Carl Sagan
Reflections On A Mote Of
Dust
Why Sagan, despite his failings,
will always be the greatest of
my heroes |
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Carl
Sagan Takes Questions
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CARL SAGAN - FIRST SCEPTIC, THEN ASTRONOMER
By Horst Sommer
Carl Sagan's greatest achievements have not been given due credit by
biographers, writers and the media.
During 62 revolutions around our star, "one of his greatest gifts was the
commitment to the truth. Not what's going to make you feel good, less
afraid, less small, more central to the workings of the universe - but to
what's true." (Ann Druyan: It is my own hope for Carl's memory that my
husband be an inspiration to all for the search for truth.)
Our species fear of death and of an uncertain future has given those who
have something to sell, those who wish to influence public opinion, and
those in power, a vested interest in discouraging skepticism and scientific
investigation. Unlike most `one- dimensional' scientists Carl thrived on
controversy and criticism. He spent equal time in debunking pseudo sciences
as in astronomy research.
He developed an interest in astronomy, it is said, at the age of 5, but his
roots lay with his parents who taught him two models of thought central to
scepticism and science - the virtue of questioning, and the joy of wonder.
In the end he faced the fear as Albert Einstein and others before him -
"satisfied with the mystery of the eternity of life and a glimpse of the
marvellous structure of the existing world...striving to comprehend a
portion, be it ever so tiny, of the Reason that manifests itself in nature."
INTRODUCTION
The passing of one of the greatest men of this century has prompted many
writers to give tributes and publish articles about his achievements.
NEWSWEEK magazine summed up Carl Sagan's work as: "The Cornell astronomer
deduced that Venus was hot, and Mars dust-blown, years before spacecraft
did. But thanks to his 1980 "Cosmos" series on PBS, he will be forever known
as the layman's guide to the universe's "billions and billions" of wonders -
including, maybe, extraterrestrial life." Dave Eicher of ASTRONOMY magazine
wrote: "Sagan will be remembered as a giant in astronomy for his long record
of professional accomplishments, his superb writing, and his outstanding
ability to communicate complex ideas in simple ways."
The NASA internet page describes Carl's contribution to space exploration:
"Astronomer, educator and author, Sagan was perhaps the world's greatest
popularizer of science, reaching millions of people through newspapers,
magazines and television broadcasts. He is well-known for his work on the
PBS series Cosmos, the Emmy- and Peabody- award-winning show that became the
most watched series in public-television history."
Many more tributes mention the type of achievements scientists can display
in frames on their living room walls. My students and I found little mention
of his dedication to showing the truth, to debunking pseudo sciences, to
preserving the environment, to bringing the cold war period to an end, to
protesting nuclear arms in Nevada, and to his profound humanism.
A POINTER TO EVOLUTIONARY BAGGAGE
Carl Sagan's greatest teachers in life had been his parents who taught him
the virtue of questioning and the joy of wonder from an early age. Neither
his school teachers nor his university professors taught him the most
essential things he came to value - a soaring sense of wonder, an
evolutionary perspective and an understanding about mistaken ideas that
everybody had once believed. (Demon-Haunted World pp xiii-xv)
He began to learn a little about how science works in college in the early
1950s (The Baltimore Sun 12/3/95, pp 10-12, 17) He states: "how rigorous the
standards of evidence must be if we are really to know something is true;
how many false starts and dead ends have plagued human thinking; how our
biases can color our interpretation of the evidence; how belief systems
widely held and supported by the political, religious and academic
hierarchies often turn out to be not just slightly in error but grotesquely
wrong. Everything hinges on the matter of evidence. On so important a
question as UFOs, the evidence must be airtight. The more we want it to be
true, the more careful we have to be. No witness's say-so is good enough.
People make mistakes. People play practical jokes. People stretch the truth
for money, attention or fame. People occasionally misunderstand what they're
seeing. People sometimes even see things that aren't there."
Two years before Paul Kurtz founded SCICOP Carl wrote one of my favorite
articles in "Broca's Brain", a brilliant exposure on pseudo-science.
Believing to be the "Second Coming of Jesus Christ", a Mr. Bloom tried to
prove the existence of "god" with numerical coincidences, which everyone
else would consider meaningless. I had never met a scientists working in
several `dimensions', willing to spend valuable research time on serious
debunking activities. He became affiliated with SCICOP soon after, enabling
him to integrate history, biology, politics and the environment with
astronomy and planetary science. SCICOP and the "Voyager" message, I would
argue, paved the way for the award-winning "Cosmos" series. He pored through
the pages of "The Skeptical Inquirer" with fascination and a burning desire
to have the truth come out on top, mixed with a somber reflection about the
dullness of the routine, and the unimaginative and stale ideas, chauvinisms,
hopes, and fears dressed up as fac ts. In his keynote address to the 1994
CSICOP conference he made scepticism a prerequisite to scientific thinking.
"Skeptical questioning, he said, "is the affordable price we pay for having
the benefits of so powerful a tool as science"
Although in a lot of scientists the ratio of wonder to skepticism declines
in time, Carl kept at it till his 62th revolution around our star, writing
in 1995 (The Demon-Haunted World, pp 76/77): "The tenets of skepticism do
not require an advanced degree, as most successful used-car buyers
demonstrate. The whole idea of a democratic application of skepticism is
that everyone should have the essential tools to effectively and
constructively evaluate claims to knowledge. All science asks is to employ
the same levels of skepticism we use in buying a used car or in judging the
quality of analgesics or beer from their TV commercials. But the tools of
skepticism are generally unavailable to the citizens of our society. They're
hardly ever mentioned in the schools, even in the presentation of science,
its most ardent practitioner, although skepticism repeatedly sprouts
spontaneously out of the disappointments of everyday life. Our politics,
economics, advertising and religions (New Age a nd Old) are awash in
credulity. Those who have something to sell, those who wish to influence
public opinion, those in power, a skeptic might suggest, have a vested
interest in discouraging skepticism."
As an extraordinary teacher Carl was passionate about bringing the big
picture to others. After each talk he sat down to take questions from the
audience. He believed that there is no such thing as a dumb question. He
never showed a lack of patience or answer in a way that would make the
questioner feel silly. He used each question to teach something, to see the
big picture. He wrote (Pale Blue Dot) "The earth is a very small stage in a
vast cosmic arena. Think of the rivers of blood spilled by all those
generals and emperors so that, in glory and triumph, they could become the
momentary masters of a fraction of a dot."
A SPEAKER FOR EARTH
Many have been touched by Carl's profound wisdom and ability to answer
questions on almost any subject. In his last talk to the Division for
Planetary Sciences he called on scientists to give a "tithe" of 10% of their
time to explain their research to the public. Through his writings and
appearances science efforts and discoveries became the shared accomplishment
of us all. What Carl wrote about the Planetary Society's goals best
expresses his aspirations and personal philosophy: "to discover and explore
new worlds, and to seek our counterparts in the depths of space - these are
objectives of mythic proportions...pursuing these endeavors for the benefit
of the human species is a mark of our dedication to a hopeful future" If I
was asked to describe his achievements in one sentence, I would choose his
often quoted piece of excellence in "Cosmos"(p.219): "We make our world
significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our
answers."
I like to end my presentation with what Carl wanted to share with us from
his hospital bed: "I would love to believe that when I die I will live
again, that some thinking, feeling, remembering part of me will continue.
But as much as I want to believe that, and despite the ancient and worldwide
cultural traditions that assert an afterlife, I know of nothing to suggest
that it is more than wishful thinking...the world is so exquisite, with so
much love and moral depth, that there is no reason to deceive ourselves with
pretty stories for which there's little good evidence. Far better, it seems
to me, in our vulnerability, is to look death in the eye and to be grateful
every day for the brief but magnificent opportunity that life
provides...Five thousand people prayed for me at an Easter service at the
Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City, the largest church in
Christendom. A Hindu priest described a large prayer vigil for me held on
banks of the Ganges. The Imam of North America told me about his prayers for
my recovery. Many Christians and Jews wrote me to tell about theirs. While I
do not think that, if there is a god, his plan for me will be altered by
prayer, I'm more grateful than I can say to those, including so many whom
I've never met, who have pulled for me during my illness. Many of them have
asked me how it is possible to face death without the certainty of an
afterlife. I can only say that it hasn't been a problem. With reservations
about feeble souls, I share the view of a hero of mine, Albert Einstein: I
cannot conceive of a god who rewards and punishes his creatures or has a
will of the kind that we experience in ourselves. Neither can I, nor would I
want to, conceive of an individual that survives his physical death. Let
feeble souls, from fear for absurd egotism, cherish such thoughts. I am
satisfied with the mystery of the eternity of life and a glimpse of the
marvelous structure of the existing world, together with the devoting
striving to comprehend a portion, be it ever so tiny, of the Reason that
manifests itself in nature."
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author would like to thank Ann Druyan and Guillermo Lemarchand, as well
as Carl Sagan Society members and students at the University of Queensland,
for their valuable comments.
REFERENCES
BOOKS BY CARL SAGAN The Cosmic Connection: An Extraterrestrial Perspective,
1973; Broca's Brain: Reflections of the Romance of Science, 1974; Other
Worlds, 1975; The Dragons of Eden: Speculations of the Origin of Human
Intelligence, 1977; Cosmos, 1980; Contact: A Novel, 19 85; Pale Blue Dot: A
Vision of the Human Future in Space, 1994; Demon-Haunted World: Science As a
Candle in the Dark, 1995; Billions and Billions: Thoughts on Life and Death
at the Brink of the Millennium, 1997
BOOKS CO-AUTHORED WITH MRS. ANN DRUYAN Comet, 1986; Shadows of Forgotten
Ancestors: A Search for Who We Are, 1992; Carl Sagan's Universe, Y.Terzian
and E.Bilson ed. 1997
BOOKS CO-AUTHORED WITH OTHER SCIENTISTS Intelligent Life in the Universe
(with I.Shklovskii); Planets (with editors of LIFE), 1966; UFOs: A
Scientific Debate (ed. with T.Page), 1972; Mars and the Mind of Man (with
R.Bradbury, A.Clarke, B.Murry, W.Sulllivan), 1973; Communication with
Extraterr estrial Intelligence (ed.), 1973; Murmurs of Earth: The Voyager
Interstellar Record (with F.Drake, A.Druyan, T.Ferris, J.Lomberg, L.Salzmann
Sagan)); The Cold and the Dark: The World After Nuclear War (with P.Ehrlich,
D.Kennedy, W.Roberts), 1984; A Path Where No Man Thought: Nuclear Winter and
the End of the Arms Race (with R.Turco), 1990
DIGITIZED MAGAZINE ARTICLES SCIENCE: The Early Faint Sun Paradox, Organic
Shielding of Ultraviolet-Labile Greenhouse Gases PARADE MAGAZINE: The Fine
Art of Baloney Detection, February 1, 1987; Crop Circles and Aliens: What's
The Evidence? Now You See Them, Now You Don't!; In the Valley of the Shadow,
Dr. Sagan talks about his brushes with death, March 1996; A Love Story (Ann
Druyan), June 1 1997
BIOASTRONOMY NEWS: In Defense of the Search for Extraterrestrial
Intelligence, 1995 ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL: Results from Five Years of SETI
Observations September 20, 1993 SKEPTICAL INQUIRER: A celebration of Isaac
Asimov, Fall 1992; Wonder and Skepticism, Jan/Feb 1995; Science and
superstition, March/April 1996; The darkened cosmos: a tribute to Carl
Sagan, March/April 1997 SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN: The Search for Extraterrestrial
Life, October 1994; The Effect of Asteroid and Comet Impacts on the Early
Terrestrial Environment; Cosmic Search: The Quest for Extraterrestrial
Intelligence; The Solar System; PSYCHOLOGY TODAY: interview Jan/Feb 1996
NOVA: interview (UFOs) 1996
OTHER ARTICLES/AUDIO TAPES (to be found in) ICARUS, THE PLANETARY REPORT,
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, SKEPTICAL INQUIRER, PARADE, MERCURY, CORNELL
UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS and numerous newspapers; THE MUSIC OF COSMOS Label:
0 7863-54002-2 8, Distributed by BMG Music, (many of C.Sagan's books are
available on video and audio tape) 4 August 1997.
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"Scientists are no more
immune to jealousy and envy than is the general population. If someone with the same
training and credentials as you parried their good looks, a gift of gab, relentless work
ethic, and fertile imagination into a career with an income an order of magnitude and
change greater than yours, you might say catty things about them, too. ;) Even Sagan's
ex-wife Lynn, who certainly knew he was all too fallible, readily admitted that the reason
Carl wasn't elected to the National Academy of Science was jealously on the part of the
membership.
Even if Sagan had not developed into a science popularizer, he would still have been
celebrated as a fine scientist. He was the first to infer that Venus was literally hotter
than Hell; that alone would have establshed his reputation. His work with Bishun Khare on
planetary atmospheric chemistry was equally imaginative and productive. Sagan's gift for
asking the right questions and Khare's mastery of gas-phase reactions built a large corpus
of information about how life could evolve on worlds yet to be discovered. But I think
Sagan's greatest contribution is one that even Einstein could not claim: he multipled his
efforts by training a cohort of first-class scientists whose contributions continue today
as the Solar System is explored. Add to this the countless anonymous enthusiasts (myself
included) whom Sagan inspired to make a lifelong pursuit of teaching and writing about
science, and his real contribution is immeasurable.
Ed
Ed Uthman, MD uthman@neosoft.com
Pathologist, Houston/Richmond, Texas USA
www.neosoft.com/~uthman "
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My Tribute
To Carl Sagan
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Carl Sagan Links:
www.carlsagan.com
www.spacelab.net/~catalj/sagan.htm
http://planetary.org/html/society/tributeswww.w-link.net/~subodeon/Sagan/Sagan.htm
http://home.pacific.net.hk/~paulchui/sagan.html
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap961226.html
www.sciam.com/explorations/010697sagan/010697explorations.html
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