Delight Springs

Wednesday, September 7, 2022

Possible experience

Looking ahead to tomorrow night, and our second MALA class on the Varieties of Experience. 

Last week it was James's Varieties, this week it's Carl Sagan's. They were Gifford lecturers in Scotland in 1901-2 and 1985, respectively. Next semester I'll offer the full-length course, examining those lectures and the books subsequent to them in their entirety. 

This week I'll set the stage for Sagan by stepping back and recalling the profound impact his cosmic perspective on philosophy and science had on teenage me, beginning with The Cosmic Connection, continuing when I saw him speak in college, followed by Cosmos (book and series), Pale Blue Dot, and so many other explorations of what it means to be "starstuff contemplating the stars... a way for the cosmos to know itself."

More recently, Carl's widow Ann Druyan has ably represented cosmic philosophy with Cosmos: Possible Worldshis daughter Sasha has elaborated its humanistic appeal with For Small Creatures Such as We: Rituals for Finding Meaning in Our Unlikely World, and Neil deGrasse Tyson has carried the torch of science popularization in the Cosmos re-boots, on television, radio, podcasts, Twitter, and countless other platforms of social media and pop culture. His tribute to Carl is quite touching.

 

His cosmic perspective is precise in its implications for our true cosmopolitan identity. We all share a universal pedigree: "The cosmic perspective not only embraces our genetic kinship with all life on Earth but also values our chemical kinship with any yet-to-be discovered life in the universe, as well as our atomic kinship with the universe itself."

Like her husband, Druyan is a humanist who dreams of a possible world that has transcended its petty chauvinisms, parochialisms, and nationalisms. "Imagine a world where the still unfolding story of the universe was told to every child as naturally as the nursery rhymes and fairy tales we fill their heads with today. How many fresh neurons and how much precious time do we waste when we busy our children's minds with nonsense during their most retentive years?"

What a world that might be. What wondrous varieties of experience they'd know. We owe them every effort to sustain the possibility.



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