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Originally posted by KelenaThe quest for knowledge is sacred to me. No one ignores the present and its harsh realities by learning to play Clair de Lune, or by looking through the world's most advanced telescope to see the light from moons beyond our galaxy. Instead, by reaching higher we elevate ourselves, and pull away from the brutishness of which we are capable.
Imagine a 14 year old math wizard with a drunken lout of a father and an ex-stripper mother. He is a bookish boy and is in his room studying his heart out while his mother throws a frying pan at his father and his father breaks a bottle on the tile floor. With his great powers of concentration, he tunes it out, promising himself he will rise above this all by pursuing the truths and mysteries of mathmatics. Do you want him to stop, get real and go address the anarchy in the kitchen? I don't.
The Thirty Meter Telescope (90 feet baby!) will see almost to the origin of the universe, as we know it. The intelligence that allows us to create such a telescope, that permits us to set aside superstitions to place it on Mauna Kea, and that allows us to interpret what we see through it may well lead us out of some of our other problems as well.
So many memes, where to start.
You wish to pull yourself away from brutishness by ignoring the screams of your mother. Another escape. Might as well take to drink or drugs.
You know, that 14 year old kids hell was create by the very thing you are using to save him. Knowledge made the alcohol and the frying pan and the low wage jobs his family is forced to work becaue of the knwoledege people have over them. But you say more of the same! I say we free the whole family, not just the child, pull them out of the wretched farce they call a life. Do you see how uncaring you are of the whole? Just like a lover of science, only seeing the little pieces.
The very fact of building the telescope is a brutish act. Have you see the forges that make the steel? A very brutish example of humanity. The raping of the earth and the poisoning of water. But you say that brutishness is worth it for some imaginary child.
And you say mathematicians is a truth. What fools we were to create a number out of nothing! Concepts are not truths, they are only daydreams. Tell a whale to count to ten and it will count to infinity before you finish your sentence.
And the glory you put on a simple man made device. A moth sees it as nothing more than a resting place. A 20 year old device on a billion year old world.
And you end of of this with a notion that it MAY lead us out of our other problems. As a science lover you should realize it MAY lead us into more problems as well. What problems has technology the lever of knowledge solved that it has not created in the first place?
But it is your little hobby, and you are just concerned about yourself regardless of your silly pretend caring about some myth of a small child. I can tell you that it happens right here in Puna. Where is the care? Easier to care about myths and ghosts on mountains.
Yes, the individualism. I think that might be unappealing to me.
And let me add, when I was 13 I worked at a gas station all summer to buy a Celestron C90 telescope. I spent long nights in the New England cold looking at the rings of Saturn and the Horsehead Nebula. But when I was older I saw it for what it was, another human fetish, something to excite us while living an utterly boring and wretched lives.