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The Copernicus Complex
The Copernicus Complex: Our Cosmic Significance in a Universe of Planets and Probabilities | Caleb Scharf
4 posts | 3 read | 1 reading | 3 to read
Longlisted for the 2015 PEN/E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award Short-listed for Physics World's Book of the Year The Sunday Times (UK) Best Science Book of 2014 A Publishers Weekly Top 10 Science Book of Fall 2014 An NBC News Top Science and Tech Book of 2014 A Politics & Prose 2014 Staff Pick In the sixteenth century, Nicolaus Copernicus dared to go against the establishment by proposing that Earth rotates around the Sun. Having demoted Earth from its unique position in the cosmos to one of mediocrity, Copernicus set in motion a revolution in scientific thought. This perspective has influenced our thinking for centuries. However, recent evidence challenges the Copernican Principle, hinting that we do in fact live in a special place, at a special time, as the product of a chain of unlikely events. But can we be significant if the Sun is still just one of a billion trillion stars in the observable universe? And what if our universe is just one of a multitude of others-a single slice of an infinity of parallel realities? In The Copernicus Complex, the renowned astrophysicist Caleb Scharf takes us on a scientific adventure, from tiny microbes within the Earth to distant exoplanets, probability theory, and beyond, arguing that there is a solution to this contradiction, a third way of viewing our place in the cosmos, if we weigh the evidence properly. As Scharf explains, we do occupy an unusual time in a 14-billion-year-old universe, in a somewhat unusual type of solar system surrounded by an ocean of unimaginable planetary diversity: hot Jupiters with orbits of less than a day, planet-size rocks spinning around dead stars, and a wealth of alien super-Earths. Yet life here is built from the most common chemistry in the universe, and we are a snapshot taken from billions of years of biological evolution. Bringing us to the cutting edge of scientific discovery, Scharf shows how the answers to fundamental questions of existence will come from embracing the peculiarity of our circumstance without denying the Copernican vision. With characteristic verve, Scharf uses the latest scientific findings to reconsider where we stand in the balance between cosmic significance and mediocrity, order and chaos. Presenting a compelling and bold view of our true status, The Copernicus Complex proposes a way forward in the ultimate quest: determining life's abundance, not just across this universe but across all realities.
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swynn
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Copernicus taught us that the universe does not revolve around us literally, and since then science has worked best when assuming this also true metaphorically. OTOH, discoveries in astronomy tell us that our solar system is an unusual one, maybe unusually (even uniquely?) suitable for life. What does that mean for our cosmic significance? Scharf takes 230 pages to say, "We don't know," but he hits some really interesting material along the way.

ChaoticMissAdventures Lovely! When I was very young I got married and got a tattoo, when I was a little less young I cover over that tattoo with an airship named Copernicus (on it's banner) it reminds me to rethink things because sometimes the center of your universe, just isn't. I so appreciate how he made people rethink about everything. 2y
swynn @ChaoticMissAdventures Thank you for sharing about your tattoo, which I think is brilliant! 2y
ChaoticMissAdventures @swynn I never see people talk about Copernicus and I always get very excited when people bring him up. He was brilliant and so brave. 2y
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swynn
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It all begins with a single drop of water.

#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl

Nutmegnc Great line!!!! 2y
swynn I know right? 2y
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swynn
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My #BookSpin and #DoubleSpin picks for December: a discussion of humanity's cosmic significance, which I coincidentally started yesterday ("How significant are we?" so far: Not much. Also, maybe, a lot.); and a memoir about being Black in twentieth century Germany. Looking forward to that one too.

Thanks @TheAromaofBooks !

TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!!! 2y
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review
shanaqui
Mehso-so

Not much new here -- mostly rehashes how Earth and complex life came to be, and the various arguments about whether that means life is rare or not, and ended more or less where I do: not enough data, impossible to tell.