humblehobbes
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Household chores dwarfed by scale of universe
Charlie Brooker
News that Andromeda is eating stars makes it hard to care about putting out the rubbish.
The sheer breadth of human knowledge is a wonderful thing. But sometimes its scary. I was aimlessly clicking my way sometime ago around the BBC news site which has become one of my favourite things in the world since I discovered just how much its very existence annoys James Murdoch reading about the burial of Michael Jackson and the like, when my eye was drawn to an alarming headline.
Galaxys cannibalism revealed, it read. This led to a story in the science section which calmly explained that a group of astronomers has decided that the Andromeda galaxy is expanding by eating stars from neighbouring galaxies. Having studied Andromedas outskirts in great detail, they discovered the fringes contained remnants of dwarf galaxies. It took me a couple of reads to establish that Andromeda wasnt literally chewing its way through the universe like a giant intergalactic Pac-Man, and that the remnants of dwarf galaxies were living stars, not the immense galactic stools Id envisaged. That was what had really frightened me: the notion that our entire solar system might be nothing more than a chunk of undigested sweetcorn in some turgid celestial bowel movement; that maybe black holes are actually almighty cosmological sphincters, squeezing solid waste into our dimension. What if the entire universe as we know it is essentially one big festival toilet?
Thatd be a pretty good social leveller, come to think of it. So there, James Murdoch. You might well walk around thinking, Ooh, hooray for me, Im the chairman and CEO of News Corporation Europe and Asia, not to mention chairman of SKY Italia and STAR TV, the non-executive chairman of British Sky Broadcasting, and a non-executive director of GlaxoSmith-Kline, but at the end of the day youre just one of 900 trillion insignificant molecules in an all-encompassing turdiverse. And your glasses are rubbish.
Overwhelming
Anyway, the astronomers who made the discovery about Andromeda deserve our awe and respect, because their everyday job consists of dealing with concepts so intense and overwhelming that its a wonder their skulls dont implode through sheer vertigo. Generally speaking, its best not to contemplate the full scope of the universe on a day-to-day basis because it makes a mockery of basic chores. Its Tuesday night and the rubbish van comes first thing Wednesday morning, so you really ought to put the bin bags out, but hey if our sun were the size of a grain of sand, the stars in our galaxy would fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool, and if our entire galaxy were a grain of sand, the galaxies in our universe would fill several Olympic-sized swimming pools. You and your bin bags. Pfff!
The human brain isnt equipped to house thoughts of this humbling enormity. Whenever I read a science article that nonchalantly describes the big bang, or some similarly dizzying reference to the staggering size and age and unknowable magnitude of everything, I feel like a sprite in an outdated platform game desperately straining to comprehend the machine code that put me there, even though that isnt my job: my job is to jump between two moving clouds and land feet-first on a mushroom without ever questioning why.
Perhaps astrophysics stories should come with a little warning. Just as graphically violent news reports tend to be preceded by a quick disclaimer advising squeamish viewers that the following footage contains shots of protesters hurling their own severed kneecaps at riot police or whatever maybe brain-mangling science reports likely to leave you nursing an unpleasant existential bruise for several hours should be flagged as equally hazardous. How can I flip channels and enjoy my favourite cop show once Ive been reminded of the crushing futility of everything? I cant even get worked up about the murders in that kind of mood. Yeah, kill him. And her. And them. Sod it. Its all just atoms in an unfathomable vortex.
Not that the few scientists I know seem to suffer. In fact, theyre unrelentingly calm and upbeat, like theyve stumbled across a cosmic secret but arent telling. One of my friends is married to a quantum physicist who, sickeningly, manages to combine an immense brain with a relaxed, down-to-earth, amused attitude to everything. He once tried to explain the characteristics of different theoretical dimensions to me.
Dimensions one to four I could just about cope with. The fifth made vague sense at a push. But the rest collapsed into terrifying babble. There was no foothold.
I swear, at one point he casually claimed the seventh dimension measured about half a metre in diameter and was shaped like a doughnut. That cant be right: either Ive misremembered it because my brain deleted the explanation as it was going in, chewing it up and spitting it out before it could do damage, or and this is just a wild theory Im too stupid to understand much in the realm of science beyond the difference between up and down, and the seventh dimension is beyond me. God knows what the eighth dimension consists of. Probably two chalk moths and a puddle. Whatever it is, and wherever it lives, dont tell me. The dustcarts due and I dont want to know. © Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2009
The Hindu : Opinion / News Analysis : Household chores dwarfed by scale of universe
Saw this in the morning paper. Interesting read. Had a chuckle much to the consternation of co-passengers in the train. Enjoy
Charlie Brooker
News that Andromeda is eating stars makes it hard to care about putting out the rubbish.
The sheer breadth of human knowledge is a wonderful thing. But sometimes its scary. I was aimlessly clicking my way sometime ago around the BBC news site which has become one of my favourite things in the world since I discovered just how much its very existence annoys James Murdoch reading about the burial of Michael Jackson and the like, when my eye was drawn to an alarming headline.
Galaxys cannibalism revealed, it read. This led to a story in the science section which calmly explained that a group of astronomers has decided that the Andromeda galaxy is expanding by eating stars from neighbouring galaxies. Having studied Andromedas outskirts in great detail, they discovered the fringes contained remnants of dwarf galaxies. It took me a couple of reads to establish that Andromeda wasnt literally chewing its way through the universe like a giant intergalactic Pac-Man, and that the remnants of dwarf galaxies were living stars, not the immense galactic stools Id envisaged. That was what had really frightened me: the notion that our entire solar system might be nothing more than a chunk of undigested sweetcorn in some turgid celestial bowel movement; that maybe black holes are actually almighty cosmological sphincters, squeezing solid waste into our dimension. What if the entire universe as we know it is essentially one big festival toilet?
Thatd be a pretty good social leveller, come to think of it. So there, James Murdoch. You might well walk around thinking, Ooh, hooray for me, Im the chairman and CEO of News Corporation Europe and Asia, not to mention chairman of SKY Italia and STAR TV, the non-executive chairman of British Sky Broadcasting, and a non-executive director of GlaxoSmith-Kline, but at the end of the day youre just one of 900 trillion insignificant molecules in an all-encompassing turdiverse. And your glasses are rubbish.
Overwhelming
Anyway, the astronomers who made the discovery about Andromeda deserve our awe and respect, because their everyday job consists of dealing with concepts so intense and overwhelming that its a wonder their skulls dont implode through sheer vertigo. Generally speaking, its best not to contemplate the full scope of the universe on a day-to-day basis because it makes a mockery of basic chores. Its Tuesday night and the rubbish van comes first thing Wednesday morning, so you really ought to put the bin bags out, but hey if our sun were the size of a grain of sand, the stars in our galaxy would fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool, and if our entire galaxy were a grain of sand, the galaxies in our universe would fill several Olympic-sized swimming pools. You and your bin bags. Pfff!
The human brain isnt equipped to house thoughts of this humbling enormity. Whenever I read a science article that nonchalantly describes the big bang, or some similarly dizzying reference to the staggering size and age and unknowable magnitude of everything, I feel like a sprite in an outdated platform game desperately straining to comprehend the machine code that put me there, even though that isnt my job: my job is to jump between two moving clouds and land feet-first on a mushroom without ever questioning why.
Perhaps astrophysics stories should come with a little warning. Just as graphically violent news reports tend to be preceded by a quick disclaimer advising squeamish viewers that the following footage contains shots of protesters hurling their own severed kneecaps at riot police or whatever maybe brain-mangling science reports likely to leave you nursing an unpleasant existential bruise for several hours should be flagged as equally hazardous. How can I flip channels and enjoy my favourite cop show once Ive been reminded of the crushing futility of everything? I cant even get worked up about the murders in that kind of mood. Yeah, kill him. And her. And them. Sod it. Its all just atoms in an unfathomable vortex.
Not that the few scientists I know seem to suffer. In fact, theyre unrelentingly calm and upbeat, like theyve stumbled across a cosmic secret but arent telling. One of my friends is married to a quantum physicist who, sickeningly, manages to combine an immense brain with a relaxed, down-to-earth, amused attitude to everything. He once tried to explain the characteristics of different theoretical dimensions to me.
Dimensions one to four I could just about cope with. The fifth made vague sense at a push. But the rest collapsed into terrifying babble. There was no foothold.
I swear, at one point he casually claimed the seventh dimension measured about half a metre in diameter and was shaped like a doughnut. That cant be right: either Ive misremembered it because my brain deleted the explanation as it was going in, chewing it up and spitting it out before it could do damage, or and this is just a wild theory Im too stupid to understand much in the realm of science beyond the difference between up and down, and the seventh dimension is beyond me. God knows what the eighth dimension consists of. Probably two chalk moths and a puddle. Whatever it is, and wherever it lives, dont tell me. The dustcarts due and I dont want to know. © Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2009
The Hindu : Opinion / News Analysis : Household chores dwarfed by scale of universe
Saw this in the morning paper. Interesting read. Had a chuckle much to the consternation of co-passengers in the train. Enjoy