Sunday, September 27, 2009

 

"My God, It's Full of Stars!"

Putting this down into words will not do it justice, but I wanted to share my experience late Friday night. While walking home from the open bar on Mackinac Island, I was struck by how many stars I could see. If you've lived in a big city your whole life, you might be amazed at just how many you can see on a clear night when you get away from big buildings.

So I'm marveling at it but then I realize my view is still being hurt by the occasional streetlight. Across the street from the Grand Hotel is a golf course. Right near the sidewalk is a big sand trap, and I realize that if I just walk to the other side of it, the hill will be blocking the light from the street and I'll be able to look up at a fairly uninterrupted view.

I stood there on the sidewalk wavering. It was about 1 in the morning, and it was cold out--I had come from Nashville and just brought a light jacket, so I wasn't really prepared for the upper Michigan weather--and I wasn't sure if it was worth sneaking onto the golf course just to see how many more stars were visible outside the blare of the streetlight. But something nudged me to go for it, and I don't think it was Richard Thaler.

I waited for some other pedestrians to get out of sight, and then I walked onto the course and down the first hill. My mouth literally dropped open. I could not BELIEVE how many stars I could now see. I have never in my life seen so many in the night sky. It looked like a planetarium show, except this was the real deal. Whereas humans can create a similar show of beauty by projecting light from a machine onto a ceiling 30 feet or so above your head, here was the Lord of the universe putting on a similar show, except He decided to use balls of gas undergoing nuclear reactions, some of which were millions of light-years away.

After testing to see just how wet the grass was, I laid down and just stared up. I had to turn my head from side to side to drink it all in; I couldn't capture it all without swiveling. I said "oh my gosh" and realized it wouldn't be cursing for me to say "oh my God." The second time I said it, I actually saw a "shooting star" the instant I said it, which was a nice finishing touch. (I don't know if I've ever seen a shooting star in real life before.)

It was an extremely pleasant way to finish the night. To (greatly) paraphrase Richard Feynman who was making a different point: There needn't be a tension between knowledge of the natural world and faith in God. In fact, the reason I was in such awe was that I had a (very vague) understanding of how far away the stars generating that light had to be. I don't imagine that the fishermen hanging around Jesus would have appreciated the night sky more than I did a few days ago, simply because it was more of a "mystery" to them.



Comments:
I live out in the country Bob. The nearest city of any consequence is Watertown NY, which is 60 miles away and barely of consequence. Our house is about a mile outside the village of Canton. There's nothing better than going outside on a clear night and getting all the houselights off and just staring up at the uncountable number of stars. And you can usually see the Milky Way too. One of the nice features of our house is that our bedroom has two skylight window, so we can lie in bed and see 'em too.

One need not believe there was a designer to marvel at the order of the universe.
 
I spent a few weeks on Mackinac Island over the summer, years ago. Very interesting place to visit. It's like it's own world.

J Cortez
 
Try the Wyoming night sky ....

Low humitity and high altitude and no human lights = massive stars.
 
Bob, wow; we share the same universe!
 
One need not believe in gravity to fall down the stairs!
 
Bob, this is probably one of the saddest statements I have read in a long time:

"I don't know if I've ever seen a shooting star in real life before."

You really don't get out much, do you? No hiking trips through the Appalachians, no visit to a friend's cottage, heck - you never even drove out of the city by night just to see the stars?

Get your nose out of your books, switch of the computer, and hook up with your local outdoors club. Maybe in the end you'll even understand WHY the environmentalists are so passionate about the environment. They may be wrong about their proposed solutions, and they may have misidentified the problem... but ... this explains a lot about you. Seriously.
 
Neither Anonymouse was me; where have you come from?

Bob, I'd caution against getting too close to Creation; you might find that our destruction of it (largely in places w/o property rights) to pain you personally, and you could become a Frumious Misanthrope like me!
 
One of the great pleasures in my life years ago (mid 1990's) was taking a bunch of kids (teens) backpacking in the Porcupine Mountains of Upper Michigan, and then at night having them sit/lay on near the southern shores of Lake Superior and look UP.

Previously they thought of the "Milky Way" as nothing but a candy bar -- THEN, when they saw the REAL THING they were, well, "astounded" is too small of a word. Even though it was "cold" with a breeze off of the lake, most of them chose to stay there for hours.

What is truly mind-blowing is when you realize that it is WE who are unique in our inability to see the stars & the milky way -- the vast majority of mankind for the lion's share of our history has lived without our "light pollution" and thus had MUCH a better grasp of the heavens above than we do.
 
You know, you were probably looking at the Milky Way; September is the brightest it gets during the year. I remember my first time looking at it -- it was just last week!
 
Anonymous wrote:

You really don't get out much, do you? No hiking trips through the Appalachians, no visit to a friend's cottage, heck - you never even drove out of the city by night just to see the stars?

Get your nose out of your books, switch of the computer, and hook up with your local outdoors club. Maybe in the end you'll even understand WHY the environmentalists are so passionate about the environment. They may be wrong about their proposed solutions, and they may have misidentified the problem... but ... this explains a lot about you. Seriously.


Let me add a bit to your psychoanalysis: I don't care much for anonymous people insulting me and then barking orders at me. If you want to encourage me to do something to overcome a flaw that you perceive, that's not the most fruitful approach. Seriously.
 
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