Saturday, September 23, 2006

Musings

I read an article recently arguing that the microscope was the greatest invention of all times. I'm not sure if I agree or not. I think the microwave is pretty amazing myself. I remember the first time I looked through a microscope and found a whole new world in it. All kinds of creatures that I couldn't ever have imagined wriggled around on the glass slide -- all contained in a single drop of water. Amazing.

I get the feeling that we have absolutely no concept of what our universe is like. We're rather like goldfish in a bowl trying to describe the planet from our view of the interior of one house. We really have no grasp on how small things actually get or how big the universe actually is. Philosophers postulated that the atom was the smallest indivisible unit of matter. Now we know that an atom is composed of protons, neutrons, and electrons. It turns out that protons, neutrons, and electrons are also composed of even smaller things. We really don't know how small the smallest things are that make up things.

I remember being a kid and trying to understand the universe. My main question was whether or not the universe had an edge. If space did have an edge, that meant that it was finite. However, that begged the question of what was just beyond the edge of space. Surely it would be more space, right? So the other option then is that space is infinite with vast spaces of nothingness extending forever. But that doesn't make sense either. How can something not have a limit? It seems just as impossible that space could extend forever as it does that it could have a limit. It still makes me dizzy, just as it did as a child, to think about it all.

Perhaps our solar system is really like an atom forming the molecule of our galaxy with all of the other atom like solar systems in our galaxy. That begs another question. If our galaxy is really only like a molecule, and is connected to all these other galaxy/molecule thingees, what do all those molecule/galaxy thingees make? That is what I would really like to know. Perhaps we are a single atom in what forms a table leg, a dog, a coffee cup or something else in a dimension that is so big that it entirely eludes our capabilities to grasp the enormity of it.

I feel like a goldfish and am in awe.

Sunday, September 17, 2006

Just gotta shake your head

When the pope recently commented about Islam's history of violence, it was sort of like the pot calling the kettle black. What amused me more about the whole incident was the response of some Muslims in the Palestinian territories. They protested his statements about Islamic violence by bombing several churches. I guess they made a point, huh?
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