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pale blue dot -carl sagan-第章

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e a few million years ago; however dangerous it has bee today。 Even members of hunter…gatherer groups—as far from the technological feats of our present global civilization as it is possible for humans to be—solemnly describe their little band; whichever it is; as 〃the people。〃 Everyone else is something different; something less than human。

If this is our natural way of viewing the world; then it should occasion no surprise that every time we make a naive judgment about our place in the Universe—one untempered by careful and skeptical scientific examination—we almost always opt for the centrality of our group and circumstance。 We want to believe; moreover; that these are objective facts; and not our prejudices finding a sanctioned vent。

So it's not much fun to have a gaggle of scientists incessantly haranguing us with 〃You're ordinary; you're unimportant your privileges are undeserved; there's nothing special about you。〃 Even unexcitable people might; after a while; grow annoyed at this incantation and those who insist on chanting it。 It almost seems that the scientists are getting some weird satisfaction out of putting humans down。 Why can't they find a way in which we're superior? Lift our spirits! Exalt us! In such debates science; with its mantra of discouragement; feels cold and remote; dispassionate; detached; unresponsive to human needs。

And; again; if we're not important; not central; not the apple of God's eye; what is implied for our theologically based moral codes? The discovery of our true bearings in the Cosmos was resisted for so long and to such a degree that many traces of the debate remain; sometimes with the motives of the geocentrists laid bare。 Here; for example; is a revealing unsigned mentary in the British review The Spectator in 1892:

'I't is certain enough that the discovery of the heliocentric motion of the planets which reduced our earth to its proper 〃insignificance〃 in the solar system; did a good deal to reduce to a similar but far from proper 〃insignificance〃 the moral principles by which the predominant races of the earth had hitherto been guided and restrained。 Part of this effect was no doubt due to the evidence afforded that the physical science of various inspired writers was erroneous instead of being infallible;…a conviction which unduly shook the confidence felt even in their moral and religious teaching。 But a good deal of it was due only to the mere sense of 〃insignificance〃 with which man has contemplated himself; since he has discovered that he inhabits nothing but a very obscure corner of the universe; instead of the central world round which sun; moon; and stars alike revolved。 There can be no doubt that man may feel himself; and has often felt himself; a great deal too insignificant to be the object of any particular divine training or care。 If the earth be regarded as a sort of ant…hill; and the life and death of human beings as the life and death of so many ants which run into and out of so many holes in search of food and sunlight; it is quite certain that no adequate importance will be attached to the duties of human life; and that a profound fatalism and hopelessness; instead of new hopefulness; will attach to human effort 。 。 。

'F'or the present at least; our horizons are quite vast enough 。 。 。 ; till we can get used to the infinite horizons we already have; and not lose our balance so much as we usually do in contemplating them; the yearning for still wider horizons is premature。



WHAT DO WE REALLY WANT from philosophy and religion? Palliatives? Therapy? fort? Do we want reassuring fables or an understanding of our actual circumstances? Dismay that the Universe does not conform to our preferences seems childish。 You might think that grown…ups would be ashamed to put such disappointments into print。 The fashionable way of doing this is not to blame the Universe—which seems truly pointless—but rather to blame the means by which we know the Universe; namely science。

George Bernard Shaw; in the preface to his play St。 Joan; described a sense of science preying on our credulity; forcing on us an alien worldview; intimidating belief:

In the Middle Ages; people believed that the Earth was flat; for which they had at least the evidence of their senses: we believe it to be round; not because as many as one per cent of us could give the physical reason for so quaint a belief; but because modern science has convinced us that nothing that is obvious is true; and that everything that is magical; improbable; extraordinary; gigantic; microscopic; heartless; or outrageous is scientific。

A more recent and very instructive example is Understanding the Present: Science and the Soul of Modern Man; by Bryan Appleyard; a British journalist。 This book makes explicit what many people feel; all over the world; but are too embarrassed to say。 Appleyard's candor is refreshing。 He is a true believer and will not let us slough over the contradictions between modern science and traditional religion:

〃Science has taken away our religion;〃 he laments。 And what sort of religion is it that he longs for? One in which 〃the human race was the point; the heart; the final cause of the whole system。 It placed our selves definitively upon the universal map。〃 。 。 。 〃We were the end; the purpose; the rational axle around which the great aetherian shells rotated。〃 He longs for 〃the universe of Catholic orthodoxy〃 in which 〃the cosmos is shown to be a machine constructed around the drama of salvation〃—by which Appleyard means that; despite explicit orders to the contrary; a woman and a man once ate of an apple; and that this act of insubordination transformed the Universe into a contrivance for operant…conditioning their remote descendants。

By contrast; modern science 〃presents us as accidents。 We are caused by the cosmos; but we are not the cause of it。 Modem man is not finally anything; he has no role in creation。〃 Science is 〃spiritually corrosive; burning away ancient authorities and traditions。 It cannot really co…exist with anything。〃 。 。 。 〃Science; quietly and inexplicitly; is talking us into abandoning our selves; our true selves。〃 It reveals 〃the mute; alien specta
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