"One of the problems of human knowledge is that the world
which we see from the surface of this planet on a sunny day bears almost
no resemblance to the Universe at large. Our Earth is made of iron
and rock, but the Universe as a whole is mostly hydrogen. The actions
which we see on the surface of this Earth runs on gravity.
What we see here are continents, oceans,
rivers and lakes, mountain ranges, forests, tundra and prairies. But
the universe at large is mostly gas, partly condensed by gravity to galaxies
and stars, and lightly sprinkled, here and there, with interstellar dust.
The dust is made from hydrogen in the bellies of the stars, and is
scattered through the galaxies by the explosions and the stellar winds of
stars much bigger and much hotter than our Sun.
But the dust is scarce, and, like our bodies, the rock
on which we live is made of these dusts. It is a collectors' item.
The heavier elements, such as iron, have sunk to the center, overlaid
with the rocks of the mantle and the crust and a thin veneer of water and
gas. Since the age of this museum piece is pushing five billion years,
by now the water-soluble compounds of the surface rocks have leached into
the water layer, making the oceans salty.
The saltiness of our blood is the saltiness of the ancient
sea, some four hundred million years ago. That is when our scaly ancestors,
on stumpy fins, crawled out across the land in search of other water and
the sight of other fish. Descended as we are from them, we can think
of our bodies, even now, as little bags of sea water, hung out on clotheslines
of bone, gulping oxygen directly from the gas layer above us, and shambling
out across the rocks to gaze with starry eyes, through the blackness of night,
at the vast expanse of the Universe beyond.
Even the oxygen that we breathe is freed by sunlight
through the instrumentality of our photosynthetic relatives, first by the
blue-green algae in the sea, and now by the green leaves of the rain forest.
Even the rain is driven by sunlight. But the Universe at large
has a reducing atmosphere, and it is without rain and without sunlight. It
is very cold, very dark, and very lonely, trying desperately to fall together
by the seemingly inexplicable attraction of the particles for each other.
Even the radiation of the Sun is driven by this attraction
which has pushed the central temperature of the Sun up to some 15 million
degrees Celsius. And it is only because
its gravitational collapse has been slowed by the nuclear fusion at its core
that the Sun has bathed our Earth with its warming rays for nearly 5 billion
years. Only this delay has made possible our long genetic development
till we were able to climb out of the water and gaze in wonder at the starry
sky of night.
Although we, as living organisms, owe both our existence
and our long genetic development to the Sun, it dazzling brightness prevents
us from seeing the Universe by day. The blueness of the daytime sky
is not the color of the air, but simply the shorter wavelengths scattered
from the sunlight by the gas layer above us. And that gas layer by
night, unlit by the Sun, is sufficiently
transparent so that through it we may gaze into the far reaches of the
Universe.
But seeing alone is not enough. It is only the beginning.
We must also understand what we see, and that has a history.
Understanding rests on a foundation of concepts and information coming
down to us from the past, albeit not the very distant past. It is not
from the first few hundred million years after we came ashore in the swamps
to look around, because in those distant days and nights the concepts which
we framed, and the information which we gained, could not be transmitted
from generation to generation. We lacked a mechanism to transmit it.
It is not transmitted genetically, and there were then no words.
The written word, by which concepts and information are
largely transmitted in what we proudly think of as the "Age of Science",
are only a few thousand years old. And vocal speech itself is fairly
new. It was probably forced upon us by the failure of our body language
in the surf when we, as brachiating primates, marooned on an island in northeast
Africa, were driven by drought from the jungles to the beach, not more than
10 or 15 million years ago.
And even the body language common to the great apes,
and easily understood by the orangs,
the gorillas the chimps and ourselves, is less than 50 million years old.
Our great gain in those earlier times was in our genetically transmitted
capabilities. By the early demise of those with poorer eyes, we gained
our visual acuity, and by the early demise of those with smaller brains,
we improved our capacity to understand. It is that capacity which sets
us apart amongst the watchers of the skies."