kitakaze
Resident DJ/NSA Supermole
I just want to underscore kitakaze's sense of wonderment here. Forget the details for a moment. We now have instruments (telescopes) that can detect motion and properties of things virtually unimaginably far away. A relatively few years ago we didn't even know they existed. How cool is that?
Or, to look through the other end of the scope, we can image individual atoms. It wasn't so long ago that atomic theory was controversial. What an incredible period we live in. Imagine, say, 500 years from now. What knowledge will we possess that will make 2009 look absolutely primitive?
Since I was a young child those mind-bogglingly macro and micro realities of our universe have fascinated my imagination. Early in my life as a music producer I got involved with ambient electronic music culture in which such fascinations were big for many artists. Here is a cool video that captures that micro/macro fascination:
Gas - Microscopic (Ambient Electronic Space)
I still feel it deep all the time. I went to check the Perseids the other night and even though I saw only one meteorite, I was just stoked to stare up at the night sky and get lost in the stars. I'm visiting my hometown in Canada where unlike, Tokyo you can actually see stars at night.
I don't want to derail WP's thread but I read the subtext as being that this is a great example of real science that can dispel erroneous notions for people trapped by a sadly distorted world view like the friend I'm mentioning. Being able to look out into what is infinity by any realistic standard and being able to observe intimate secrets of the universe is a wonderful thing. Just imagine if we all lived by that terrible God-did-it mindset and could never see or know these things.
Thank you, WP, for the cool thread. The universe rocks!