<![CDATA[io9: carlsagan]]> http://tags.lifehacker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/io9.com.png <![CDATA[io9: carlsagan]]> http://io9.com/tag/carlsagan http://io9.com/tag/carlsagan <![CDATA[Is "Science Fiction Humanism" A Contradiction In Terms? [Rant]]]> People talk about science fiction as the literature of humanism. But actually, science fiction's explorations put it into conflict with humanism's tenets. The best science fiction questions the nature of humanity, and whether the universe will let us stay human.

It's easy to think of science fiction and humanism as going hand in hand: Science fiction is about, or else informed by, science, which is empirical and rejects "a priori" beliefs and superstitions. Both Isaac Asimov and Kurt Vonnegut served as honorary presidents of the American Humanist Association.

According to Wikipedia, other famous secular humanists include Arthur C. Clarke, Terry Pratchett, Joss Whedon, Carl Sagan, and not surprisingly Philip Pullman. (A side note: I love the fact that the International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU)'s symbol is the Happy Human. Which sounds like a fast-food chain for cannibals.)

More than that, science fiction and humanism came of age around the same time — even though humanism arose in the Renaissance and flowered in the Enlightenment, the kind of skeptical, heavily secular form of humanism that we know today really game into its own in the mid-19th century. And it rose in popularity on the same wave of enthusiasm for science and technology that carried science fiction into the mass consciousness.

Note: For the purposes of this article, I'm defining humanism as a school of thought that emphasizes the dignity of humans, the free choice of the individual, and the importance of rationality. I'm aware that there are many different traditions of humanism, and many different definitions of the term, and feel free to offer your own in the comments.

But is science fiction really humanist? Much of science fiction turns out to be about exploring our vast cosmos, and expanding our being. From this quest, one of two outcomes often arises: 1) We meet something greater than ourselves. 2) We become something greater than our current selves. It's rare, and becoming rarer, to find science fiction that rejects both mysticism and posthumanism. You could even argue that if the journey doesn't change us somehow, then what's the point?

And if the journey does change us radically, are we still the mere humans that humanism purports to celebrate?

Image: "My Scream" by Shorey Chapman, via Alexi Panshin's The Abyss Of Wonder.

The Temptation Of Transcendence

Influential humanist thinker Paul Kurtz wags his finger at science fiction in his book The Transcendental Temptation: A Critique Of Religion And The Paranormal:

Science fiction can easily degenerate into a dream world of sheer fantasy and madness, and in the process it can help defeat the impulse of discovery and creation. It is with the realm of the transcendental that it is forever flirting.

Kurtz also describes the religious impulse as a "Hydra-headed monster within ourselves" that can only be defeated by "Occam's Razor, honed by reason and science."

Kurtz is right — it's very easy for science fiction to embrace transcendence, which might be viewed as one of the heads of that inner hydra. Just look at Wikipedia's list of famous humanists, and you'll notice Arthur C. Clarke and Carl Sagan.

Clarke, of course, is a pioneer of the "big objects in space" subgenre of SF, and his work often leans towards transcendence. In Rendezvous With Rama, we never quite learn the purpose of that massive spaceship's arrival in our solar system. And in 2001: A Space Odyssey, Bowman utters the famous phrase: "This thing's hollow — it goes on forever — and — oh my God — it's full of stars!" He then travels outside our galaxy and becomes a new kind of entity, a Star Child, that wields almost unimaginable powers. In the movie version, he becomes the poster-child (literally) for acid-trip mysticism in science fiction:

As for Sagan, his one work of fiction, Contact, flirts with spirituality in the novel version — Eleanor travels across the galaxy and meets mysterious aliens who give her "transcendental numbers," which may contain a message from the universe's creator. And when she returns to Earth, among the few who believe her is Palmer, a preacher who tells her that her experience may make humanity seem very small, but it "makes God seem very big." We end with a fairly woo-woo epilogue, in which we're told "The universe was made on purpose." And in the film version, it's even more sherbet-y:

This interest in the transcendent often goes hand in hand with humanism's faith in our evolution beyond our current limited states — but at what point are we no longer human? That's the crux of the matter.

Gods And Cyborgs:

Often, humanism in science fiction appears in opposition to something that wants to deny, or erase, our humanity and dignity. Think of it as a spectrum: At one end, you have gods and godlike entities, who want us to return to an earlier state of development and revert to idolatry. At the other, you have cyborgs and artificial intelligences, who want us to abandon our humanity altogether and become something unrecognizeable.

"Humanist" science fiction either proves that we're no longer barbarians, and we can achieve greatness on our own without needing some proscriptive deities to tell us what to do, or it upholds the fact that we haven't become machines yet.

Philip K. Dick's protagonists are frequently flawed — as representatives of the dignity of humanity, they're not as impressive as, say, Heinlein's libertarian over-achievers — but there is something essentially humanist about their struggle, as Jason P. Vest argues in his book The Postmodern Humanism Of Philip K. Dick. Similar to Borges, Calvino and Kafka, Dick presents flawed protagonists grappling with alien forces that threaten their "autonomy, agency, and identity," and their struggle is humanistic whether or not they "win." (This includes godlike intelligences, as in Eye In The Sky, or superior artificial intelligences.)

But here's the thing — at some point, the struggle against those external forces does change us. And maybe we're destined, no matter what, to turn into cyborgs and/or gods in our own right. Just look at Star Trek, which many people would uphold as the most quintessentially humanist sagas in the universe.

Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry was an avowed humanist, who joined the American Humanist Association in 1986 and told Humanist Magazine in 1991 that the philosophy was the logical culmination of all his studies. (He also talks about fighting to keep a Chaplain off the Enterprise, and to keep Spock from having a Christian funeral in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.) In fact, the rivalry between Star Wars and Star Trek can be seen as a clash between mysticism and humanism.

Roddenberry also said, in the 1991 interview, "We are a young species. I think if we allow ourselves a little development, understanding what we've done already, we'll be surprised what a cherishable, lovely group that humans can evolve into." This is a theme that the original Trek pushes quite hard, as various all-powerful entities harangue Captain Kirk about the youthfulness of the human race and our amazing potential to evolve.

In fact, if you think about that spectrum of humanism, with gods at one end and cyborgs at the other, you can see a progression across the entire Star Trek saga. The original series is very much about rejecting barbarism — the Enterprise crew is constantly meeting godlike beings, including the Greek god Apollo, and Captain Kirk always makes a huge speech about how far humanity has progressed, and the fact that humans don't need to worship a tribal god any more. (There are evil computers, too, but they mostly take the same role as gods, and often even pretend to be gods.)

But as Starfleet's technology progresses and becomes more miraculous, the concern shifts. The first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation is very much a re-run of the original series' "meeting godlike entities" episodes. But the most memorable adversary the TNG crew meets is the Borg, who represent the opposite extreme — they've abandoned barbarism to such a great extent, they've lost their individuality and personhood.

It seems almost inevitable that the human race will wind up becoming like the Borg — but we fight to be able to do it on our own terms. In the very first Borg story, Guinan even tells Picard that eventually, the human race will be able to deal with the Borg (because our technology will have advanced.) For now — for right now — the Borg only see humanity as raw materials, but eventually, Guinan says the Borg might see us as equals. (Which does imply, on some level, that we will be like them.) Meanwhile, another frequent theme of Star Trek: The Next Generation is Data's search for his humanity.

By the time Star Trek: Voyager ends, the journey to becoming Borg-like has progressed to the point that the crew has an ex-Borg member, and the ship is enhanced with Borg technology. Janeway and Tuvok have been assimilated at least once, and thanks to a visit from Janeway's future self, their technology is now more magic than ever. The embattled starship Voyager only survives its journey through the Delta Quadrant by becoming more Borg-like than any Starfleet ship we've ever seen.

You get the sense that Star Trek can't go much further into its own future than that, because the Federation's technology will become so advanced, we'll no longer recognize its characters as being like ourselves. A kind of Star Trek Singularity is on the horizon, after which storytelling will be impossible. (And indeed, ever since Voyager ended, Star Trek has been all about its own past.)

The Singularity Is Coming!

Okay, so let's talk about Joss Whedon. Here he is, accepting an Outstanding Lifetime Achievement Award in Cultural Humanism, and preaching about humanism from an actual pulpit:

Here's the thing, though — Whedon's heroes don't tend to be human.

Take Buffy Summers, who spends seven seasons of Buffy The Vampire Slayer struggling with having a normal life (and hence, being a normal person) while also being the super-powered savior of the world. She goes to the prom, she has Thanksgiving dinner, she works at a fast-food joint. Etc. Until she finds out, towards the end, that she's actually part demon, and her power comes from the demon essence inside her. The reason she can't have a normal life isn't just because she's superhuman — it's because she's not fully human at all.

Angel, of course, is a "vampire with a soul," which is a type of posthuman, I guess. And then both River Tam and Echo are enhanced humans, who've had experiments done on them to the point where they're almost like living computers. The amount of information Echo can store in her head, and the number of skills she can hang on to, is literally not humanly possible. Even though we're not supposed to jump on Alpha's bandwagon when he claims he and Echo are the next stages of human evolution, it's obviously true, to some extent.

In Whedon's stories, we humans can't save ourselves. We need our posthuman saviors to do it for us.

And the marvelous posthuman is a figure who appears more and more often in space opera and other wide-scale science fiction epics, from John Varley to Iain M. Banks to Charles Stross. There is a tendency, in recent space opera, to write about characters who have left off-the-shelf humanity behind.

As Alan DeNiro puts it in his review of the New Space Opera anthology, which is well worth reading its entirety:

In many of these stories, Earth-like physiology has mutated to a point of no return; virtual realities give way to virtual bodies and vice-versa. The anthology has a general inhuman pallor-to put it another way, humanity has been emulsified against the backdrop of far-flung space.

Reading a lot of space opera published in the past couple of decades, you do emerge with the sense that space is just too big, too weird, for regular humans to make a go of it. We can't possibly survive out there without tons of upgrades. Characters in space opera novels often seem to live for millions of years (partly thanks to suspended animation and travel at relativistic speeds) and it's not unusual to see characters who can inhabit different types of bodies, depending on the situation. (Like the character in Stross' Glasshouse, who was a tank at one point.) I can't remember off the top of my head which Varley book has the female pilot who jettisons her legs whenever she's in space, only to reattach them when she makes planetfall.

It's an article of faith among many geeks that our own Singularity is coming — usually defined as a point after which society and technology will have changed so radically that our own era will look like the Stone Age to the people of, say, 2050. This makes writing near-future science fiction problematic, because it's impossible for us to imagine the world of a few decades from now. So you don't even have to venture into space for humans to start warping into something almost unrecognizeable. You just have to hang around on Earth and wait for Moore's Law to reach its inevitable conclusion — the birth of artificial intelligence, and the elevation of humans into something altogether new.

I guess in the end, it depends how you look at it — is our posthuman future the culmination of humanism's promises? Or is it a transformation into something that's no longer human, and makes humanism irrelevant? Or both?

Book cover images by Cadwalader Ringgold, Calamity Jon, Digital Sextant and MarkBult on Flickr.

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<![CDATA[The Mystery Of The Glowing Jellyfish In The Sky [Science]]]> Was this giant glowing aerial presence just a satellite — or a sign of intelligent life in the universe? That's what scientists are asking when a strange, eerily familiar shape showed up in a photo of Norway's Northern Lights.

The aurora borealis — oddball illumination caused by iodized atoms in extreme northern latitudes — are weird enough as it is without something like this showing up. Here, in a story by the Mail Online about the image captured by an amateur photographer, reporter Claire Bates fields educated guesses as to what exactly this thing is.

The photographer first assumed the odd optical effect was a spot on his camera lens. But after he posted his photographs on Spaceweather.com he was inundated with emails from interested experts from around the world.

Apparently every theory makes sense — but not completely enough to make a solid explanation.

Fun fact: Carl Sagan's Cosmos speculated that lifeforms on Jupiter, and other gas giants, could look very much like enormous jellyfish, using something like jet propulsion to move itself through the thick atmosphere.

Northern Lights image from Per-Arne Mikalsen. Jellyfish courtesy Getty Image.

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<![CDATA[#carlsagan]]> Not sure how many here at io9 are frequent sister site readers. Jesus over at Gizmodo has a great Carl Sagan Lego spaceship gallery up.

[gizmodo.com]

Huge ship. Check it out.

#tips
#lego
#carlsagan
#gizmodo

Ruthless if you let me

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<![CDATA[Is Science Fiction Creating A New Religion? [Quote Of The Day]]]> "The culture-shaping force of science fiction storytellers may be more significant and more widespread than we imagine. That's because they trade in myth. By myth, I mean a transcendent story that helps us make sense of our place in the cosmos. This common definition makes the Christian gospel, as C. S. Lewis suggested, "God's myth"-not because it is fiction, but because it is a story that gives ultimate meaning. We live in an age in which new myths, born mostly of science-fueled imaginations, are crafted and propagated at an unprecedented rate.

"The vast international audience for science fiction seldom asks about the origin of the exotic notions that animate these tales. Nor do we usually ponder what their social impact might be. We are well aware of the venomous public assault on Christianity and scientific challenges to faith from militant atheists such as Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens. Yet underneath our noses, creators of blockbuster movies and best-selling books circulate compelling new myths. Scientists write and speak on essentially spiritual themes. Authors invent new religions wholly in their inquisitive minds.

"Many of these powerful shapers of culture are unfamiliar to Christians. Life-extension advocate Aubrey de Grey, inventor and author Ray Kurzweil, X-Files creator Chris Carter, astronomer Martin Rees, physicist Freeman Dyson, and Matrix directors Larry and Andy Wachowski come to mind. They are just a few modern mythmakers whose creative minds mold stories that are subtly persuasive and freighted with spiritual implications.

"The new myths don't arise from a single source. Yet science fiction has played a disproportionate role in modern myth crafting. The genre has profoundly shaped not only the entertainment industry, but Western spirituality as well." - James A. Herrick, writing in Christianity Today.

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<![CDATA[True Tales from Beyond the Solar System [Voyager]]]> More than 30 years ago, we launched two space craft on a long-shot, once in a lifetime mission to explore the outer planets. Today, the Voyager space probes are still making their long, lonely journeys outside the boundaries of our solar system. Amazingly, they are still functioning and still sending us data about the things they encounter. Now we know what the edge of the solar system looks like, but where will the Voyagers end up?

Five papers published in a recent issue of Nature explain the crossing of the termination shock, the outer edge of the solar system where the solar wind (particles expelled by the sun) dies off. Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 exited at opposite ends of the solar system (north and south, relative to the orientation of Earth), and found that the interstellar magnetic field alters the shape of the heliosheath. Voyager 2 discovered that the termination shock is much more dynamic than astronomers guessed, with the solar wind ebbing and surging like rippling waves at the beach. Voyager 1 found some mysterious cosmic rays that scientists haven't figured out yet, and researchers also learned that energized ions from interstellar space help push back against the solar wind.

It's incredible that the Voyagers are still working, considering that astronomers in the 70s weren't even sure if they would accomplish their primary mission to explore Saturn and Jupiter. The amount of data they have generated is immense - much of what we know about the outer planets, even today, is based on Voyagers' exploration. Their distance from Earth is difficult to comprehend - it takes more than 14 hours for radio signals from the probes to get back to us. Although their radioisotope generators will run out of power in the next few years, and their orientation thrusters will use up the last of their fuel, they will continue their steady flight into space at more than 30,000 mph. There's really nothing out there to damage them or slow them down, so they will be traveling for a long, long time. It will take tens of thousands of years before they're anywhere near another star, and it might be millions of years before their journey finally ends. They'll be carrying those weird golden records that Carl Sagan designed just in case, but if anyone ever finds them, they'll probably serve as an epitaph to a human race long since vanished.

You can check out a longer article I recently wrote about the Voyagers over at HowStuffWorks. Image by: NASA/JPL.

The laboratory at the end of the solar system. [Nobel Intent]

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<![CDATA[We Must Leave Earth [Space Politics]]]> leaveearth.jpgHilary Clinton is currently the only presidential candidate with a space plan, which can't be pleasing to the scientists and scifi writers who warn that the human race must escape from Earth if it's to have any future. It's probably not surprising that 1970s astronomer icon Carl "billions of stars" Sagan was an offworld booster; nor would it boggle your mind to know that SF visionary Octavia Butler's post-apocalypse duet Parable of the Sower and Parable of the Talents is about why colonizing space is one of the most urgent political tasks of our time. But space travel as a political issue goes back further than that — way further.

In 1959, Philip Shockey wrote an essay called "The Ultimate Necessity of Space Travel," which was about how humans would never survive unless they left the planet. Shockey's daughter has posted the article in its entirety (which we found thanks to Paleo-Future), and it's fascinating to see early Space Age writing on a topic that has become almost a cliche in science fiction — and a nonstarter as a political platform.

Shockey points out that the sun is going to go red giant and destroy the Earth in the next 50 million years, and therefore we must start prepping now to get all our valuable Earth culture off the planet where it will be safe. What's interesting is that his ideas take a decidedly political turn once he's made this point:

The project is so huge in scope that no single country will be able to carry it through; the physical and mental resources of all the world will be required. This unified effort should produce nonviolent political and religious revolutions terminating in world harmony . . . It is difficult to see how any of the existing formal religions or political plans, except democracy, will survive scrutiny by a world population applying the scientific method to all phases of life.
He also praises the scientists who are urging President Eisenhower to buy into a 20-year plan that would bring humans to the moon.

If you want to hear a more contemporary plea for offworld planning, check out Carl Sagan's Cosmos miniseries, which is airing again on the Discovery Channel starting Jan. 8.

"The Ultimate Necessity of Space Travel" [Space Journal]

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<![CDATA[Wikipedia is No Place for Alien Civilizations [Aliens]]]> noaliens.gif George Dvorsky reports over at Sentient Developments that the Wikipedia community has deleted a perfectly reasonable entry on astrosociobiology, "the speculative scientific study of extraterrestrial civilizations and their possible social characteristics and developmental tendencies." People like Carl Sagan and Freeman Dyson are counted among the ranks of astrosociobiologists, as are countless scifi creators. Luckily, Dvorksy has preserved the excised the entry in its entirety on his blog. Find out what Wikipedia doesn't want you to know about cultures that might develop beyond our solar system's heliopause.

Most of the expunged Wikipedia entry is taken up with the philosophical/scientific underpinnings of Astrosociobiology, as well as many pained acknowledgments that we don't really know what we're talking about since we know of no actual alien civilizations. The best part comes at the end, when we finally get down to brass tacks:

A method for classifying civilization types was introduced by Russian astronomer Nikolai Kardashev in 1964. Known as the Kardashev scale, classifications are assigned based on the amount of usable energy a civilization has at its disposal and increasing logarithmically:

* Type I - A civilization that is able to harness all of the power available on a single planet, approximately 1016W.
* Type II - A civilization that is able to harness all of the power available from a single star, approximately 1026W.
* Type III - A civilization that is able to harness all of the power available from a single galaxy, approximately 1036W.

Human civilization has yet to achieve full Type I status, as it is able to harness only a portion of the energy that is available on Earth. Carl Sagan speculated that humanity's current civilization type is around 0.7


Really? We actually have civilization among humans? Who knew.

Astrosociobiology article on Wikipedia Deleted [Sentient Developments]

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<![CDATA[Must See: Contact [Contact]]]> contact_ver2.jpgMust-see movies are futuristic classics that shouldn't be missed. Of course, not every must-see is perfect. That's why we've rated them 1-5 on the patented "crunchy goodness" scale. Written by Jason Shankel.

Title: Contact
Date: 1997

Vitals: Jodie Foster, surrounded by the likes of Matthew MacConaughey, Tom Skerrit, John Hurt and James Woods, searches for less creepy life elsewhere in the galaxy.

Famous names: Jodie Foster John Hurt Matthew MacConaughey Carl Sagan Tom Skerrit

Crunchy goodness: 3

Elevator pitch: Close Encounters of the Third Kind with more math and fewer French people.

Life lesson: Never let Jake Busey near anything expensive.

Deadliest spoiler: Turns out the alien was just her dad.

Contact: Official Site

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