Symmetry: The Ordering Principle

Symmetry: The Ordering Principle

by David Wade
Symmetry: The Ordering Principle

Symmetry: The Ordering Principle

by David Wade

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Overview

Why on do cars have the same symmetry as dragonflies? Is there really a beautiful swirling pattern lurking in every dripping tap? What do insect eggs have in common with planets, and why? In this exquisite book, the smallest and most concise on the subject, designer David Wade introduces the main principles of symmetry, and shows how, despite opinions over exactly what it is, symmetry can be found in almost every corner of science, nature and human culture.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781952178153
Publisher: Wooden Books
Publication date: 07/15/2024
Series: Wooden Books North America Editions
Pages: 64
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 6.75(h) x 0.33(d)

About the Author

David Wade is a designer and writer. Also the author of Li (Wooden Books), Crystal and Dragon and Islamic Designs, he lives in Wales.

Read an Excerpt

Symmetry has a very wide appeal; it is of as much interest to mathematicians as it is to artists, and is as relevant to physics as it is to architecture. In fact, many other disciplines lay their own claims on the subject, each having their own ideas of what symmetry is, or should be. Clearly, whatever approach is taken, we are dealing here with a universal principle, however, in our day-to-day experience conspicuous symmetries are comparatively rare and most are far from obvious. So what is symmetry? Are there general terms for it? Can it, indeed, be clearly defined at all?
On investigation, it soon becomes clear that the whole field is hedged about with paradox. To begin with, any notion of symmetry is completely entangled with that of asymmetry; we can scarcely conceive of the former without invoking thoughts of the latter (as with the related concepts of order and disorder)—and there are other dualities. Symmetry precepts are always involved with categorisation, with classification and observed regularities; in short, with limits. But in itself symmetry is unlimited; there is nowhere that its principles do not penetrate. In addition, symmetry principles are characterised by a quietude, a stillness that is somehow beyond the bustling world; yet, in one way or another, they are almost always involved with transformation, or disturbance, or movement.
The more deeply one investigates this subject the more apparent it becomes that this is at the same time one of the most mundane and extensive areas of study—but that, in the final analysis, it remains one of the most mysterious.

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