Catherine Funk Positive

Published 2024-02-05
During one of my frequent expeditions into Arizona's untamed wilderness, I became captivated by the uncanny resemblance shared by various stones, almost as if they were whispering secrets through their intricate patterns. This intriguing pattern repetition extended beyond nature, catching my eye even in Google Earth photos. I categorized these patterns into four distinct groups and, while perusing the Nevada landscape on Google Earth, my artistic intuition led me to perceive geese and a man carrying a cross up a mountain, evoking a sense of saintly imagery. To my delight, my observations aligned with hagiographic writings and ancient art, associating the four patterns with Saint Jerome, Saint Catherine, Saint Martin, and Saint Eligus. Concurrently, I delved into the world of plotting Julia sets within multi-dimensional Mandelbrot sets, particularly the Multibrot. Astonishingly, I began noticing parallels between the patterns I had observed on Google Earth and the Multibrot sets. This realization unveiled a profound connection between the saintly stories and the Multibrot sets, expressed through dimensional ratios: Jerome (4/5), Catherine (4/6), Eligus (4/7), and Martin (4/8). As my journey unfolded, I introduced a groundbreaking concept – the Funky Doodle, a three-dimensional number comprising real, imaginary, and the enigmatic "funk" (also an imaginary number). In my quest to display the relationship between the Multibrot ratios (4/5, 4/6, 4/7, 4/8) and the Mandelbrot set (dimension 2), I've coined this fusion as the Bablebrot, where the "funk" part of the initial iterating position (C) aligns with the ratio of the Saints, creating a truly mesmerizing interplay between art, mathematics, and spirituality.
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