By Stephen Portz
Early drawing of ideas for space exploration by a youthful Carl Sagan |
The astrophysicists are
a harden lot. They marched up several who were students of
Sagan back in the day. They reviewed his pale blue earth
montage but this
time with
a twist. The presenter who was his former student and had worked on
the Cassini probe, showed the audience for the first time the footage
from behind Saturn looking at our earth through its rings. It
was spectacular:
Photo of Earth taken from behind Saturn by the Cassini Probe |
Since
the technology is so advanced from Pioneer and Voyager days, the
image is super high resolution and they could keep zooming in on it
until you could see our earth and its moon. It was stunning!
Earth and her moon photo taken from the Cassini Probe |
Perhaps
Carl Sagan’s greatest legacy was the time that he devoted to
touching individual lives – students, youngsters, colleagues,
anyone who reached out to him, was cherished and appreciated and
usually rewarded with personal letters and time with him – with
which he appeared to have been very generous. Considering this was
before email and computerized everything, and most correspondence was
by typewriter through the mail, it was a significant devotion of
time.
Unfortunately,
the day was also quite politicized. Beware when people start
talking about how politicized science has become, because they are
then about to start politicizing it themselves. Talking about
how our ancestors climbed down from trees, how people who don't think
like they
do are
superstitious, uneducated, and “sitting on the other side of the
aisle.” I didn't know this, but apparently the theories of
evolution and anthropogenic global warming are now to be treated with
the same veracity
as the Law of Gravity, because the scientists mocked people who
believed one and not the other. The president of the United
States was once again quoted to the great amusement of the audience
that we didn’t have time to convene a meeting of the “Flat Earth
Society.” Many of the scientists presumed to put words in Sagan’s
mouth how, if Carl were here, he would be putting all the
anthropogenic global warming naysayers in their place. The
meeting took a very interesting turn into almost a funeral-like
quality and the scientist
that spoke
about
our ancestors climbing down from a tree (Carolyn Porco), then spoke
to Carl
Sagan
“wherever he was” and told him “we love him and miss him” -
as if his intelligence is still prowling around the cosmos.
It seemed rather ironic to me that an educated person
would be trying to talk to someone that has been dead for 17 years.
In
dealing with mortality and the concepts of a hereafter, Ann has gone
on record about losing Carl and the reconciliation process for her:
“When
my husband died, because he was so famous and known for not being a
believer, many people would come up to me—it still sometimes
happens—and ask me if Carl changed at the end and converted to a
belief in an afterlife. They also frequently ask me if I think I will
see him again. Carl faced his death with unflagging courage and never
sought refuge in illusions. The tragedy was that we knew we would
never see each other again. I don't ever expect to be reunited with
Carl.”
Her
sentiments reflect such a “tragedy” of thought and expression.
It makes me think of the scientific mind and the juxtaposition
of
having such intelligence in dealing with corporeal matters, but being so limited in dealing with the spiritual ones. With
no intention to demean scientists, like the ones paraded out during
the dedication, in the same way that they in fact demeaned people of
faith, I would submit the following ideas to consider.
With
recent discoveries in dark energy, dark matter, and the Higgs Boson
Carrier Particle there is so much
that we do not know or understand
and scientists in their greatest capacities are still at a loss to
explain about our universe; Even when they do, and usually with such dogmatic confidence, it is sometimes difficult to accept it all because of
their poor track record. I was priviledged to meet Dr Harrison Proctor from the CERN Lab that discovered the Higgs Boson Particle. The comment that he made referring to Dark Matter and Dark Energy which presumably fills the universe was that "scientists call things that they don't understand "dark".
I often view many scientific pronouncements of geological time and things that must have occurred millions of years ago with some amusement as we do not have the ability to describe exactly what may have occurred at a crime scene only a few hours before or know for sure what the weather is going to be tomorrow much less be able to make these definitive declarations. Throw in metaphysical concepts of inter dimensional existences, space/time relationships, and singularities in the universe, I would say that one could make a pretty good case that there is room even SCIENTIFICALLY, for the existence intelligent designer/first cause.
Meeting Dr Harrison Proctor - On the Higgs Boson discovery team from CERN |
I often view many scientific pronouncements of geological time and things that must have occurred millions of years ago with some amusement as we do not have the ability to describe exactly what may have occurred at a crime scene only a few hours before or know for sure what the weather is going to be tomorrow much less be able to make these definitive declarations. Throw in metaphysical concepts of inter dimensional existences, space/time relationships, and singularities in the universe, I would say that one could make a pretty good case that there is room even SCIENTIFICALLY, for the existence intelligent designer/first cause.
It
is almost as if some of these good scientist friends are missing the
ability to perceive the world around them in any other way which
cannot be measured and quantified, much as an individual on the
autism scale has difficulty discerning social queues. Or a person with color blindness not being able to differentiate between colors. Using a
scientific metaphor for these scientists that struggle with spiritual
concepts that seem so difficult for many of them to grasp seems
apropos here.
Albert Einstein once famously compared the understanding of
his theory of relativity with having a walk with a blind friend:
Not
long after his arrival in Princeton he was invited, by the wife of
one of the professors of mathematics at Princeton, to be guest of
honor at a tea.-Reluctantly, Einstein consented. After the tea had
progressed for a time, the excited hostess, thrilled to have such an
eminent guest of honor, fluttered out into the center of activity and
with raised arms silenced the group. Bubbling out some words
expressing her thrill and pleasure, she turned to Einstein and said:
"I wonder, Dr. Einstein, if you would be so kind as to explain
to my guests in a few words, just what is relativity theory?"
Without
any hesitation Einstein rose to his feet and told a story. He said he
was reminded of a walk he had one day with his blind friend. The day
was hot and he turned to the blind friend and said, "I wish I
had a glass of milk."
"Glass,"
replied the blind friend, "I know what that is. But what do you
mean by milk?"
"Why,
milk is a white fluid," explained Einstein.
"Now
fluid, I know what that is," said the blind man. "But what
is white? "
"Oh,
white is the color of a swan's feathers."
"Feathers,
now I know what they are, but what is a swan?"
"A
swan is a bird with a crooked neck."
"Neck,
I know what that is, but what do you mean by crooked?"
At
this point Einstein said he lost his patience. He seized his blind
friend's arm and pulled it straight. "There, now your arm is
straight," he said. Then he bent the blind friend's arm at the
elbow. "Now it is crooked."
"Ah,"
said the blind friend. "Now I know what milk is."
And
Einstein, at the tea, sat down.
The
problem with things spiritual is that if we do not have comparisons
in the corporeal world to relate them to, the person of intellect
will often view them as foolish superstitions. This story of
Einstein is instructive, because he was teaching on many levels here.
He was using tongue in cheek humor to relate the difficulty of the
task at hand in trying to explain a concept that really had no common
frame of reference with which to base an explanation. Hence he took
his poor blind friend on a convoluted path from milk to swans using
the common to explain the unknown. By doing this his friend would
then understand something that they had no prior experience with, and
now know and understand it at the same level that he understood
things common to him - which of course, was absurd. This is the same
challenge we face when explaining faith known principles to the
scientific community.
The
way the instrumentation on the Kepler telescope works is that it
“watches” stars and when a star blinks it then presumably has had
something cross in front of it. The crossing body is then thought to
be a planet orbiting the star in its own solar system. When NASA
scientists first proposed the Kepler mission, the premise was that
this project would be able to detect other exceptional solar systems
in the galaxy that were like ours. The notion that there were large
numbers of stars which had planets orbiting around them was not even
considered because the hypothesis was that our solar system was
fairly unique in this respect. What they have since concluded
through Kepler, is that it is very common for stars to have planets
orbiting around them and it is now understood, as far as our galaxy
is concerned, that it is more the rule than the exception. There are
billions of planets orbiting around stars in the universe. With that
knowledge scientists are now not only looking for planets orbiting
stars but they have now refined the search for planets that are in
the “Goldilocks” sweet spot in orbital placement. Those planets
may have the potential for life as we understand it.
With
those interesting conclusions, he started talking about the Hubble
Deep Field Imagery Project. How scientists found the darkest spot in
the night sky, presumably devoid of any light from any stars and took
a long exposure photograph in that region. To their surprise they
discovered that the region was not only populated with stars but
galaxies of stars, more than could be counted. He showed Hubble
photos of what looked like a field of stars but upon magnification
turned out to be many varieties of different kinds of galaxies as
numerous as the aforementioned stars.
Hubble Deep Field photo |
With
that, the scientist stated: “now doesn’t that make you feel
small and insignificant?” This statement totally took me by
surprise because I was at that time having an exactly opposite and
profoundly spiritual experience. I felt wonder and awe that God’s
creations go on forever and yet he is mindful of the fall of a
sparrow. And I know he is mindful of me because I have felt his
spirit in unmistakable communication. It puts a totally new perspective on the Cosmos, which was the name of Carl Sagan’s
masterpiece series that first raised the consciousness of so many to
the wonders of the universe…
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