-Caveat Lector-

from http://www.sfsite.com/fsf/depts/sci07.htm

A Scientist's Notebook
by Gregory Benford


Sending Meaning Across Epochs

We read messages everywhere, even when there aren't any.
Every known culture perceives constellations and stories in the stars. We see
faces where there are none, in the chance roiling of clouds, the dark lava
features of our moon, or the erosion patterns of a mountain on Mars.

We also read buildings. No architecture stands independent of aesthetics.
"Beauty" changes with time, so that buildings once considered masterful are
often demoted and even demolished.

This High Church defense, then, depends on how long one thinks a given
cultural preference shall reign. By High Church, I mean striving to pass on
the elite culture of the time---the best art, jewelry, etc. Ruling classes do
this throughout history. Future Kilroys lie in wait to scrawl Kilroy Was Here
on the finest durable works on their time. As urban planners know, the first
signs that a neighborhood is beginning to slide are graffiti. The fact that
NASA now attaches disks loaded with signatures of the public to every outbound
spacecraft is not reassuring in this regard.

Those works considered beautiful can even ignore structural rules. The
Athenians converted a wooden temple into a stone one, disregarding the vastly
different demands of the transition, yet creating the marvel of the Parthenon.


Architecture conveys many nonverbal, or semiotic messages: consider the barred
windows of a jail versus the ornamented, status-rich windows of a Renaissance
palace. Semiotic meanings are deeply cultural and time shapes them. The
pyramids once sent a religious message, later a magical one, still later an
engineering one; today we see them mostly through a lens that combines
artistic, structural and sociological ideas.

Still, they have great power. Doomed nuclear-war survivors in Nevil Shute's On
the Beach spend their last days constructing one in the Australian desert, a
monument with no future audience, since humanity is dying; yet they build.

But some themes seem embedded even more deeply in the way we see our world.
>From the tension in a rope pulling a bucket from a well we intuit tensile
properties. These then inform our way of looking at a suspension bridge,
surely the most elegant combination of function and form in our time. Semiotic
messages satisfy us best when we understand them both structurally and
aesthetically.

A sense of wrongness can also be deeply intuitive. A tree trunk and branches
tells us, by analogy, about gravity loads in tall buildings, adding from top
to bottom. Violating this intuition brings a sense of error or ugliness. We
stand puzzled before Cretan columns, which thicken as they rise, but accept
Doric columns which are widest at the base. Cantilever beams which thin toward
the tip are right to us, while a beam broader at the tip strikes us as wrong.

The Cheops pyramid reminds us awesomely of a mountain, but a building of
inverted, truncated pyramid design says to us that some trick has been played
to give an unnatural result. We get an uneasy surprise from glimpsing one on
the horizon, of "dishonest" design.

Scale does not seem to impede semiotic messages. Spider webs and the Golden
Gate bridge alike call forth our perception of tensile structure, their
lightness striking us as obviously elegant.

Yet semiotic readings can change quickly. The Eiffel tower was vigorously
opposed and originally slated to be torn down after the exhibition it
ornamented was over. Within a generation this "monstrosity" had become the
very symbol of Paris and France itself. It attained this glory by conceding
almost nothing to decoration, revealing its sinews completely, like a vertical
suspension bridge.

Perhaps the most reliable wordless message to send across the millennia is
awe. To instill this mingling of fear and wonder leaves the visitor with a
memory free of words or detail. Though this is a High Church approach, fear
can be part of the effect: the convergence of awe with the awful. Many have
seen something fleetingly terrible in the visage of the Sphinx.

Ancient things and places hold inherent wonder for us because they speak to
deep aesthetic biases we share. The most striking of obvious markers hold a
still and subtle balance that their makers carefully shaped, speaking across
time in the language of beauty. Ancient cultures fell in line with nature,
many of their most obvious markers (pyramids, astronomically aligned henges)
comprising a vast, unvoiced aspiration to join in harmony with elemental
forces. Their stones speak to us still.

Next to the Egyptian pyramids, Stonehenge seems the best known example of
this. Somehow this ring of stones instills wonder, though at first glance it
is not very impressive to some. John Fowles in The Enigma of Stonehenge (1980)
quotes a child saying worriedly, "Why are there so many doors?" To the
untutored eye it seems easy to see in it a mere lot of doorways leading
nowhere.

Like the several hundred "henges" in Britain, its true purpose is unknown.
Plainly it meant much to the ancient laborers who dressed the huge stones,
moved them many miles, pounded them level and true with mauls. Their sarsen
stone is three times harder to work than granite, able to ruin the edge of
most modern tools short of steel alloy. Though the site slopes several feet
east to west, the tops of the lintels vary by only three inches, after
millennia of settling. Engineers estimate that about half a million man-hours
went into simply digging the ditches and banks of the area.

Explanations of its geometry revolve about astronomy; photos of it invariably
portray the sun rising or setting between uprights and a lintel. To the modern
mind, which rarely notes the rise of the sun nor of stars, the astronomical
role is not intuitive.

Millions today know their birth-sign, but because the stars have moved since
the Babylonians invented the Zodiac, most of them have it wrong. Such people
may find it difficult to conceive of a passionate interest in getting the
winter solstice, say, exactly right, as viewed through a ritual stonework.

Still, the henges seem to focus lines of sight and to shut out glare; they are
more like sun-visors than doorways. Even copies, such as the exact Stonehenge
replica beside the Columbia River in Washington State (built, oddly, as a
memorial to the World War I dead), capture this reverential flavor.

Stonehenge itself was an observatory, not in our modern sense of a place to
discover the new, but rather, a site to embody knowledge of the sky won over
centuries, if not millennia, and already old. The strength of conviction
demanded to inspire such awesome labors, constructing an entire complex of
henges (Avebury and Woodhenge lie nearby), all to reflect an understanding of
our universe as revealed in the sky, is difficult for us to fathom. This
underscores the immense cultural gulf that deep time messages must span, and
so seldom do.

Even though awe-struck, we do note geometrical messages, some no doubt
unconsciously. Stonehenge's central stones form an oval as seen from above.
The lengths of the two oval axes are in the ratio 5:3; this is close to the
Golden Section, 1.6280..., a number of great import to the ancient Greeks.
Such deep aesthetics can cross cultures.

It is also worth noting that the perimeter of the Great Pyramid, divided by
its height, is 2 pi, so the height was set to equal the radius. The symbol of
the sun God Ra was a circle, so when Ra rose at morning the pyramid greeted
him with a geometric analog of himself, a hailing call from his subjects.

Such mathematical clues play to perceptions free of words and sentences. The
Golden Section is a preferred number in the aesthetics of many different
cultures. That these predilections appear to come down to us intuitively,
while we must endlessly speculate on the true intentions of the Stonehenge
builders, suggests that some very rarefied messages can persist.

Great monuments also seek to carry messages through the ancient language of
mass. Bulk alone can draw our attention. Texts like the Bible carry messages
through a hardening of an existing culture, protecting the text itself from
tampering or extinction.

This desire to convey some essence of ourselves, whether High Church or Kilroy
Was Here, is the great impulse behind deep time messages. But there is also a
clear desire to shape the future, and to use the idea of the future to shape
the present. Many legacies stem from this desire.


Time Capsules
The universal human urge to bury the dead, often with accompanying objects,
may stem from the agricultural experience of burying a seed and seeing a
specific plant grow later. But Neanderthals' careful grave burials belie this
easy explanation, though quite possibly the impulse behind human burials is to
invoke the resurrection we see in nature each Spring.

In this sense some deep time messages play to this "natural" predisposition.
The storage and replanting of seeds is a Jungian archetype. But long-time
marking of radioactive waste sites is anti-archetypal, since we are planting
not life but anti-life, poison. Rather than say the "right" thing ("Take my
husband, Crag, who lived a good life and deserves mercy."), our waste site
markers must proclaim "Stay away, danger!"

We have learned much from ancient burials. Intentional grave sites are often
High Church, providing the deceased with some supplies for the afterlife, or
artistically decorating casket, sarcophagus, crypt or tomb. Inadvertent
burials can tell us much more, as with the chance discovery of a man covered
by ice for 5,300 years in the Austrian-Italian Alps.

This unique find brought us a body well preserved and carrying its
microorganisms and parasites, his working tools (bows, arrows, dagger, axe)
and clothes. Apparently caught in a sudden storm, his is the best permafrost
mummy ever found, a trove of clues to a society and time that left no written
records.

Bodies can even give us enough clues to reconstruct plausible features,
literally giving faces to the past, as in a striking depiction of Alexander's
father from an 8 B.C. Macedonian grave site. Science can pluck subtle clues
from apparent ruin, making time capsules from accidents. Whole cities flooded
by lava, such as Pompeii and Heraculaneum, provide us with encased bodies and
buildings, invaluable archeological troves. As science advances, most deep
time messages will be inadvertant, pulled out of history's noise level.

Time capsules embody a modern faith in a future that will care about us,
underpinned by our anxiety that our most cherished beliefs and customs may be
unintelligible, meaningless. Cities and institutions, no less than whole
nations, have solemnly buried memorabilia, with much accompanying ceremony.
The Order of Masons' cornerstone-laying ceremonies may have started this
modern practice; in 1793 George Washington, a Mason, laid the original
cornerstone of the U.S. Capitol, which may have held artifacts and has since
been lost.

Roughly ten thousand time capsules already await future historians. Notably,
their time horizon is quite short, usually a century. Citizens of Sandusky,
Ohio will presumably gather to open a capsule laid down only fifty years
before, though, filled with objects which recall "the triumphs and tragedies
of life in America during 1995." These include Pop-Tarts, crayons, the May 29,
1995 Newsweek, a "Buns of Steel" video and a Wonderbra. In 2043 Euclid, Ohio
presumably will dig up a seven-foot torpedo tube packed with a history of town
organizations including the Polka Hall of Fame and a "Not Too Young to Polka"
cassette.

The Seville World's Fair of 1992 left an interesting democratic variation: the
Capsula de Tiempo, an open tar pit into which anyone can throw whatever they
wish. This cavalier style, advertised as "democratic," contrasts with the
World's Fair of 1939 tube of copper, chromium and silver, "deemed capable of
resisting the effects of time for 5,000 years." It was the first to be called
a time capsule, though its first name was "time bomb" since some believed its
opening in 6936 A.D. would set off a cultural explosion, with its textiles and
microfilm, TV set and a machine that teaches English.

For the U.S. Bicentennial, President Ford had 22,000,000 citizen signatures
collected for interrment at Valley Forge, intending them for study in 2076.
Proudly toured throughout the nation for display, the capsule was however
stolen from a van at the burial site.

This is another common theme: slips between cup and lip. Many capsules are
already lost, their markers not erected, details of location forgotten. The
city of Corona, California has already laid down seventeen capsules (one of
which I saw solemnly interred in 1963) over the last half century, only to
lose track of them all, though they did tear up a lot of concrete around the
civic center in a fruitless search. The cast of the "M*A*S*H" TV show buried a
priceless set of tapes of the show, plus artifacts, somewhere in the 20th
Century Fox parking Lot in Hollywood, but nobody knows just where. Though
buried only in 1983, it is already submerged beneath a huge Marriott hotel.

A 1953 two-ton capsule mandated by the state of Washington lies lost beneath
the capitol grounds because during political infighting the legislature did
not fund the last act, its marker. People can recall the ceremony, but not
precisely where it was held.

The approach of the millennium has caused a boom in time capsules; there is
even a company producing custom-engraved aluminum tubes. They seem designed to
last at best a few centuries. Capsules are usually gestures of more importance
to their planners than anyone else. The pop artist Andy Warhol filled 608
packing boxes between 1974 and 1987 with inexplicable memorabilia, ranging
from unknown paintings to telephone messages, check stubs and a piece of cake.
He intended this trove for some permanent capsule, but never built it. In 1997
Pittsburgh's Warhol museum paid tribute to him by laying down another capsule
assembled from whatever local residents brought in. As engineers put it, the
signal to noise ratio here seems low.

Some capsule designers take the longer view. Oglethorpe University in Atlanta
sealed a Crypt of Civilization in 1940, not to be reopened until 8113. (This
date is as far from 1940 as were the earliest dated writings then known.)

The Crypt was devised by Thornwell Jacobs, who began the academic pursuit of
time capsules with an article in Scientific American in 1936. He was impressed
by a capsule buried by Tokyo citizens, to carry forward the names of 10,000
victims of a 1923 earthquake. Far greater disasters have befallen this
century, so this tragedy and its Kilroy capsule now seem eclipsed as they lie
in quartz jars beneath a Buddhist temple.

Oglethorpe houses the International Time Capsule Society, and its Crypt is
indeed vast, the size of a swimming pool. It contains microfilmed books "on
every subject of importance known to mankind," artifacts dealing with 6
millennia of history, the inevitable photos and wire recordings of world
leaders circa 1940 (already mostly forgotten), and a quart of Budweiser. The
designer apparently felt that much would change, but not beer, though it seems
an uncertain sort of Rosetta stone. Perhaps it will be reassuring to the
openers in 8113 to find that this Bud's for them (though it will be flat), but
it is unclear how anyone will know when to open the repository itself.

This is a classic dilemma of deep time: safely buried, how does the object
announce itself to its intended audience?

As the Vatican well knows, preserving a capsule, marker or message by creating
an attendant culture can work over millennia. Ancient religious sites such as
Mecca transmit with high fidelity their central tenets, perhaps more
concretely than their sacred texts, which can be Bowdlerized or reinterpreted,
since they rely on perishable parchment or paper.

Still, no institution comes down to us intact from the vast era before the
invention of writing. This is no accident; text carries so much information,
it can knit together whole communnities. Perhaps the success o the Catholic
church stems in part from its deep urge to copy old manuscripts, which served
it well a millennium ago.

It seems unlikely that one could build such a devout community today, short of
launching a new religion. In Osaka, Japan, a group plans to bury in 2001, atop
Mount Fuji in Antarctica, a master time capsule housing biological samples;
apparently they feel that isolation is the best defense.

Suggestions that nuclear waste sites be cared for by an "atomic priesthood"
ignore the motivations of the priests. It seems difficult to imbue groups with
the dedication to spread superstitions about spots having "bad juju".
Skepticism suggests that some future Age of Enlightenment would spawn free-
thinking types who would venture into the sites to prove that the priesthood
was full of baloney.

Still, the rise of mass celebrations could conceivably lead to such a
community. The current Burning Man assembly in the desert near the Nevada-
California border, dedicated to torching a tall wooden statue every year,
echoes the Celtic wicker man ritual, but seems unlikely to convey any durable
message, though cultural critic Stewart Brand has at least ventured the idea.

Brand and others have founded The Long Now Foundation, which seeks to leave an
enduring clock and library, perhaps with a community to support it, probably
in the Nevada-California desert. A clock marking off millennia could inspire
long-term thinking, though how can anyone both make it public and protect it?
With a nonsecular priesthood?

Brand cites an arresting fact: The oak beams in the College Hall of New
College, Oxford needed replacing in the nineteenth century, so the College cut
down some oaks planted in 1386 for that express purpose. In our modern time-
pressed lives, does any organization, even New College, plant or plan for such
perspectives?

Bits can last better than mass; strong belief systems have weathered from
antiquity, principally as religions or philosophies. The cohesion of the Jews
is legendary. The Pharoahs' priesthood lasted millennia, and New College's
faith in the continuity of English culture is striking to us in our helter-
skelter times. We could ape such deep time strategies. But how to inspire a
priesthood? Modern times have been full of convictions, many strongly felt
(Communism, Fascism, Socialism) and short of span--but it is not an age of
faith.

At the end of our millennium we face a particular problem: the rate of change
drives short-term thinking, but as our powers increase, our problems become
longer-term. Environmental impacts are the best example. Meanwhile our
principal tool, technology, is moving toward the transient and small.

Our modern sense of the technological sublime stems from fresh sensations of
size, speed, sound and novelty. Big things compel attention, as always; even
better if they are loud and fast and new. The Apollo V rocket fits all of
these.

Our newest technological marvels are relentlessly small and quiet, however,
from ever more compact computers to genetic engineering feats. When Arthur C.
Clarke picked the microchip as a recent wonder, his response was intellectual,
not visceral. Speed, compactness and novelty are passing wonders. Again, stone
is the best deep time investment.

Unlike the Hoover Dam, which was designed to last two thousand years (and has
impressive symbolic star-chart time markers which could be read over that
time), the late 20th century leaves few impressive techno-marvels. The High
Aswan Dam and China's Yellow River Dam carry no notable messages. The
millennial fever surrounding 2001 comes in an age more time-obsessed than any,
but whose latest technology seems particularly inappropriate for deep time
messages.

Still, one could bury a time capsule and hope for the best. Once only kings
could marshal durable deep time messages. Now we all can at least try.

In my next column I shall deal with the many ways we are attempting to leave
markers to endure through centuries, and what they reveal about us.


===THE END===


--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portions of this appear in Dr. Benford's new book, Deep Time.
Copyright (c) 1999 by Abbenford Associates

Comments and objections to this column are welcome. Please send them to
Gregory Benford, Physics Department, Univ. Calif., Irvine, CA 92717. email:
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