Humanity and The Pace of Change
Humanity and The Pace of Change
Posted by Cliff Pickover,
Reality Carnival
All of human achievement -- all our hopes, dreams, and fears -- in one graph.
The mysterious pace of change is great. Where will be tomorrow?
Favorite Quotes from Will and Ariel Durant, "The Lessons of History"
"History is subject to geology. Every day the sea encroaches somewhere
upon the land, or the land upon the sea; cities disappear under the
water, and sunken cathedrals ring their melancholy bells.
To the geologic eye all the surface of the earth is a fluid
forum, and man moves upon it as insecurely as Peter walking on the
waves to Christ."
-
"Sometimes, wandering alone in the woods on a summer day, we hear
or see the movement of a hundred species of flying, leaping, creeping,
crawling, burrowing things. Suddenly we perceive to what a perilous
minority we belong on this impartial planet, and for a moment we feel,
as these varied denizens clearly do, that we are passing interlopers
in their natural habitat."
- "As his studies come to a close the historian faces the challenge:
Of what use have your studies been? Have you found in your work only
the amusement of recounting the rise and fall of nations and ideas,
and retelling "sad stories of the death of kings"?
Is it possible that, after all, history has no sense, that it
teaches us nothing, and that the immense past was only the weary
rehearsal of mistakes that the future is destined to make on a larger
stage and scale?"
-
"Do we really know what the past was, what actually happened, or is
history a fable not quite agreed upon? Our knowledge of any past event
is always incomplete, probably inaccurate, beclouded by ambivalent
evidence and biased historians..."
-
"The historian always oversimplifies, and hastily selects a
manageable minority of facts and faces out of a crowd of souls
and events whose multitudinous complexity he can never quite
embrace or comprehend."
-
"...An element of chance, perhaps of freedom, seems to enter into
the conduct of metals and men. We are no longer confident that
atoms, much less organisms, will respond in the future as we think they
have responded in the past. The electrons, like Cowper's God,
move in mysterious ways their wonders to perform, and some quirk
of character or circumstance may upset national equations...."
Source of above Graph: "The Escape from Hunger and Premature Death, 1700-2100: Europe, America, and the Third World" (Cambridge Studies in Population, Economy and Society in Past Time), 2004, by Robert William Fogel.
← Interested in the history of physics?
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