|
It
is a compelling human story. From genetics, to cognitive science, to
physics we can patch together a view of the world, our place in it,
our power and powerlessness. We can describe the mad animals we are
in the middle of a range of phenomenon from the microscopic to the mind
tauntingly vast.
Janna
Levin
Dear Mr. President
There
is a weighty apprehension that scientific issues in general have been
marginalized in your administration. We could detail our specific causes
but the impact is lost if the very nature of scientific pursuit is not
appreciated. Should we first advise you of the significance to our country
and the world of our broader scientific aspirations?
It is
a compelling human story. From genetics, to cognitive science, to physics
we can patch together a view of the world, our place in it, our power
and powerlessness. We can describe the mad animals we are in the middle
of a range of phenomenon from the microscopic to the mind tauntingly
vast. The fruits of this vast scientific enterprise are of pressing
importance to our survival—a survival that is not currently assured.
I have
heard, to my persistent surprise, that people kill each other for land,
money, oil. Our petty gripes and vicious aggression as insignificant
as a dog fight kicking up dust and dirt in our squabbles as the earth
rolls us around the sun. And although so many of us despair over the
newspaper accounts of our more barbarous traits, Tuesdays are always
a good day as we get the special Science Section in The New York
Times and the pessimism lifts.
The articles
are not about territory or struggle or financial gain they're about
strange crystal growths, rocks from Mars, the human genome, an accelerating
universe. These things we do out of purely human curiosity. We are driven
by inquisitiveness and a belief that the world is beautiful and true
and reaffirms our brand of faith which transcends race and gender and
national boundaries. Nature speaks to all of us and any of us.
No one
can guess the shape or size or language of the next genius but we can
all participate in the knowledge that is woven of all of our contributions.
Through a well-supported scientific initiative we could develop energy
sources to better protect our planet, cure AIDS, and understand the
origin and fate of our entire universe. No small aims.
Reaching
these aims demands vision beyond our short-term ambitions. When a Congressional
Committee asked how scientific research would advance defense of our
country, Robert Wilson, the founding director of Fermilab said, "it
has nothing to do directly with defending our country, except to make
it worth defending". Our scientific culture helps to make ours a world
worth defending.
Janna
Levin
Theoretical Physicist
Cambridge University
Author of How the Universe got Its Spots.
|