I have no idea why a show about the cosmos would discuss evolution, since evolution is utterly irrelevant on such scales.
I'm starting to realize that the new series follows pretty much the same (or very similar) pattern as the original, but uses different examples. For instance, the TV listings for next week talks about Newton and Halley, as opposed to Kepler and Brahe, as they were the astronomers profiled in "Harmony of the Worlds."Yeah having just rewatched the second episode of the original Cosmos, it was striking just how much more careful and diplomatic Tyson was being on the subject compared to Sagan.Carl Sagan went one step further: He said: "Evolution is a fact." He didn't dance around any business of diplomacy - just said it flat-out and went on from there.
And I also have to say I thought the original episode flowed a lot better and explained evolution in a much more concise way. The new one seemed to bounce around too much and take too many little detours (from the evolution of dogs, to the eye, to the Hall of Extinction, to the DNA of trees, to a visit to Titan...).
Tyson got in a lot of good points, but I imagine for a kid or a newbie to the subject, the original episode would have been much more effective and easy to follow.
You have evidently missed those three important words: We are starstuff.I have no idea why a show about the cosmos would discuss evolution, since evolution is utterly irrelevant on such scales.
The combined mass of all evolved organisms in our solar system is less than 600e12 kg out of a total mass of about 2.0e30 kg. For every 1 kg of life, there are 3,300,000,000,000,000 kg of non-living gas and rock. If new Cosmos episodes had been streaming ever since the Big Bang, the show literally airing for billions and billions of years with no reruns, and each bit of mass was given equal time, life should only get mentioned for about 2.7 seconds.
But the self-important narcissistic developers of the show have already burned almost an entire episode on the subject, one that is utterly irrelevant cosmologically.
Why are you even watching this, then? It seems like you're not getting much out of it.Then why not call the show "Science" instead of "Cosmos"?
"Fairly early in its development, the third planet got covered in a self-replicating organic goo, which continued to evolve more complicated organisms, though ones whose total mass was much less than the goo itself. Meanwhile, on Neptune, wind speeds routinely reached supersonic velocities despite the very small amount of solar energy being pumped into the planet's atmosphere."
The goo is weird, but not nearly as significant as the slow breakdown of potassium-40 into argon - except to self-centered organisms who think their unusual molecular arrangement makes them special. "The goo later produced narcissism, and in the next episode of 'Cosmos" we're going to focus on Kim Kardashian and Lindsey Lohan."
It's as bad as Sagan giving any airtime to the ridiculous Drake Equation, which if extended can allow you to exactly calculate the number of intelligent beings in the universe who watch inter-racial midget porn and prefer Hellman's to Miracle Whip - because it's science.
The show also erred on Giordano Bruno, who was executed for preaching against the divinity of Jesus, denying transubstantiation, saying that the Virgin Mary was a slut, promoting heretical religious texts, believing in reincarnation, believing that human souls could migrate into animals, and supporting the Egyptian god Thoth, among other things. But he was a martyr for science, bacause as science later showed, human souls can become trapped inside animals, as sometimes happens with werewolves and other demonic creatures, and Thoth was indeed a powerful Go'auld system lord.
Oh wait... Bruno is a horrible example of a scientist, much less an oppressed one, but Catholics are all in service of the anti-Christ, so it's okay to make up shit about them.
The goo is weird, but not nearly as significant as the slow breakdown of potassium-40 into argon - except to self-centered organisms who think their unusual molecular arrangement makes them special. "The goo later produced narcissism, and in the next episode of 'Cosmos" we're going to focus on Kim Kardashian and Lindsey Lohan."
Really? One element breaking down into another is more significant than an organic goo evolving over billions of years into an incredible variety of life forms on Earth?
I have a feeling most scientists would probably strongly disagree with that. And "narcissism" has nothing to do with it.
Then those "millions of people" weren't paying attention when Tyson said, literally, "Bruno was no scientist." Tyson further explained that Bruno's claims were not scientific because they couldn't (at the time) be tested, "His vision of the Cosmos was a lucky guess because he had no evidence to support it."The reason I bring up Giordano Bruno is that now millions of people will be holding him up as an example of a martyred scientist without once looking into what he really stood for.
Then why not call the show "Science" instead of "Cosmos"?
It's as bad as Sagan giving any airtime to the ridiculous Drake Equation, which if extended can allow you to exactly calculate the number of intelligent beings in the universe who watch inter-racial midget porn and prefer Hellman's to Miracle Whip - because it's science.
Ironically, one of the biggest scientific mis-educators is Star Trek itself. The way they treat DNA and evolution makes Young Earth Creationism seem like a reasoned alternative.
By itself, there is nothing that is "very much of it" when it comes to the size of the Universe. Even the largest known star is very small in comparison to the whole of everything.We're made of starstuff, but we're certainly not very much of it. The combined mass of all life in the solar system would form a spherical body only 10 kilometers in diameter. That would make us the same size as Erriapus, the 28th moon of Saturn that was only discovered in 2000, and 1 km smaller than 107 Camilla, an asteroid "moon" that is orbiting a more noteworthy asteroid. So one of the amazing things about the cosmos, even our own solar system, is the awe at how tiny we are.
The reason I bring up Giordano Bruno is that now millions of people will be holding him up as an example of a martyred scientist without once looking into what he really stood for. He believed the universe was constant and unchanging, filled with aether (because a void was impossible), and that mathematics was a useless tool to understand it compared to the profound power of mystic revelation. So students, ditch the advanced math classes and drop LSD!
The reason almost none of you had heard about Bruno is because there's no way to get any coherent lesson from his story, other than that a group of religious scholars executed someone who was even nuttier than they were, after giving him every opportunity to defend himself. I suppose you could hold Bruno up as proof that the Catholic Church was suppressing the truth of reincarnation and that human souls can inhabit beasts, or something like that, but what does that get you? The Cardinal that had him executed was a better scientist than Bruno was (and indeed has a US liberal arts university named after him). In a series as high-profile as Cosmos, that's just shoddy research that will produce more misunderstanding and inaccurate perceptions than it cures, for no point at all. The medieval professors who were wedded to the dogmatic belief in Aristotle's teachings caused far more retardation of scientific advancement than the Catholic Church, and Aristotle certainly wasn't a Christian, he was a scientist. Much of the history of medieval science consists of various experiments, proofs, and arguments showing that Aristotle was flat wrong about a great many things, and trying to get academics to pay attention to the detailed refutations instead of relying on consensus.
As some people keep saying in the Trek forum (for a different reason), Star Trek is not a documentary. I deplore some of the incredibly dumb misuses of science done in that show just for the sake of what the writers thought was a good story. But I honestly do not see what Star Trek has to do with Cosmos (unless you want to count Wil Wheaton and Neil deGrasse Tyson appearing on the same discussion panels).Ironically, one of the biggest scientific mis-educators is Star Trek itself. The way they treat DNA and evolution makes Young Earth Creationism seem like a reasoned alternative.
"Mom, people can de-evolve into giant spiders!"
"No they can't, dear."
"But it's science!"
"*sigh*"
"I'm going to evolve into an energy being when I grow up!"
Now I think I'll got eat a banana to replenish the hundred potassium-40 atoms that turn into argon atoms every second - right inside me. I'm radioactive!![]()
Bruno's story wasn't selected to provide an example of a scientist, but rather to illustrate the dangers of a society that is afraid and insecure enough to have its beliefs challenged.
Again, you're entirely missing the point. Nobody's ever claimed that the Drake Equation is a method for actually calculating the number of radio-emitting civilizations. It's a metaphor, a teaching tool for discussing the various factors that could influence those results. It's not about giving an answer, it's about framing the question.
The point of the Bruno example was to show that it was dangerous just to have different ideas about the world back then-- whether they were supported by any actual scientific evidence or not.
You can ridicule some of the other crazy things Bruno believed in, but the fact he was executed for those beliefs still tells you all you need to know about the world he lived in.
Will this do?
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You have evidently missed those three important words: We are starstuff.
The "Hall of Extinction," or whatever it was called, was a nice addition to the repertoire of metaphors..
I don't understand your reference to "anti-nukes." My point was in response to a post that questioned having biology and evolution in a program about the Universe.For arguments with anti-nukes, I prefer the term cosmic fallout, since the reason atomic bombs didn't runaway to the point of blowing up the whole planet is because we are already worked over coals, as it were.You have evidently missed those three important words: We are starstuff.
I thought I was seeing things at first... then figured, "Okay, somebody goofed." This is one error that will definitely be noticed and commented on. But shouldn't they have caught it in post-production?Nice concept--but my only nitpick is that they showed dino bones in the Permian extinction! Augh!The "Hall of Extinction," or whatever it was called, was a nice addition to the repertoire of metaphors..
The dense asteroid belt I can take--when a big one breaks up it is going to be dense right there for a bit. We show planets on textbooks really close together (out of scale) for clarity. Besides, textbooks are expensive enough as it is.
But dino cadavers in the Permian? Oh well, the overall point was made. Besides, Neil was in front of a greenscreen the whole time or he would have caught it.
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