View from the Cockpit
It's a fast and furious time in science and technology, and a man who knows promises only more of the same
- By John P. Wiley, Jr.
- Smithsonian magazine, February 1999, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Now if a person had a reasonable expectation that things would slow down, that sooner or later we would have time to catch our breath, it wouldn't be so bad. Unfortunately, it looks like the future holds more of the same, only more so. A man named John Maddox was for nearly 23 years the editor of Nature, a weekly journal that publishes both original research and science news. He had first-hand knowledge of what was happening, especially in astronomy and molecular biology. He is retired (and is now Sir John) and has written a book called What Remains To Be Discovered. It is a long book, and dense, so rich that it is best approached like pâté de foie gras, to be ingested in small quantities. Maddox believes that science is not quite as far along as is sometimes thought. Some of the questions he raises, he writes, "cry out for answers. The nature of the hidden mass in apparently ordinary galaxies is a deepening embarrassment as the decades tick by. On the other hand, the search for 'missing mass' to close the Universe [make it eventually stop expanding and collapse in on itself] seems destined to be a wild-goose chase. The origin of the energetic particles in cosmic rays, a fashionable object of study three or four decades ago, remains enigmatic. The role of magnetism in the structure of galaxies and perhaps of the Universe at large is another issue that cosmology has put aside for the time being."
Maddox is less than convinced of either the Big Bang or black holes. "Observers of the heavens have been like kidnap victims seeking to learn where they are," he says, "from the chinks of light that reach them through the imperfections of their blindfolds; half a century from now, cosmologists will have a much better idea of what kind of Universe they are expected to explain." Fifty years isn't much from the universe's point of view. Without saying the M word, let's think in larger units. Think of how far astronomy has come in the past 1,000 years. (For a clue as to where some of the centers of astronomy might have been 1,000 years ago, consider how many stars have names derived from Arabic: Aldebaran, Rigel, Altair, Deneb...) So, how far will it go in the next 1,000? Or 10,000? And how fast will the F-3712 be flying?
By John P. Wiley, Jr.
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