Saturday, September 6, 2014

The Really Big Picture

This fascinating video about galactic superclusters recently came to my attention and the person who posted the link said it made him more than ever convinced that intelligent design must be involved in the organization of the universe.

I had to respond thus:

Everywhere I look with my mind and imagination, from the subatomic to the cosmic supercluster of galaxies, I perceive the incomparable power of the interaction of physical laws, each operating blindly, relentlessly, and with unerring precision in its sphere of influence. The end result is an impossibly grand yet mind-bogglingly intricate self-organizing dance of Newtonian cause and effect, Heisenbergian uncertainty, and Einsteinian relativity (among any number of other things I'm sure I'm not aware of).

In the infancy of our species, we conjured up an unending menagerie of omnipowerful beings in an effort to explain what we had not yet developed the tools to understand. This need to understand and to find the reasons things happen, part of our genetic endowment, conferred an important survival advantage and was part of how and why we evolved consciousness. It explains why we invented endless different gods. Now, thanks to hundreds of transformative inventions like the scientific method, books, microscopes, and telescopes, we are able to understand more things, more thoroughly than we ever have. In case after case -- every case, actually -- things we had long thought were the result of supernatural power were really only the result of the mundane interaction of discoverable, testable laws that arise naturally from the fundamental properties of energy/matter and space/time.

Now we understand that our world, that seems so big in comparison with us, is just one of a hundred billion, being pulled along by gravity around the center of our average-sized galaxy, also just one of the hundred billion of its sibling galaxies whose light has had time to reach us. We have no way of knowing how many others lie outside our light cone. We are as tiny to the universe as hydrogen atoms are tiny to us.

It is now time for us to let go of the insecurity and immaturity that keeps us from understanding and accepting our true place in the cosmos. Inventing deities no longer becomes us. They ceased to serve a valid purpose many centuries ago and now the mindset that created them has become the greatest impediment to our physical, moral, and ethical development as a species. When we impose the narrow limits of our minds, our customs, our imperfect notions of justice and mercy and morality on the cosmos through the intermediary of deities we invent, we only hamper and do ourselves a grave disservice. The sooner we see this, the better off we will be.

For the first four and a half decades of my life, Mormon theology did indeed shape my understanding of many things, cosmology included. I have outgrown that theology and now the cosmos has become incomparably more beautiful, more interesting, and more awe-inspiring since I stopped imagining I held a privileged place in it. To lose that terrible misconception was the greatest awakening and the premier transformative event of my life.

 

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