The Art of writing

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa


    10 reasons why Shakespeare could be a fraud!

    Don't know what the truth is but the points are worth thinking about!

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    100 Aberdeen Street, Northbridge, Western Australia Combining current collaborative book projects between artists and writers from a variety of backgrounds with a survey of historical and contemporary Western Australian photographic books, two exhibitions investigate the relationship between books, photographs and the textual form.

    http://www.lethologicapress.org/teapot/?p=1864

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Creative imagination and inventiveness have always been hallmarks of good science, just as of good writing. Writers must conform to certain recognized truths about human nature, just as scientists must conform to truths about non-human nature.

    Both the novelist and the scientist are seeking truth. For the novelist, this truth is related to the world of the mind and the heart, for the scientist the truth in the world of the subject he is investigating or studying.

    For instance gravity is equivalent to acceleration, hangs together like a work of art. You’ve all seen paintings or musical compositions where you felt you couldn’t remove one brush stroke or change one note without severely altering the work.

    scientists and artists share the mixed blessing and burden of the creative life and the thrill of what we call the creative moment — the “aha” moment when a scientist finally realizes the missing piece in some troubling problem. Scientists and artists do what they do because they love it and because they cannot imagine doing anything else.

    The important difference between the two pursuits is that science requires a high level of certainty, while writing or painting requires a degree of abstraction.

    Scientists try to name things, but artists try to avoid naming things. Much of the game of science is to pose a problem with enough precision and clarity so that it is guaranteed a solution.

    Artists often don’t care what the answer is because definite answers often don’t exist. For many artists, the question is more important than the answer.

    Another thing that distinguishes the processes of art and science: Every electron is identical, but every love is different.

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Gedankenexperiment or gedankenexperiment

    PRONUNCIATION:
    (guh-DAHNG-kuhn-ik-SPER-uh-muhnt)

    MEANING:
    noun: A thought experiment: an experiment carried out in imagination only.

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    http://www.theaterjones.com/features/20120514075612/2012-05-14/Scie...

    Science as Theater Catalyst

    Author and physicist Alan Lightman, speaking at Arts & Letters Live this week, on collaborative theater, science.

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Feel I'm goin' back to Massachusetts.
    Something's telling me I must go home.
    And the lights all went out in Massachusetts
    The day I left her standing on her own.

    Tried to hitch a ride to San Francisco.
    Gotta do the things I wanna do.
    And the lights all went out in Massachusetts
    They brought me back to see my way with you.

    Talk about the life in Massachusetts.
    Speak about the people I have seen.
    And the lights all went out in Massachusetts,
    And Massachusetts is one place I have seen

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Lyrics-

    Nights in white satin,
    Never reaching the end,
    Letters Ive written,
    Never meaning to send.

    Beauty Id always missed
    With these eyes before,
    Just what the truth is
    I cant say anymore.

    cause I love you,
    Yes, I love you,
    Oh, how, I love you.

    Gazing at people,
    Some hand in hand,
    Just what Im going thru
    They can understand.

    Some try to tell me
    Thoughts they cannot defend,
    Just what you want to be
    You will be in the end,

    And I love you,
    Yes, I love you,
    Oh, how, I love you.
    Oh, how, I love you.

    Nights in white satin,
    Never reaching the end,
    Letters Ive written,
    Never meaning to send.

    Beauty Id always missed
    With these eyes before,
    Just what the truth is
    I cant say anymore.

    cause I love you,
    Yes, I love you,
    Oh, how, I love you.
    Oh, how, I love you.

    cause I love you,
    Yes, I love you,
    Oh, how, I love you.
    Oh, how, I love you

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Writing like a scientist is different from writing like an artist or a writer!
    Yes, read this article:
    http://sciencecareers.sciencemag.org/career_magazine/previous_issue...

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Comment by Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa just now
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    http://www.thehindu.com/features/the-yin-thing/writing-and-experime...
    Writing and experimenting
    In Britain’s often ill-tempered culture wars where—like Twain scientists and literary intellectuals are destined never to meet, Sunetra Gupta is among the exceptions: a well-known scientist and an equally well-known writer. She has just been honoured for her contribution to science but through the medium of art!

    Professor Gupta was among a select group of female scientists whose specially commissioned portrait sketches were shown at the Royal Society’s "Great Women in Science’’ show as part of its prestigious summer science exhibition in London. A rare honour, it confirmed her status as a true representative of C. P. Snow’s "two cultures" _ someone who is able so effortlessly to straddle the perceived gap between science and art.

    Like Snow, she doesn’t see a division between art and science and believes that they are simply different ways of expressing ideas.

    "A mathematical equation can be as beautiful as a Keats’ poem," she said in a BBC interview.

    Asked whether she saw herself primarily as a scientist or a novelist, Prof Gupta, who has written five novels one of which was long listed for the Orange Prize, replied: "I think of myself as both. What I want to do is to shed some sort of light—some minor illumination—on human condition. I use different languages to explore it. I think certain languages are more appropriate like the language of mathematics for understanding the physical world—and other languages such as poetry are more appropriate when you are trying to understand what’s going on inside yourself."

    Her inclusion in the art show was specifically a recognition of her achievements as a woman scientist in an environment that is not exactly friendly to female professionals.

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    I just read a dumb article about rituals of writers. Dumb because I never practice any rituals before writing. Writing itself gives a kick and I don't need any other! Your brain burns, burns, burns and burns and it can be cooled down and get relieved only when you put all that fuel on a piece of paper! It is all in your mind, if you can't read your own mind, yes, you need external assistance!

    You can read the article there: http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/literally-psyched/2013/08/12/ca...

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=how-a-computer-pro...
    How a Computer Program Helped Reveal J. K. Rowling as Author of A Cuckoo’s Calling

    Author of the Harry Potter books has a distinct linguistic signature

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=writing-can-help-i...
    Writing Can Help Injuries Heal Faster

    Expressive writing may lead to faster recovery from injury

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa