The Potential for Human Evolution? How will humanity change in the next 50 years.. 500 years… 5000 years… The Potential for Human Evolution 50 years… Smart prosthetics for limbs AND organs Genetic ID/elimination of hereditary disease Computers & AI improve Nanotechnology increases The Potential for Human Evolution 50 years… Questions… Fusion? Food? Water? The Potential for Human Evolution 500 years… Brains/Bodies enhanced (“bionics”) Lifetimes, Adaptability increase The Potential for Human Evolution 500 years… Questions… Room to survive? Resolve to allow “Cyborgs”? Reasons to explore? The Potential for Human Evolution 5000 years… What is “human”? Fully “artificial” 1000+ year lifetime Able to travel for 1000 years@ high speeds Able to reach nearby stars… The Potential for Human Evolution 5000 years… Questions… What will “we” find? Congratulations! You’ve made it! Astronomy & Our Lives What could learning about the planets and stars possibly have in common with my life now?? What have we learned? Seven Days/Week, “Moonths” and “Dis-asters” What have we learned? Distance ≠ Seasons! What have we learned? You most likely aren’t an Aries (or whatever sign you thought you were!) What have we learned? Orbits are just controlled, continuous falling! What have we learned? The world will not end in 2028 (at least because of Asteroid XF11) What have we learned? There are thousands of planets orbiting other stars… Astronomers are not just men… “Do not look at stars as bright spots only. Try to take in the vastness of the universe.” “We especially need imagination in science.” – Maria Mitchell and EVERYONE can be an astronomer! What have we learned? What have we learned? We – as humans - live for an “eye-blink” of time relative to the stars What have we learned? We humans live for an “eye-blink” of time relative to the stars But in that blink of an eye, we can imagine infinity What have we learned? We humans live for an “eye-blink” of time relative to the stars But in that blink of an eye, we can imagine infinity, visualize black holes What have we learned? We humans live for an “eye-blink” of time relative to the stars But in that blink of an eye, we can imagine infinity, visualize black holes, and explain how the Sun shines for a billion years. What have we learned? What have we learned? If the Earth was a grain of cream of wheat…. The Sun would be an orange ~12 steps away What have we learned? If the Earth was a grain of cream of wheat…. The Sun would be an orange ~12 steps away Pluto would be at Hesperian & Depot roads What have we learned? If the Earth was a grain of cream of wheat…. The Sun would be an orange ~12 steps away Pluto would be at Hesperian & Depot roads The next nearest star would be 1000 miles away, in El Paso Texas What have we learned? Nearest Star 1000 What have we learned? If our Milky Way Galaxy was size of Bay Area…. What have we learned? If the Milky Way Galaxy was size of Bay Area…. The entire Solar System (to Pluto!) would be a grain of Cream of Wheat = What have we learned? If the Milky Way Galaxy was size of Bay Area…. The nearest stars would still be ~25 feet away What have we learned? If the Milky Way Galaxy was size of Bay Area…. There would be more than ~120,000 other grains of Cream of Wheat representing other solar systems scattered across Chabot’s campus How big is the universe? And… the Milky Way has as many stars as grains of sand on that beach . How big is the universe? Now picture just one grain of sand on your fingertip… held up to the sky… . What have we learned? Science is not about certainty Many hypotheses start out wrong! “We are trying to prove ourselves wrong as quickly as possible, because only in that way can we find progress.” ― Richard Feynman What have we learned? Science is not about certainty Many hypotheses start out wrong! But … Science is self-correcting Multiple tests Independent Experiments by others Peer Review Publishing Astronomy gives us a sense of who we are… Culture A sense of who we are… Technology A sense of who we are… Poetry “Doubt thou the stars are fire; Doubt that the sun doth move; Doubt truth to be a liar; But never doubt I love.” ― William Shakespeare, Hamlet “But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks? It is the east, and Juliet is the sun.” ― Romeo and Juliet The Falling Star by Sara Teasdale I saw a star slide down the sky, Blinding the north as it went by, Too burning and too quick to hold, Too lovely to be bought or sold, Good only to make wishes on And then forever to be gone. Stars Alone in the night On a dark hill With pines around me Spicy and still, And a heaven full of stars Over my head, White and topaz And misty red; Myriads with beating Hearts of fire That aeons Cannot vex or tire; Up the dome of heaven Like a great hill, I watch them marching Stately and still, And I know that I Am honored to be Witness Of so much majesty. And I know that I Am honored to be Witness Of so much majesty. - Sara Teasdale Who will I have been when I am gone? - Rebecca Elson Key Questions I asked you…. How does science work? What do we gain, as humans, by asking questions of Nature? Is the quest for knowledge worth the costs? Key Question for you NOW… What will you do with what you now know? “Nobody ever figures out what life is all about, and it doesn't matter. Explore the world. Nearly everything is really interesting if you go into it deeply enough.” ― Richard P. Feynman