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Tuesday, February 13, 2007 | Reason : Science of Religion | print version Print | Comments |

Document A Familiar and Prescient Voice, Brought to Life

by Dennis Overbye

Reposted from NYTimes:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/13/science/13carl.html?em&ex=1171515600&en=32a4fdd6685de182&ei=5070
Thanks to Sarah Walker for sending this in.

It's been a long 10 years since we've heard Carl Sagan beckoning us to consider the possibilities inherent in the "billions" of stars peppering the sky and in the "billions" of neuronal connections spiderwebbing our brains.

In the day, the Cornell astronomer, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of books like "The Dragons of Eden," "Contact," "Pale Blue Dot" and "The Demon-Haunted World," impresario of the PBS program "Cosmos" and Johnny Carson regular was one of the world's most famous and eloquent unbelievers, an apostle of cosmic wonder, critic of nuclear arms and a champion of science's duty to probe and question without limit, including the claims of religion. He died of pneumonia after a series of bone marrow transplants in December 1996.

In his absence, the public discourse on his favorite issues — the fate of the planet, the beauty and mystery of the cosmos — has not fared well. The teaching of evolution in public schools has become a bitter bone of contention; NASA tried to abandon the Hubble Space Telescope and censor talk of climate change; and of course, religious fanatics crashed jetliners into the World Trade Center, leading to a war in the Middle East that has awakened memories in some corners of the Crusades.

Now, however, Dr. Sagan has rejoined the cosmic debate from the grave. The occasion is the publication last month of "The Varieties of Scientific Experience: A Personal View of the Search for God" (Penguin). The book is based on a series of lectures exploring the boundary between science and religion that Dr. Sagan gave in Glasgow in 1985, and it was edited by Ann Druyan, his widow and collaborator.

Reading Dr. Sagan's new book is like running into an old friend at a noisy party, discovering he still has all his hair, and repairing to the den for a quiet, congenial drink.

"I would suggest that science is, at least in part, informed worship," he writes at the beginning of a discussion that includes the history of cosmology, a travel guide to the solar system, the reason there are hallucinogen receptors in the brain, and the meaning of the potential discovery — or lack thereof — of extraterrestrial intelligence.

Never afraid to venture into global politics, Dr. Sagan warns at one point of the danger that a leader under the sway of religious fundamentalism might not try too hard to avoid nuclear Armageddon, reasoning that it was God's plan.

"He might be interested to see what that would be like," Dr. Sagan wrote. "Why slow it down?"

Almost in the same breath, Dr. Sagan acknowledges that religion can engender hope and speak truth to power, as in the civil rights movement in the United States, but that it rarely does.

It's curious, he says, that no allegedly Christian nation has adopted the Golden Rule as a basis for foreign policy. Rather, in the nuclear age, mutually assured destruction was the policy of choice. "Christianity says that you should love your enemy. It certainly doesn't say that you should vaporize his children."

When Saddam Hussein was hanged in December, those words had a haunting resonance.

It was Ms. Druyan's impatience with religious fundamentalism that led her to resurrect Dr. Sagan's lectures, which were part of the Gifford Lectures, a prestigious series about natural theology that has been going on since the 19th century.

Ms. Druyan, who co-wrote "Cosmos" and produced the movie "Contact," based on her husband's novel, runs Cosmos Studio and was a leader in the aborted effort by the Planetary Society to launch a solar sail from a Russian submarine two years ago. Among her lesser-known achievements is a kiss on the cheek of the science writer Timothy Ferris, which was recorded and included on a record of the sounds of Earth that is part of the Voyager spacecraft now flying out of the solar system. She and Dr. Sagan had planned to use his Gifford lectures as the basis for a new television show called "Ethos," a sequel to "Cosmos," about the spiritual implications of the scientific revolution. "I know of no other force that can wean us from our infantile belief that we are the center of the universe," she said.

But "Ethos" never happened, and the lectures disappeared.

In the wake of Sept. 11 and the attacks on the teaching of evolution in this country, she said, a tacit truce between science and religion that has existed since the time of Galileo started breaking down. "A lot of scientists were mad as hell, and they weren't going to take it anymore," Ms. Druyan said over lunch recently.

Some of the books that resulted, such as Richard Dawkins's "The God Delusion," have been criticized as shrill, but Ms. Druyan said: "People like Carl and Dawkins are more serious about God than people who just go through the motions. They are real seekers."

About a year ago, Ms. Druyan went looking for Dr. Sagan's lectures, eventually finding them filed under "Ethos" in his archive at Cornell, which occupies 1,000 filing cabinets and includes things like his baby pictures and report cards.

Rereading them, she said, "I couldn't believe how prophetic they were."

It took about a day for her editor at Penguin to decide to publish them, she said.

She retitled the book — Dr. Sagan had named his lectures "The Search for Who We Are" — as a nod to William James, whose Gifford lectures in 1901 and 1902 became the basis for his book "The Varieties of Religious Experience."

Ever the questioner, Dr. Sagan asks at one point in his lectures why the God of the Scriptures seems to betray no apparent knowledge of the wider universe that "He or She or It or whatever the appropriate pronoun is" allegedly created. Why not a commandment, for instance, that thou shalt not exceed the speed of light? Or why not engrave the Ten Commandments on the Moon in such a way that they would not be discovered until now, à la the slab in "2001: A Space Odyssey"?

If such an inscription were found, people would ask how it had gotten there, Dr. Sagan writes. "And then there would be various hypotheses, most of which would be very interesting," he adds dryly.

Near the end of his book, Dr. Sagan parses the difference between belief and science this way: "I think if we ever reach the point where we think we thoroughly understand who we are and where we came from, we will have failed."

The search for who we are does not lead to complacency or arrogance, he explains. "It goes with a courageous intent to greet the universe as it really is, not to foist our emotional predispositions on it but to courageously accept what our explorations tell us."

Dr. Sagan was many things, but shrill was not one of them.

The last word may as well go to Dr. Dawkins himself, who in a 1996 book nominated Dr. Sagan as the ideal spokesman for Earth. In a blurb for the new book, Dr. Dawkins said that the astronomer was more than religious, having left behind the priests and mullahs.

"He left them behind, because he had so much more to be religious about," Dr. Dawkins wrote. "They have their Bronze Age myths, medieval superstitions and childish wishful thinking. He had the universe."

Comments 1 - 20 of 20 |

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1. Comment #22294 by ScienceBreath on February 14, 2007 at 12:23 am

...his archive at Cornell, which occupies 1,000 filing cabinets...

Could this be true? That's a shit-load of documents!

Other Comments by ScienceBreath

2. Comment #22306 by Yorker on February 14, 2007 at 2:22 am

Comment #22294 by ScienceBreath

Yes, it's true, I've heard Annie Druyan say that herself. Carl documented everything; he annotated every book he read; his resume was over an inch thick, that's the kind of person he was. There's a book named "Carl Sagan: A Life", I can't remember the author's name but it's worth reading because it discusses his human flaws as well as his accomplishments.

Apparently he wasn't a very good father and didn't want to get involved in mundane household chores etc. Personally, I would forgive him all that, his virtues far outweighed his faults.

Other Comments by Yorker

3. Comment #22314 by igor on February 14, 2007 at 7:56 am

 avatarWell now I'm going to have to buy this.

I hope you're happy!

Other Comments by igor

4. Comment #22318 by JeffW on February 14, 2007 at 5:34 pm

As many of us have, I grew up watching and reading Sagan, and loved all his stuff. But I find this statement interesting:

"It goes with a courageous intent to greet the universe as it really is, not to foist our emotional predispositions on it but to courageously accept what our explorations tell us."

This may accurately describe what scientists do, but falls short of mark for engineers, artists, and creative people in general. They really do foist their predispositions on the world. And in some ways, using almost Heisenberg-like reasoning, seeing the world too clearly as it is can sometimes interfere with your vision of how it might be.

Other Comments by JeffW

5. Comment #22320 by Nazgul on February 14, 2007 at 6:05 pm

I just finished the book, and it was great. I was 14 when I watched his PBS "Cosmos", and it made me the rational thinker I am today. I wish he was still alive today to fight the good fight along side Dawkins and Harris.

Other Comments by Nazgul

6. Comment #22327 by Harlon57 on February 14, 2007 at 7:44 pm

 avatarThis book by Ann Druyan will now be added to the long list of books I can't wait to read.

Today, I had to order Sam Harris' "Letter to a Christian Nation" from Barnes & Noble as it was out of stock. They assured me it would be in within a week and that they just can't keep it in stock.

Isn't that a good sign!?!

Other Comments by Harlon57

7. Comment #22328 by Johnny Bones on February 14, 2007 at 8:25 pm

 avatar'The Varieties of Scientific Experience' is a wonderful book.

I would love to see Ann Druyan complete 'Ethos'.

Other Comments by Johnny Bones

8. Comment #22364 by charlesj on February 15, 2007 at 5:02 am

 avatarDoes anyone know if the Sagan Archive is open to the public?

Other Comments by charlesj

9. Comment #22368 by SMART on February 15, 2007 at 6:09 am

My favourite Sagan quote is, "There are more stars in the universe than all the grains of sand on all the beaches of the world, combined!"

If religious people took a minute or two to actually think about what that number must be... once they'd stopped gasping, it might do much to stick a pin in their grossly inflated sense of their own importance.

To believe that the alleged creator of this massive universe is not only aware of your existence but is actually interested in minute details of how you live your life - that must surely be the ultimate delusion of grandeur!

Other Comments by SMART

10. Comment #22379 by vdubmatt on February 15, 2007 at 8:01 pm

Carl Sagan was truly a hero to me. Everyday I regret the fact that he is gone and that his voice of reason is silenced. I really think everyone here should read as much of his works as possible. When I first saw Cosmos in HS it is what opened my eyes to a world of Atheism and rationality.

In some ways I believe Dawkins is continuing what carl had done, but there will never be anyoe else like him.

ps. The author of Carl Sagan: A Life is Keay Davidson. A very good book I would recomend to all.

"We live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology in which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology."
CS

Other Comments by vdubmatt

11. Comment #22381 by MelM on February 15, 2007 at 9:00 pm

Neil deGrasse Tyson's new book "Death by Black Hole: And Other Cosmic Quandaries" came out on Jan 22 '07 and is #14 on the current NYT best seller list.
http://www.amazon.com/Death-Black-Hole-Cosmic-Quandaries/dp/0393062244/sr=1-1/qid=1171600076/ref=sr_1_1/104-7079336-6081544?ie=UTF8&s=books

So, that's a good thing. Here's his web site; you might enjoy some of the videos.
http://research.amnh.org/users/tyson/index.php

I bought Sagan's book and have started it; however, the subtitle "Personal View of the Search For God" makes me wince a little. If it weren't a Sagan book, I'd likely leave it at the book store thinking that I'd seen the title a hundred times; I'm not a fan of flirting with religion.

Other Comments by MelM

12. Comment #22401 by vdubmatt on February 16, 2007 at 10:36 am

Right now I am re-reading Billions and Billions, but when i am finished, I am going to pick up "Death by Blackhole". I too agree that Tyson is picking up the slack left in the wake of Sagan's untimely death.

He really is a great figure for the public education in the sciences.

I am teaching an Earth Science lab at a University and I actually showed one of his Nova specials (origins) yesterday to my freshman class.

Other Comments by vdubmatt

13. Comment #22404 by Red Foot Oakie on February 16, 2007 at 11:40 am

 avatarMan, I really miss Carl Sagan...

Other Comments by Red Foot Oakie

14. Comment #22411 by MelM on February 16, 2007 at 7:59 pm

Everyone loves black holes but I'd sure like to see deGrasse-Tyson or anyone, get on the (U.S.) Tonight Show and explain the wonderful science in an ordinary electrical extension cord. That's what I like about science: the mundane just disappears.

Other Comments by MelM

15. Comment #22413 by MelM on February 16, 2007 at 9:22 pm

OT but exciting...

Scientists urged to run for school boards
http://www.sciencedaily.com/upi/index.php?feed=Science&article=UPI-1-20070213-09133300-bc-us-scientists.xml

It's worth a shot and much much better than evangelicals running things. We'd better do something before our schools end up like "Jesus Camp".

Other Comments by MelM

16. Comment #22424 by Vadjong on February 17, 2007 at 4:15 am

 avatarIf ever the Zeitgeist was ripe for "Ethos" to be made, it must be now.

Other Comments by Vadjong

17. Comment #22665 by happinessiseasy on February 20, 2007 at 12:10 pm

 avatarRest in peace, Carl Sagan. You will be forever missed.

Other Comments by happinessiseasy

18. Comment #22669 by quork on February 20, 2007 at 12:47 pm

I finished the book a few days ago. It's quite good. It gives an astronomer's viewpoint on various questions which impinge on religion. It starts with the vast scale of the universe, and the ubiquity of organic matter in the solar system. Lots of good pictures. Sagan walks the audience through it step by step, with admirable patience and only a few lapses. At the end of the book are excerpts from the Q&A sessions following the lectures; Sagan maintained composure where I'm sure I couldn't have.

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19. Comment #22697 by Skutter on February 20, 2007 at 11:54 pm

 avatar"Today, I had to order Sam Harris' "Letter to a Christian Nation" from Barnes & Noble as it was out of stock. They assured me it would be in within a week and that they just can't keep it in stock.

Isn't that a good sign!?!"

Hi all.

My first post here. I have a library hold on Sam Harris's "Letter to a Christian Nation". I checked where I was in the queue and I'm twenty-seventh.

I find this very heartening that people are willing to read alternative views.

Carl is certainly missed. I loved Cosmos.

Other Comments by Skutter

20. Comment #24748 by Fedler on March 8, 2007 at 9:57 am

 avatarI just finished the book and enjoyed it thoroughly. I especially like Professor Sagan's take on religious belief and whether science has a right or responsibility to question it. He stated science can explore beliefs (i.e. resurrection, virgin birth, existence of god, etc.), however right now there is no reason to. Unless there is evidence that any of those claims might be true, science is fine to discover other things and there is no need for science to waste its energy on myth or folklore. If some evidence presents itself, then science can be free to throw all the scrutiny of the scientific method into discovering the facts.

It just made think how scientists (like Dawkins) are often accused of attacking religion and religious beliefs, but I believe science just shows the world for what it really is. This ruffles the feathers of believers because it goes against their beliefs. I would assert that Dawkins, Dennett, Harris, et al are only responding back to the believers who have been so vocal about saying how science should not 'interfere' with religious beliefs. But again, science is objective and just tells it like it is.

Professor Sagan said it best at the end of the lecture portion of the book, right before the Q&A section:

"I think if we ever reach the point where we think we thoroughly understand who we are and where we came from, we will have failed. I think this search does not lead to a complacent satisfaction that we know the answer, not an arrogant sense that she answer is before us and we need do only one more experiment to find it out. It goes with a courageous intent to greet the universe as it really is, not to foist our emotional predispositions on it but to courageously accept what our explorations tell us."


Professor Sagan is sorely missed.

Other Comments by Fedler
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