Pale Blue Dot (book)

Pale Blue Dot  
Author(s) Carl Sagan
Language English
Publication date 1994
ISBN 0-679-43841-6
OCLC Number 30736355
Dewey Decimal 919.9/04 20
LC Classification QB500.262 .S24 1994
Preceded by Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors
Followed by The Demon-Haunted World

Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space (1994) is a non-fiction book by Carl Sagan. It is the sequel to Cosmos: A Personal Voyage and was inspired by the "Pale Blue Dot" photograph, for which Sagan provides a sobering description. In this book, Sagan mixes philosophy about the human place in the universe with a description of the current knowledge about the Solar System. He also details a human vision for the future.[1]

Contents

Book summary

The first part of the book looks at the claims made throughout history that Earth and the human species are unique. Sagan makes two claims for the persistence of the idea of a geocentric, or Earth-centered universe: human pride in our existence, and the threat of torturing those who dissented from it, particularly during the time of the Roman Inquisition. However, he also admits that the scientific tools to prove the Earth orbited the Sun were (until the last few hundred years) not accurate enough to measure effects such as parallax, making it difficult for astronomers to prove that the geocentric theory was false.

After saying that we have gained humility from understanding that we are not, literally, the center of the universe, Sagan embarks on an exploration of the entire solar system. He begins with an account of the Voyager program, in which Sagan was a participating scientist. He describes the difficulty of working with the low light levels at distant planets, and the mechanical and computer problems which beset the twin spacecraft as they aged, and which could not always be diagnosed and fixed remotely. Sagan then examines each one of the major planets, as well as some of the moons—including Titan, Triton, and Miranda—focusing on whether life is possible at the frontiers of the solar system.

Sagan argues that studying other planets provides context for understanding the Earth—and protecting humanity's only home planet from environmental catastrophe. He believes that NASA's decision to cut back exploration of the Moon after the Apollo program was a short-sighted decision, despite the expense and the failing popularity of the program among the United States public. Sagan says future exploration of space should focus on ways to protect Earth and to extend human habitation beyond it. The book was published the year after the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 crashed into Jupiter, an event Sagan uses to highlight the danger Earth faces from the occasional asteroid or comet large enough to cause substantial damage if it were to hit Earth. He says we need the political will to track large extraterrestrial objects, or we risk losing everything. Sagan argues that in order to save the human race, space colonization and terraforming should be utilized.

Later in the book, Sagan's wife, Ann Druyan, challenges readers to pick one of the other planetary dots photographed and featured in the book, and imagine that there are inhabitants on that world who believe that the universe was created solely for themselves. She shared Sagan's belief that humans are not as important as they think they are.

The first edition of the book includes an extensive list of illustrations and photographs, mostly provided by NASA. Other editions reference various figures, but which are not included.

Chapters

  1. You Are Here
  2. Aberrations of Light
  3. The Great Demotions
  4. A Universe Not Made for Us
  5. Is There Intelligent Life on Earth?
  6. The Triumph of Voyager
  7. Among the Moons of Saturn
  8. The First New Planet
  9. An American Ship at the Frontiers of the Solar System
  10. Sacred Black
  11. Evening and Morning Star
  12. The Ground Melts
  13. The Gift of Apollo
  14. Exploring Other Worlds and Protecting This One
  15. The Gates of the Wonder World Open
  16. Scaling Heaven
  17. Routine Interplanetary Violence
  18. The Marsh of Camarina
  19. Remaking the Planets
  20. Darkness
  21. To the Sky!
  22. Tiptoeing Through the Milky Way

See also

Astronomy portal
Books portal
Spaceflight portal

References

External links