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The Prophet and the Astronomer: Apocalyptic Science and the End of the World PDF

324 Pages·2003·5.45 MB·English
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P r o l o g ue Nature from one thing brings another forth, And out of death new life is born. LUCRETIUS Throughout the history of humankind, we can witness a persistent longing to understand and make peace with the passage of time. Humans, like all living things, are born, grow to maturity, procreate, and perish. But we, alone, know it. Being conscious of our own mortal ity is the ultimate mixed blessing. We create works of art and theories, have children, and help those in need, attempting to produce a legacy that we hope will survive our short lives. And yet, death is still the cause of much despair, of cries of injustice and tears of pain, our final defeat by nature's power to create and destroy. Religions of the East and the West help relieve the fear of dying or the pain of losing a loved one by turning death into an event transcend ing physical reality. Some designate life and death as equally important parts of an eternal cycle of existence; others promise eternal life in par adise for those who abide by their precepts. In most, redemption from the specter of death does not come lightly: the transition into a new cycle of existence or into eternal life is often punctuated by horrendous PROLOCUE cataclysms that shake the very foundations of the earth and the sky. The Druids believed in a succession of ages, each terminated when the skies fell over their heads; the Zoroastrians believed in a final judg ment day, when those of high moral standards would be granted eter nal life while the wicked of spirit would be destroyed by floods of fire and molten metal. The last book of the New Testament, the Revelation to John, tells of the destruction of Earth and the lower heavens by a succession of cosmic disasters, which include collisions with "blazing stars," causing the Sun to darken, the Moon to turn bloody red, and the stars to fall from the sky. The skies, as active channels of communication between God and the people, were watched with an intense mixture of anticipation and fear, since portents of the impending end could appear at any moment. In this book, I explore religion's assimilation of cataclysmic cosmic phenomena and its influence on scientific thought through the ages, from the pre-Socratic philosophers of ancient Greece to modern-day cosmologists. Our concerns with the stability of our environment, the perpetuation of life on Earth, the reassuring sight of yet another sun rise, or the fate of the cosmos as a whole, have permeated and inspired scientific thought since its early origins. If huge asteroids did hit Earth in the past, will they hit us again? Will the Sun shine forever? Will the universe exist forever? What is our place in a changing cosmos, where stars and solar systems are constantly created and destroyed? If Earth will be destroyed, can we perpetuate our existence elsewhere in the universe? Like questions about the origin of the universe, those related to the fate of the cosmos are deeply interwoven with religious thought. Indeed, I will argue that we create a scientific world as we do a spiri tual one—in order to overcome fear, to defy time, to understand our place in this world, and to justify our lives. As a research scientist, I find that much of my motivation to study the physical nature of the universe comes from these "big questions," even if my everyday routine is filled more with long technical calcula tions and detailed computer programs than with metaphysical specula tion. One of my goals in this book is to humanize science, to argue that xii PROLOGUE our scientific ideas are very much a product of the cultural and emo tional environment where they originate. It is my hope that the pres ent exploration of apocalyptic ideas in religion and science will elucidate some of the issues that polarize the science-religion debate, as well as paint a fairly complete picture of scientific thought pertaining to the skies, from our own planet to the universe as a whole. Draw ing on the Book of Daniel, the Book of Revelation, and an investiga tion of apocalyptic sects, art, and literature, we will examine the formation and evolution of the solar system, the extinction of the dinosaurs, Einstein's general theory of relativity, pulsars and black holes, the big bang and the inflationary universe, all the way to the latest ideas in cosmology. Certain issues are essentially multidisciplinary in nature, and a full appreciation of their scope requires that we examine their many facets. The end of the world is one of them. The many answers humans have proposed throughout the ages are expressions of the same universal fears and expectations. It is my hope that by examining some of them we will have a better chance of prolonging our presence on this planet and, when the time comes, elsewhere in this vast universe. This book is written for the nonspecialist, although I truly hope some of my more specialized colleagues will be attracted by its broader nature; every scientific concept introduced is explained in jargon-free language and, whenever possible, illustrated by images and analogies from everyday phenomena; it is my belief that the essence of their mes sage can still be captured and its beauty appreciated. I hope that you the reader, after finishing this volume, will agree with me. I am confi dent your effort will be worthwhile, for the vistas opened by modern cosmology are truly magnificent. I should also emphasize that it would be impossible to do complete justice to the rich history of apocalyptic ideas in religion and to the whole of astronomical sciences in one single volume. In order to keep my task (and yours!) within acceptable dimensions, I have had to exclude several deserving topics, and limit the level of detail with which some ideas have been treated. I ask my colleagues whose worthy Mil PROLOGUE ideas are not included here to forgive my brevity. As a partial remedy, I append a fairly long bibliography of popular science books dealing with topics of related interest. My wish is that the whole will be much bigger than the sum of its parts, and that you will share my joy in par taking in our endless quest for meaning. XIV P A RT I " T he E nd Is N e a r !" CHAPTER I The S k i es Are F a l l i ng / am all-powerful Time, which destroys all things. — B HA CAVAD GlTA, I I. 3 2 We are creatures bound by time. Our lives have a beginning and an end, a finite period of time, which we hasten to chop into equal seg ments—years, months, days, hours—in the vain hope that through this frantic counting we can somehow control its passage. But time always has the upper hand: we do grow older and we die, not knowing when, not knowing how. This well-known fact, which many people may simply brush aside as obvious, some as too disturbing, or others as just depressing, is the single most fundamental aspect of our existence. It is what gives meaning to being human. Death gives rise to our yearning for permanence, to our constant struggle to create, be it a painting or a family, a mathematical theorem or a new recipe, something that will stay after we go, something beyond the mere memory of our existence in the minds of our friends or relatives. Memories fade from generation to generation. A few years ago, while exploring some forgotten corners of my parents' attic, I bumped into my grandparents' photo albums, packed with hundreds 3 THE PROPHET AND THE ASTRONOMER of yellowed photographs of their parties, relatives, friends, celebra tions, and speeches, frozen moments of a time long gone. "All ghosts now," my brother Rogerio quipped, in his unique sardonic style. Look ing at the pictures, I wondered how much of that laughter, of that wis dom, of their many stories, is still alive in the minds of their great-grandchildren. Feeling like the missing link of a four-generation chain, I closed the albums with a deep sense of sadness, of having lost a part of my own history, now buried in photos I can't recognize. But wait! Close to the photo albums there was a large box, made of golden cardboard. Inside I found dozens of letters my grandparents wrote to each other, to their relatives in Ukraine and Russia, to my par ents when my father was studying in Boston in the early 1950s. Extremely excited, I asked Lenore Grenoble, a friend in the linguistics department—a specialist in Eastern European and Slavic languages— to help me translate the letters. But my initial excitement quickly turned into disappointment; the letters were painfully boring, full of endless details of everyday life. No deep existential message, no deep secret revealed, nothing! It dawns on me just how selfish we the living can be. I was not try ing to get to know my ancestors better; the letters and photos could have helped me with that. What I really wanted was to get to know myself better through them. After all, their history is my history, their lives part of mine, where I grew up, who my parents were. But we can't expect the past to define our future completely. Our ancestors' lives and lessons may teach and guide, but we are the ones who must make choices. We search for meaning, for help, for companionship. We need something more than just memories and dreams: we need hope. Per haps we can defeat the passage of time by elevating ourselves to a supernatural level, by transcending life itself. In fact, if we beat time, we may be once more with our long-departed loved ones, for it is when time's passage is suspended that life and death merge, and the dead can coexist with the living; in immortality we become godlike. Thus, we create the infinite and the eternal. Belief soothes and justifies. It 4 THE SKIES ARE FALLING inspires us all, the painter, the teacher, the scientist, the priest, the lawyer. As Saul Bellow once wrote, "We are all drawn toward the same craters of the spirit—to know what we are and what we are for, to know our purpose, to seek grace." Our creations in pursuit of the eternal are many. In this book we will examine some of the ways we humans have attempted to defy our time-bound existence, inspired by a common link: the mix of terror and awe of the sky above us. Because of the sacred character that all cultures and religions attributed to the skies, celestial phenomena were often viewed as a manifestation of divine power, a channel through which the gods communicated with us. And the news from above could be good or bad. In many religions, signs of impending doom or punishment often come from the skies, be they celestial objects thrown by angry deities on our homes and land, blankets of thick darkness in the middle of the day, or floods that drown all but a few chosen ones. In more extreme apocalyptic texts, falling celestial objects announce the end of all terrestrial life, the end of all ends, which will bring eter nal bliss for the virtuous and eternal suffering for the sinful. Science, since its origins, has also been inspired by the sky and its mysteries. From Plato to Einstein, many of the greatest philosophers and scientists have studied the sky not just for practical purposes but in an attempt to bring the human mind closer to that of the Creator, the Great Cosmic Organizer, believing that knowledge of the natural world lifted humankind to a higher moral sphere. The pursuit of this knowledge through reason was turned into a passionate quest, worthy of a lifelong devotion. As a consequence, our accumulated scientific knowledge of celestial phenomena drove away many ancient sky- related fears and beliefs. But in spite of all this progress or, better still, because of it, many new challenges have appeared, and will keep appearing. A scientist may refer to the continuous presence of the "mysterious" as the amazing creativity of nature or—more cynically— as an expression of our own limitations as rational beings, while a reli gious person may call it a manifestation of the infinite nature of God. By exploring thus our ageless relationship with the sky, whether 5 THE PROPHET AND THE ASTRONOMER through faith or reason, or both, we will find that religion and science represent different, but complementary, facets of our struggle against time, born of the same questing spirit. This chapter begins with a sur vey of apocalypticism, dramatic narratives of the end of the world according to several religions, from that of the Druids to Christianity. These timeless stories provide the bare-bones imagery that will reap pear throughout this book. I call them "archetypes of doom." Celestial Messages "Surely, our shaman knew what he was doing. Every day, he would run up to the mountain, lifting his arms toward the skies and chanting the sacred hymns of our elders, the ones that brought us health and a plentiful harvest. He knew how to talk to the gods through the lan guage of the night, written in the bright stars and the Moon. When many stars fell, the gods were shedding diamond tears, saddened by our lack of devotion to them. If a hairy star appeared one night and stayed for many moons, something bad would happen, maybe even the death of our king. Or worse, a giant sky-serpent could eat the Sun, bringing on eternal night. We would bring fruits and animals and clothes to the top of the sacred mountain, which was the place closest to our gods, and dance and chant for as long as our shaman told us to. The mountain connected the earth and the sky." This fictional narrative, which combines elements of many differ ent ancient cultures without being specific to any one in particular, is a short allegorical tale of our ancestors' mysterious relationship with the skies. The gods decide how things will be, but we can plead with them and perhaps even change their minds if we know how to interact with them, speak their language. The shaman, the holy man, is the inter preter of the gods, the decipherer of their intentions as written in the skies. His actions go both ways, from the gods to the tribe and from the tribe to the gods. He possesses the knowledge needed to understand the gods, being the bridge to the unknown. As such, he is more than 6

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"An intellectual accomplishment that illuminates the magic and the wisdom of the heavens above."—Kirkus Reviews"Tracing our contemplation of the cosmos from the big bang to the big crunch" (The New Yorker), Marcelo Gleiser explores the shared quest of ancient prophets and today's astronomers to ex
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.