Blink Twice to Quell a Quasar: Carl Sagan on Superstition
By Maria Popova
Growing up in Bulgaria, in a city teeming in stray dogs and cars, I was deeply distressed by the sight of each dead animal in the streets between home and school — deaths I could not prevent and could not bear. To cope with the aching helplessness, I developed a private superstition: If I touched each of the vertical bars on every fence along my walk, no dog would die. Sometimes I ran to touch as many bars as possible in as little time as possible, the impact bruising and callusing my fingers. Dogs continued dying. I continued doing it. When the school year ended, I was sent to my grandmother’s house in rural Bulgaria, where every night I watched her say prayers to a god she believed would protect us from harm. Harm came anyway. To this day she continues praying.

It can be hard to bear, how the cosmos went from hydrogen to the double helix by its own insentient laws, forged from the iron rib of dying stars creatures capable of the Benedictus and the atomic bomb, hurled ice ages and earthquakes at the rocky body of a world we now walk in skins and nervous systems over which have had no say, born into families and eras we have not chosen. Somehow we must hold all this choicelessness — hold the knowledge that any synch of chance could unseam a life — and still do laundry, still make art, still love. How understandable, how human, the yearning for an organizing principle more comprehensible and therefore more subject to control than chance, for some great hand to align the dice of the universe in our favor, for a magic wand.
And yet as we lean on our crutches of magical thinking, we forget that we are hobbling through a reality already full of magic — hummingbirds and ghost pipes, cordyceps and cosmic rays.
No one has Carl Sagan (November 9, 1934–December 20, 1996) in an unpublished 1979 typescript found among his papers at the Library of Congress under the heading “Where to file? Ideas riding?”

Nearly two decades before he formulated his superb “Baloney Detection Kit” in The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark — the benediction of reality completed just before that chance mutation of cells claimed his life — he writes:
“Superstition [is] cowardice in the presence of the Divine.” So said Theophrastus, a contemporary of Aristotle and Alexander. We live in a universe where atoms are made in the stars; where life is sparked by sunlight and lightning in the airs and waters of youthful planets; where the raw material for biological evolution is sometimes made by the explosion of a star halfway across the Galaxy; where matter can be put together in so subtle a way as to become self-aware; where a thing as beautiful as a galaxy is formed a hundred billion times; a universe of quasars and quarks, snowflakes and fireflies; where there may be black holes and other universes and intelligent beings so far beyond us that their technology will seem to us indistinguishable from magic. How pallid by comparison are the pretensions of superstition and pseudoscience; how important it is for us to pursue and understand science, that characteristically human endeavor imperfect and incomplete surely. But the best means to understand the world that we know. There is no aspect of nature which fails to reveal a deep mystery, to touch our sense of awe and wonder. Theophrastus was right. Those afraid of the universe as it really is, those who wish to pretend to non-existent knowledge and control and a Cosmos centered on human beings, will prefer superstition. But those with the courage to explore the weave and structure of the Cosmos, even where It differs profoundly from our wishes and prejudices, to those people belongs the future. Superstitions may be comforting for a while. But, because they avoid rather than confront the world, they are doomed. The future belongs to those able to learn, to change, to accommodate to this exquisite Cosmos that we have been privileged to inhabit for a brief moment.
Couple with Sagan on how to live with the unknown, then revisit the story of how Kepler discovered the laws of planetary motion while defending his mother in a witchcraft trial.
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