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- Fractals
Provide Unusual Theme In
Much African Culture And Art
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- Reported July 28, 1999
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- COLUMBUS, Ohio-- In
everything from braided hairstyles to the design of housing settlements,
the geometric structures known as fractals permeate African culture.
In a new book, an Ohio State University scholar examines the
unlikely pairing of this mathematical concept and the culture
and art of Africa.
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- "While fractal
geometry is often used in high-tech science, its patterns are
surprisingly common in traditional African designs," said
Ron Eglash, senior lecturer in comparative studies in the humanities.
Eglash is author of African Fractals: Modern Computing and Indigenous
Design. Eglash said his work suggests that African mathematics
is more complex than previously thought.
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- He also says using
African fractals in U.S. classrooms may boost interest in math
among students, particularly African Americans. He has developed
a Web page to help teachers use fractal geometry in the classroom.
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- Fractals are geometric
patterns that repeat on ever-shrinking scales. Many natural objects,
like ferns, tree branches, and lung bronchial systems are shaped
like fractals.
-
- Fractals can also be
seen in many of the swirling patterns produced by computer graphics,
and have become an important new tool for modeling in biology,
geology, and other natural sciences.
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- In African Fractals,
Eglash discusses fractal patterns that appear in widespread components
of indigenous African culture, from braided hairstyles and kente
cloth to counting systems and the design of homes and settlements.
Other researchers have studied bits and pieces of African mathematics
in areas such as art, architecture, and religious practices,
but Eglash said this is the first attempt to describe the common
theme of fractal geometry among several different African cultures.
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- "There is no singular
'reason' why Africans use fractals, any more than a singular
reason why Americans like rock music," Eglash noted in his
book. "Such enormous cultural practices just cover too much
social terrain."
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- He began this research
in the 1980s when he noticed the striking fractal patterns in
aerial photos of African settlements: circles of circular houses,
rectangles inside rectangles, and streets branching like trees.
Eglash confirmed his visual intuition by calculating the geometry
of the arrangements in the photos, they were indeed fractal.
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- At first he thought
that only unconscious social dynamics were responsible. Later,
however, he received a Fulbright grant for field work in west
and central Africa, and found during his travels that fractals
were a deliberate part of many African cultures' artistic expressions
and counting systems, too.
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- In one chapter, Eglash
described an ivory hatpin from the Democratic Republic of the
Congo that is decorated with carvings
of faces. The faces
alternate direction and are arranged in rows that shrink progressively
toward the end of the pin. Eglash determined that the design
matches a fractal-like sequence of squares where the length of
the line that bisects one square determines the length of the
side of the following square.
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- In another chapter,
he illustrated how divination priests of the Bamana people in
Dakar, Senegal, calculate fortunes using a recursively generated
binary code. Eglash explained that diviners use base-two arithmetic,
just like the ones and zeros in digital circuits, and bring each
output of the arithmetic procedure back in as the next input.
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- This produces a string
of symbols that the priests then interpret as the client's fortune.
This technique is similar to a kind of random number generation
in computing, Eglash said, and the Bamana's technique can produce
over 65,000 numbers before the sequence repeats.
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- While fractals can
be found in cultures on other continents -- Celtic knots are
one example -- fractals are particularly prevalent in Africa.
Eglash pointed out that this does not mean African mathematics
is more complex than Western mathematics, or that African cultures
are "closer to nature" because fractals are present
in nature -- these sweeping conclusions are just plain incorrect,
he said.
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- "Creating a body
of mathematics is about intellectual labor, not some kind of
transcendental revelation. There are plenty of important components
of European fractal geometry that are missing from the African
version," Eglash said. On the other hand, Eglash maintained,
his work does show that African mathematics is much more complex
than previously thought.
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- Knowing fractal geometry
enables scientists to model complex processes in biology, chemistry,
and geography on computer. It also helps generate realistic computer
images of natural features such as rugged terrain or tangled
tree branches. Still, most schools teach classical geometry,
the study of simple shapes like circles or squares, not fractal
geometry, Eglash said.
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- In studies of African-American
students' poor math performance, researchers have suggested that
computer-based teaching methods or the presentation of real-world
math applications might encourage students to learn more. According
to Eglash, the use of African fractals in math classes could
combine both solutions.
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- Eglash's Web page contains
links for obtaining both commercial products related to African
fractals as well as free materials. For example, he has just
written a program that allows students who visit the page to
interact with a computer simulation of the patterns in cornrow
hairstyles.
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- Even without computers,
Eglash said, students can still learn about Fractals using common
school supplies. In his book he explained how to fold a piece
of paper to demonstrate the geometry of a traditional African
tie-dye method, for example.
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- The Web page also has
some materials that teachers can print out and use with their
students. One lesson shows how students can derive fractal equations
from their own photos of cornrow braid patterns using a protractor
and some simple calculations.
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- Eglash cautioned that
African-American students won't automatically be interested in
fractals simply because they appear in African designs. He suggests
that the most powerful potential of African fractal geometry
comes from its opposition to biological determinism, the assumption
that math ability is genetically determined.
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- "Just think how
often students are told by parents, 'Oh, don't worry about your
bad scores, I was no good at math either.'" Such myths have
their most devastating impact on minority children, Eglash said,
but he makes a distinction between this kind of argument and
more simplistic models of identity or self-esteem.
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- For instance, when
Eglash introduced fractal geometry to a class of 12-year-old
African-American students at a 1996 urban youth conference, the
students used traditional African fractals only as inspiration
for creating new designs of their own.
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- "The best thing
we can do is give students the tools for constructing their own
identities, powerful new tools like African fractals, and then
just get out of the way," Eglash said.
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- Learning and creating designs
with African Fractals
- http://www.rpi.edu/~eglash/eglash.dir/afractal/afractal.htm
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- Note:
If you wish to quote from any part of this story, please credit
- Ohio
State University as the original source.
- Source:
Ohio State University (http://www.acs.ohio-state.edu/)
- Editor's
Note: The original news release can be found
- at
http://www.acs.ohio-state.edu/units/research/archive/fractal.htm
-
-
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