Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0011021, Sat, 12 Feb 2005 17:21:21 -0800

Subject
Fwd: Re: Solids and surds in Pnin
Date
Body
EDNOTE. NABOKV-L thanls Dr. Stadlen for an illuminating response.

----- Forwarded message from STADLEN@aol.com -----
Date: Sat, 12 Feb 2005 15:09:35 EST
From: STADLEN@aol.com

In a message dated 12/02/2005 02:28:17 GMT Standard Time,
chtodel@gss.ucsb.edu writes:

> Would someone explain the general opposition of solids and surds, and
> how the latter applies to the scholars in question [Pnin, Vintage p41]?
>
> "There are human solids and there are human surds, and Clements and
> Pnin belonged to the latter variety."
> Many thanks.
>
> Sandy Drescher
>
>

As one who read mathematics at Cambridge, I had always taken it that this was
a poetic rather than a mathematical opposition. Mathematically, it is absurd.
This is what makes it humorously right. It compares entities of different
logical category. And there is no reason, for instance, why all or some of the
dimensions of a solid should not be surds. For example, in a cube of side 1
unit, the diagonals of the faces have length the square root of 2, and the
diagonal of the cube itself has the length the square root of 3, and these are
both
surds, i.e., irrational numbers.

Surds are irrational numbers such as the square root of 2; they include
transcendental numbers such as pi. They cannot be expressed as the ratio of two
integers (whole numbers, such as 1, 2, 3,...). Pythagorean legend has it that
someone (Hippasus?) died in a shipwreck because he had revealed the
irrationality
of the square root of 2. Beckett (in his essay on Bram van Velde, in relation
to the "realisation that art has always been bourgeois") speaks of the
"Pythagorean terror" at the "irrationality" of pi. (I'm writing from memory.
Beckett's also a bit inaccurate, as the Pythagoreans can hardly have known pi
was
irrational.)

So the opposition VN is evoking, based on the wordplay of s...ds, is surely
beween prosaic solidity, squareness, bourgeois philistinism, on the one hand
and some kind of individuality, transcendence, otherness on the other.

Anthony Stadlen

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