Really, really good article in today's NY Times
magazine on current cosmological theory, just
beautifully written.  Excerpt:

...Since the invention of the telescope four centuries ago, 
astronomers have been able to figure out the workings of the universe 
simply by observing the heavens and applying some math, and vice 
versa. Take the discovery of moons, planets, stars and galaxies, 
apply Newton's laws and you have a universe that runs like clockwork. 
Take Einstein's modifications of Newton, apply the discovery of an 
expanding universe and you get the big bang. "It's a ridiculously 
simple, intentionally cartoonish picture," [cosmologist Saul] 
Perlmutter said. "We're just incredibly lucky that that first try has 
matched so well."

But is our luck about to run out? [Nobel physicist George] Smoot's 
and Perlmutter's work is part of a revolution that has forced their 
colleagues to confront a universe wholly unlike any they have ever 
known, one that is made of only 4 percent of the kind of matter we 
have always assumed it to be — the material that makes up you and me 
and this magazine and all the planets and stars in our galaxy and in 
all 125 billion galaxies beyond. The rest — 96 percent of the 
universe — is ... who knows?

"Dark," cosmologists call it, in what could go down in history as the 
ultimate semantic surrender. This is not "dark" as in distant or 
invisible. This is "dark" as in unknown for now, and possibly forever.

If so, such a development would presumably not be without 
philosophical consequences of the civilization-altering variety. 
Cosmologists often refer to this possibility as "the ultimate 
Copernican revolution": not only are we not at the center of 
anything; we're not even made of the same stuff as most of the rest 
of everything. "We're just a bit of pollution," Lawrence M. Krauss, a 
theorist at Case Western Reserve, said not long ago at a public panel 
on cosmology in Chicago. "If you got rid of us, and all the stars and 
all the galaxies and all the planets and all the aliens and 
everybody, then the universe would be largely the same. We're 
completely irrelevant."

All well and good. Science is full of homo sapiens-humbling insights. 
But the trade-off for these lessons in insignificance has always been 
that at least now we would have a deeper — simpler — understanding of 
the universe. That the more we could observe, the more we would know. 
But what about the less we could observe? What happens to new 
knowledge then? It's a question cosmologists have been asking 
themselves lately, and it might well be a question we'll all be 
asking ourselves soon, because if they're right, then the time has 
come to rethink a fundamental assumption: When we look up at the 
night sky, we're seeing the universe.

Not so. Not even close....



http://tinyurl.com/3bdbd5


Reply via email to