Sunday, January 12, 2014

Dark matters

I've always been uncomfortable with the term "Dark Matter."  Whatever the phenomenon behind unexplained gravitational forces might be, leakage from an alternate universe or MOND or TeVeS we're only guessing what it is from the observable world where mass has gravity.  Yes, it's presumptuous of me to talk about things so far over my head (pun partially intended) but when I heard  Neal DeGrasse Tyson explain to Bill Moyers that the existence of such invisible "stuff" was only suggested by habit I was impressed, as I usually am when someone otherwise impressive agrees with my muddy observations.  “What it truly is is dark gravity. Boom,”  Sounds right to me and right to the point. We see what we're primed by habit to see. Obviously a genius.

I have to like the guy and although some astrophysicists seem to have fled out into the cosmos  to escape the rest of us and others dislike scientists who make the effort to share their enthusiasm for science with the world, seeing that as an effort to sell ideas without peer review, I don't think his regard and his enthusiasm for public understanding of what's going on at the frontier of knowledge is a fault. I'm looking forward to the rest of his series  The New Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey

I have to like the guy even more after reading this excerpt from his new autobiography: The Sky is not the Limit

"When combined with the dozens of times I have been stopped and questioned by the police for going to and from my office after hours, and the hundreds of times I am followed by security guards in department stores, and the countless times people cross the street upon seeing me approach them on the sidewalk, I can summarize my life’s path by noting the following: in the perception of society, my athletic talents are genetic; I am a likely mugger-rapist; my academic failures are expected; and my academic successes are attributed to others."

If that doesn't resonate with you somehow, perhaps only that alternate universe hypothesis can explain it.  Dr. Tyson is an exceptional man and not only for being able to do the math that stumps a brain such as most of us have, but for succeeding at doing what society has constantly told him he couldn't, shouldn't and wasn't suited to do.  An example for the young, certainly, but more deliciously a slap in the face for smug, condescending attitudes from those who think they know something important about you by referring to a stereotype. 

5 comments:

  1. A wonderful story from the Moyers' interview with deGrasse Tyson:

    "And here’s a fun fact showing there may be order in the universe: deGrasse Tyson met Carl Sagan while in high school and applying to colleges. Unbeknownst to Tyson, his application to Cornell was forwarded to Sagan, who was a professor of astronomy at the university. Sagan sent deGrasse Tyson a letter inviting him for a personal tour of Cornell, which he accepted. ”One of my favorite memories is he reaches back, pulled out one of the books that he wrote and signed it to me, and I said to myself, ‘That is awesome. If I ever am in a position of influence the way he is, then I will surely interact with students the way he has interacted with me,’” deGrasse Tyson told Bill."

    I think, but am not sure, that's called "paying it forward."

    deGrasse Tyson has always been a favorite. I love his passion for science and his rejection of superstition.

    I'm looking forward to the new series.

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  2. Capt. Fogg,

    Yes, I like scientist Tyson too -- he's an honest chap, and a brilliant chap. The awful thing about stereotypes like the ones he mentions becomes even more clear when we realize that they are functions of an ideology. And ideology is one of those things that forms a shield of Cryptonite Plus around a person's mind so that no actual information can ever get in or out once the "protection" is complete. A bigot will always think whoever their "Other" is must be at once a blithering inferior and a dangerous troublemaker who bears watching at all times. Nothing, at least in the short run, can convince such ideologues that they're wrong and don't have full possession of THE TRUTH, and maybe even THE TRUTH ABOUT THE TRUTH (TM).

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  3. I have no doubt that any number of people who look at him will attribute his success to "affirmative action" and sneer in derision. I'm not that kind of guy who can do differential equations in my head while whistling Dixie, but I love listening to him and I share his passion for knowing the secrets of existence and any of those things that keep knocking our damned arrogant species off that damned pedestal.

    Any number of people did in fact attempt to explain Barack Obama that way and even to assert that the North Koreans must have payed his tuition and maybe did his homework for him because Black people can't do this sort of thing unless they cheated and if he lives in a nice house, there must be a sinister story behind that too.



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  4. I'm not familiar with deGrasse Tyson. It sounds like I should be.

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  5. Tyson explains things so even I can understand. He has a gift and shares it well.

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