.

Attendance is free, however we kindly ask you to register by replying to this
email
tolectures AT soft.vub.ac.be
(preferably before February 15th).
(mailto:charlotte.herzeel AT vub.ac.be
for questions)

Please find the abstract and title of the talk below.

************

The Nature of Order

Christopher Alexander is best known to computer scientists and software
engineers for his work on pattern languages. This work inspired the classic
"Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software," by Eric
Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, and John Vlissides, as well as the
software patterns community and its dozens if not hundreds of patterns books
and 5 conferences a year.

Alexander is an architect whose real interest lies in understanding the
nature of beauty and its objective reality. This project has held his
attention for over 30 years and culminated in the publication of his
gargantuan 4-book essay called "The Nature of Order." In it he attempts
nothing short of proposing a new scientific method and cosmology to replace
the Cartesian / reductionist / mechanistic approach to science and the
neutral underlying space-time-matter view of the world; and while he's at it,
he proposes a *common sense* way to understand the incomprehensible
mathematics of quantum mechanics. (Along the way he also unifies science,
art, and the spiritual.)

We once believed his ideas had something to do with how to design and build
software, and the metaphor of software creation and architecture & the
built-world is still strong. His ideas about centers, life, & wholeness; the
Fundamental Process; the 15 structure-preserving transformations; deep and
personal feeling as a valid scientific means of observation; sequences and
the process of unfolding; the fundamental unity of function and ornament;
patterns as generic centers; the subdued brilliance of color; the underlying
"ground," "plenum," Self, and "the I"; and his use of sadness to find beauty
are hard to understand without understanding all of his work - his many and
convoluted books, papers, and essays, and the buildings he's built - and even
the arc of his life. He is a maddeningly simplistic, complex, and frustrating
man, filled with a luminous beauty painted in grayed storm-swept colors.

I have taken the time, over the past nearly 20 years, to (try to) understand
his work, and to a degree the man. This talk - not the talk itself but the
ideas in it - will leave you confused, profoundly smarter, reeling, in
despair, and suffused by joy about what is possible for us in software and
programming. Whenever I speak of Alexander and his work, I feel like a
shimmering bright and deceptive Prometheus.

************

Bio: Richard P. Gabriel is a Distinguished Engineer (sic re: the engineer
part at least) at IBM Research.http://dreamsongs.com or:

"Black Out"

A tavern in Old Europe. Late in the evening. Participants at a psychology
conference chat.

Canadian: In fact I mostly go to computer science conferences.
American: Really, is there anything interesting to discuss?
C: Well, sometimes there is. I have high hopes for this conference called
"Onward!".
A: What is it about?
C: All kinds of things. It was started by Richard Gabriel, and he...
A: Who?
C: Gabriel.
A: You mean Richard Gabriel the *poet*???

Curtain.

*************

Kind Regards,

Charlotte Herzeel
Lectures@Software
Languages Lab

--
Pascal Costanza,
mailto:pc AT p-cos.net,
http://p-cos.net
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Software Languages Lab
Pleinlaan 2, B-1050 Brussel, Belgium











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