this curious life
14
Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind. - Dr. Seuss
Curated by Janet Devlin
Follow
Scooped by Janet Devlin onto this curious life
Scoop.it!

Inspiring Politics?

Inspiring Politics? | this curious life | Scoop.it
It’s Denmark’s ‘The West Wing’: the TV series ‘Borgen’ has done for politics what Nordic-Noir has done for screen police and thriller lit.
No comment yet.
Janet Devlin is also curating
labyrinth Rights a mind to crime Psycholitics & Psychonomics
Discover Topics Janet Devlin is following
Quite Interesting News Science News Amazing Science 21st Century Information Fluency Social Foraging Strange days indeed...
and 50 others
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by Janet Devlin from Soul Fill
Scoop.it!

Mars and the Mind of Man: Carl Sagan, Ray Bradbury and Arthur C. Clarke in Conversation, 1971

Mars and the Mind of Man: Carl Sagan, Ray Bradbury and Arthur C. Clarke in Conversation, 1971 | this curious life | Scoop.it

“It’s part of the nature of man to start with romance and build to a reality.”

 

'Mariner 9 mission reached Mars and became the first spacecraft to orbit another planet, Caltech Planetary Science professor Bruce Murray summoned a formidable panel of thinkers to discuss the implications of the historic event. Murray himself was to join the great Carl Sagan (♥) and science fiction icons Ray Bradbury (♥) and Arthur C. Clarke (♥) in a conversation moderated by New York Times science editor Walter Sullivan, who had been assigned to cover Mariner 9′s arrival for the newspaper. What unfolded — easily history’s only redeeming manifestation of the panel format — was a fascinating quilt of perspectives not only on the Mariner 9 mission itself, or even just Mars, but on the relationship between mankind and the cosmos, the importance of space exploration, and the future of our civilization.'

 

..........'[Carl Sagan] follows [that] with one of the most eloquent portions of the entire conversation — an insistence on the value of embracing ignorance, learning to live with ambiguity, and choosing the unknown over answers that might be wrong, alongside a call for balancing skepticism with openness — something he’d articulate formally more than a decade later'

 

 


Via Sakis Koukouvis, Pamela D Lloyd, Mariana Soffer
No comment yet.