explorations of the universe one voice in the cosmic fugue

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Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

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Page 1: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Explorations of the Universe

One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Page 2: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

What’s a Fugue?

• From a Latin word for “flight”

• From the same root as the word “fugitive”

• Variations on a theme are played on top of one another, creates an aural impression of rapid flight

• No true fugues anywhere in the episode!

Page 3: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Artistic Conventions and Science

• Anthropomorphism

• Accelerating Events

• Picturing the invisible

• Bringing the past to life

• Restoring Lost Details

• What if?

Page 4: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

DNA• Deoxyribonucleic acid

• Total length of human DNA in a single cell is about a meter

• A human body contains about 20 trillion cells

• The total length of DNA in a human body is thus 20 trillion meters, or twenty billion kilometers, the circumference of the orbit of Pluto.

Page 5: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

"Evolution is a Fact, Not a Theory - It Really Happened"

• Here's Sagan at his in-your-face best.

• Why is Evolution a Hot-Button Issue?– Science versus other modes of Knowledge– Ideological Abuses of Science– Dualistic nature of Western Culture (Fact vs.

Fiction)

Page 6: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

“Of course, long before you mature, most of you will be eaten.”

Page 7: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

“The picture’s pretty bleak,

gentlemen. The earth’s climate is

changing, the mammals are

taking over, and we all have

brains the size of a walnut.”

Page 8: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

“Now this end is called

the thagomizer, after the late

Thag Simmons.”

Page 9: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

“Evolution’s been good to you, Sid.”

Page 10: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

The Cosmic Calendar

• Human History = 5000 years

• Dinosaurs = 150,000,000 years

• Dinosaurs had:– 30,000 years for every year of human history– 80 years for every day– 8 hours for every second

Page 11: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Prebiotic Evolution

• The basic molecules of organic chemistry are easily made

• The first self-replicating molecule was almost certainly not DNA

• DNA assembles from simpler materials all the time

Page 12: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Plants and Animals

• CO2 + H2O + Energy = Sugars, Starches, etc. + O2 (toxic waste) - “The sky is made by life”

• O2 is actually toxic (even to us!)

• Idea: Take the sugars and starches (from somebody else) combine it with the waste O2, and get energy

Page 13: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Amazing Events in Life History

• “Invention of Sex” - Who Needs It?

• We are a team - Mitochondria

• The Great Freeze 900-600 m.y. ago

• Mass Extinctions– Dinosaurs = 4th worst– Permian extinction (220 m.y. ago) took out

90% of all species

Page 14: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Randomness, Order and Evolution

• Are the following letter sequences random: crvn, smrt, vrlo, gdje, trg?

• In Serbo-Croatian, the words mean, respectively, red, death, very, where and town square.

• Moral: the fact that something looks random doesn't mean it is. It may convey meaning in a way you don't understand.

Page 15: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Randomness, Order and Evolution

• Is the following number sequence random: 592653589793238462643383279?

• It not only looks random: it is random.

• But lacking in meaning? No. These are the digits of pi beginning with the fourth decimal place.

• Random does not mean “meaningless”

Page 16: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

The Scientific Meaning of Random

• Something cannot be predicted with better accuracy than that predicted by statistics.

• It takes as much information or effort to describe an event fully as it does simply to produce the event itself. The event is its own simplest description

Page 17: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Randomness and Evolution

• Biological systems are far too complex to describe or predict mathematically

• We have incomplete information,

• Significant events like climate change or asteroid impact are unpredictable.

Page 18: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Randomness and History• Mongols in Europe, 1242

– In three months, the Mongols wiped out military opposition in the Balkans

– Ordered to turn back to select a new Khan– Mongols never returned

• Gallipoli, February 1915– Object: force passage to the Black Sea and Russia– Intense artillery forced British fleet to retreat– Turks had 5 minutes’ ammunition left

Page 19: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Can Order Arise Naturally?• The Second Law of Thermodynamics is often

paraphrased as: – ”Things always go from bad to worse”– ”Disorder in the Universe is always increasing"

• The core of the Second Law is entropy

• Entropy can decrease locally if it increases elsewhere

• Intuitive notions of disorder are of no relevance whatsoever

Page 20: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Chemical Reactions are not Random

Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na Cl Na

Cl Na

Cl Na Cl Na Cl Cl Na Cl Na Cl Cl

Page 21: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

The Geologic Record

• Physical evidence records mostly small-scale, gradual processes

• Fossils show a gradual increase in complexity with time

• Fossil forms intermediate between major groups are well documented

• Over most of its history, life on Earth was simple

Page 22: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Selection• Deliberate selection for desirable traits by

humans (only since ca. 1700)

• Unsystematic selection for desirable traits by humans (domesticated animals and plants)

• Unconscious and unintentional selection by humans (self-domestication of animals)

• Natural selection with no human intervention at all

Page 23: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Lessons from Selection

• Artificial selection has produced organisms radically different from their natural state

• Natural selection has resulted in dramatic changes in natural populations with and without human intervention

• Microorganisms and viruses change with dazzling speed (mutation of flu viruses, resistance to antibiotics)

Page 24: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

This Descended from Wolves?

Page 25: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Prelude to Evolution

• 1750

• 1800

• 1825

• 1850

• Biology• Linnaeus• Selective Breeding• Lamarck

• Voyage of Beagle• Mendel - genes• Origin of Species

Geology

Hutton

Lyell-Uniformitarianism

Geologic Column

Page 26: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Linnaeus• Classification of Organisms

• Kingdom-Phylum-Class-Order-Family-Genus-Species

• Included Man and Apes in the Primates

• Encountered little opposition

• System was viewed as descriptive only

• Static, hierarchical, meshed with social prejudices of the day

Page 27: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Classification of Dogs and Humans• Kingdom Animalia

• Phylum Chordata

• Class Mammalia

• Order Carnivora (Dogs) Primates (Humans)

• Family Canidae Hominidae

• Genus Canis Homo

• Species familiaris sapiens

Page 28: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

The Five Kingdom System

• Animals

• Plants

• Protista (one-celled organisms)

• Fungi

• Bacteria*

• Ediacaran Fossils? (ca. 700 m.y. ago)

Page 29: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

What’s Bigger Than a Kingdom?• Bacteria differ from all other kingdoms in

lacking a cell nucleus

• We need a bigger box

• Superkingdoms or Domains– Monera (Bacteria)– Archaea– Eukarya (have cell nucleus)

• Need electron microscopes and molecular biology to see differences

Page 30: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Prelude to Evolution

• 1750

• 1800

• 1825

• 1850

• Biology• Linnaeus• Selective Breeding• Lamarck

• Voyage of Beagle• Mendel - genes• Origin of Species

Geology

Hutton

Lyell-Uniformitarianism

Geologic Column

Page 31: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Jean Lamarck, 1795• Animals change in response to their

environment

• Changes passed to offspring

• Example: the Giraffe

• First modern theory of evolution

• Wrong, but contributed the idea that the environment shapes organisms

Page 32: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Prelude to Evolution

• 1750

• 1800

• 1825

• 1850

• Biology• Linnaeus• Selective Breeding• Lamarck

• Voyage of Beagle• Mendel - genes• Origin of Species

Geology

Hutton

Lyell-Uniformitarianism

Geologic Column

Page 33: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Why was Darwin on the Beagle?• British Navy SOP: ship’s surgeon (Dr.

McKenzie) is the expedition naturalist

• Rigid rules against fraternization

• Depression ran in Captain Fitzroy’s family

• Solution: hire an extra civilian naturalist

• Real job: social peer and gentleman companion to the captain

• Problem: Darwin and Fitzroy were ideological opposites

Page 34: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Evolution By Natural Selection• Charles Darwin and Alfred Russell Wallace,

1859

• Organisms are adapted to their environments

• Individuals vary

• More organisms are born than can possibly survive

• Variations best suited to the environment tend to survive and be passed on.

Page 35: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Why the Furor over Evolution?• Pieces had been falling into place for over

100 years

• All the main tenets of Natural Selection were well known

• Seemed Cruel

• Seemed purposeless (“random”)

• Conflicts with Religion

• Sexual Connotations

• Ideological Abuses

Page 36: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Sexual Connotations• This was the Victorian era, and you can’t

discuss evolution without reproduction

• For an allegedly prudish era, they produced a lot of undraped art and figure-exaggerating fashions

• They weren’t so much prudish as mind-numbingly sentimental

Page 37: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

How Sentimental

Were the Victorians?

Page 38: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Conflicts with Religion• Death and the Fall

– Traditional: Death due to Adam’s fall– Darwin: Death is intrinsic part of life– So where does Christianity fit?

• Could a merciful God design Natural Selection?– The Paradox of Predestination– Does predation have any moral dimension?

• How to Interpret the Bible?– Literal versus metaphorical and allegorical

Page 39: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Ideological Abuses• Evolution Disproves Christianity

– Atheism vs. Fundamentalism

• Evolution Negates Purpose in Life– Nihilism vs. Religious and Marxist Schools

• Evolution = “Survival of the Fittest”– Social Darwinism vs. Religious and Marxist

Schools

• Racist Applications

Page 40: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

“Evolution Disproves Christianity”

• Where did all these atheists come from?

• They were there all along, but keeping a low profile (compare resurgence of racism in recent years)

• Moral: suppression is always more dangerous to the suppressor

• Two final words: Soviet Union

Page 41: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

The Five Fundamentals (1910)

• Literal Inerrancy of the Bible

• Virgin Birth and Divinity of Christ

• Atonement for sin at the Crucifixion

• Resurrection of Christ

• Second Coming

Page 42: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

How Fundamentalists See It

Page 43: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

The Scopes Trial, 1926

• Intended as a deliberate test of Tennessee’s anti-evolution law

• Clarence Darrow (defense) vs. William Jennings Bryan (prosecution)

• Climax came when Darrow grilled Bryan on the stand

• Inherit the Wind, based on the trial, is good drama but very inaccurate history

Page 44: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

The Biggest Single Misconception About Religion

• Many scientists consciously avoid saying “science believes”

• Draw distinction between subjective beliefs and documented evidence

• PROBLEM: EVERY RELIGION REGARDS ITS DOCTRINES AS PROVEN FACTS

Page 45: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Lysenko (USSR 1930’s)

• Rejected Darwin because of social darwinist abuses of evolution, “purposelessness”

• Reverted to Lamarckian theories• Likened struggle for existence to Marxist

class struggle• Was close friend of Josef Stalin• Effectively shut down Soviet biology 1930-

1945

Page 46: Explorations of the Universe One Voice in the Cosmic Fugue

Racism and Evolution

(Ernst Haeckel,

1874)