I awoke, still tired, as the sky barely
brightened, and my first tendency was to roll over, go back to sleep,
but I knew the planets were out there, up there, and I had to see
them, which I did, brilliant against the blue-black of the pre-dawn
east, arrayed today in a diagonal line, an arrow with sparkling Venus
as its tip; then Mars, a faint red dot; the smoldering white coal of
Jupiter, and at the bottom, the moon, slim sliver of light cupping
the dark of the whole.
Stars spattered the sky, taking my
thoughts back to The Martian, the film I watched last night. It was
unique in its celebration of intelligence, of science, as a stranded
astronaut — Matt Damon — uses his vast knowledge of math and
science to make water, grow food, generate power, build shelters,
survive.
Image by Roth Ritter |
It had no product placements, save for
NASA and Jet Propulsion Labs, and ended with a hopeful scenario: the U.S. and China
cooperating on a mission to explore the “final frontier.” So is
space exploration ultimately a unifying tool? Because out there,
neighborhoods and nations, race and religion, become meaningless;
Earthling is the only demographic designation that matters.
Though it had all the markings of a
Hollywood blockbuster — soaring score, dramatic tension, masterful special
effects, plucky hero, happy ending — it departed from the norm in
delivering a message that was consistent and clear: Without math and
science, you're dead.
It also slipped in some not-so-subtle
commentary on the food and energy issues that currently plague the
planet.
For instance, after the Matt Damon
character deliberately digs up the spacecraft's ditched radioisotope
thermoelectric generator — “the big box of plutonium” —
knowing it could kill him, but desperate for heat, he notes:
And sure, I could choose to think
about the fact that I'm warm because I have a decaying radioactive isotope riding right behind me. But
right now I got bigger problems on my hands.
When he returns to Earth, and a career
as a survival instructor, he begins by telling the young astronaut
hopefuls:
Yes, I did in fact survive on a
deserted planet by farming in my own shit. Yes, it's actually worse
than it sounds. So, let's not talk about that ever again.
His point is obvious: Yes, the ancient
ways of farming did work, and still will in a pinch. But there's more
than one reason why people stopped collecting “night soil” and
applying it to their fields, so let's stop idealizing traditional
agriculture.
At another place in the movie, he
observes:
They said that once you grow crops
somewhere, you officially "colonized" it. So, technically,
I colonized Mars.
It made me think about the natural
process of colonization in which seeds, carried by birds, drifting on
ocean currents, floating on the wind, take hold in different
surroundings, sometimes dominating, crowding out, that which was
already there, cross-breeding, perhaps, ultimately evolving to adapt to the conditions of the new environment.
It's a process that's repeated as well by
animals of all kinds (of which are one) — sometimes with
devastating consequences. Yet it's part of the seemingly
inevitable, and unceasing, mixing of life that fosters the genetic
diversity that is the hallmark of a healthy species, a healthy
ecosystem. Life, in all its many forms, is an unending work in progress.
The hero goes on tell his students:
This is space. It does not
cooperate. At some point, everything's going to go south on you.
Everything's going to go south and you're going to say "This is
it. That is how I end." Now you can either accept that, or you
can get to work. That's all it is. You just begin. You do the math.
You solve one problem and you solve the next one, and then the next.
And if you solve enough problems,
you get to come home.
Though we forget it most of the time,
this blue-green sphere we call home is traveling in space. At various times in its history, cataclysmic events have taken place. And once again, it seems that in so many ways, everything is going south.
Can we problem-solve our way out of it?
Do we have any other choice?
Do we have any other choice?
Because we aren't going back; we're
somehow going forward.
While many seem to relish the notion of
a postmodern apocalypse, with its enforced simplicity, I've studied
enough history, seen enough poor rural communities, to disabuse
myself of the romanticism of eking out an existence. Homo sapiens
have striven always to go beyond mere survival.
Yes, we need to know, understand and
honor the ways of the past, the building blocks of our survival. But
we can't turn our back on science, silence the scientists, allow the
fearful and ignorant to define a conversation they aren't equipped to
lead.
Because at this point in our evolution
as a species, it does seem quite literally true: Without math and
science, we're dead.
11 comments:
“You must have chaos within you to give birth to a dancing star.”
“The man of knowledge must be able not only to love his enemies but also to hate his friends.”
“All things are subject to interpretation. Whichever interpretation prevails at a given time is a function of power and not truth.”
“A thought, even a possibility, can shatter and transform us.”
― all above quotes --Friedrich Nietzsche
“Ah, women. They make the highs higher and the lows more frequent.”
― Friedrich Nietzsche--------not for Ms Joan
“Everything that is done in this world is done by hope.”
― Martin Luther
"I invented the internet"
-Al Gore....an ardent anti-Gmo enthusiast
Welp it is a good day to aspire to great things. I think I'll do the math on how many new County employees we can hire with the built-in logarithmic ratios inherent in our Kauai property taxes and ponder on the futility of the long barking dog.
Joan Conrow, you are a spark. Thank you.
Joan, you've stepped into the unknown future that people don't want to face. Our bodies need to learn to live in the environment we are creating. The pollution that won't instantly go away, has become so bad that the air we breathe is dangerous. Our bodies will learn to live with that and science will help to develop ways to fight it or make it better. In the meantime, some bodies will survive and others will not. So, live life to it's fullest and do good whenever you can.
Beautifully said. Thank you, Joan.
Nothing is organic anymore. Who are we kidding. Even humans are multi bred with many blood types. Humans need to accept we live and die.
Thank you so very much for your post. I'm reminded of Carl Sagan.
We need more of math and science and less of ignorance, superstition and fairytales that divide us.
We may die due to suppression and censorship of scientific data by the government, heads of companies, the "big Boys" whose ego, greed and power rule their days!
10:09am,
You are more likely to choke on your bullshit first.
Love your comment 6:26 PM!
10:09---what bullshit? better get to reading and listening to the news---big boy bullshit everyday and more to come--lies and deception---what is hidden will soon be revealed, oops, some stuff already being revealed---do your homework---
So 6:26pm you have never heard of cigarette companies and the big truth that they were selling you for decades?
I believe it's the same concept that 10:09am is correlating towards.
As I recall, 11:41, the scientific data and studies were overwhelming in the case of cigarettes. So I do not find a scientific equivalency between the known harms of tobacco smoke and the perception of some people of the harmfulness of the Kauai seed company operations. These perceptions are so far unsupported by the available health data and the great preponderance of pesticide studies in the public domain despite what some people say. I will, just to make you happy, grant you that I see a moral equivalency between the activities of many of the principal anti GMO agitators with other self aggrandizing people who do dubious things for self promotion or financial gain (like cigarette company executives).
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