yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Carl Sagan: "I don’t want to believe. I want to know." | Sasha Sagan


3m read
·Nov 3, 2024

  • Science and technology have come a long way in making it possible for us to do things that would've seemed like magic tricks not too long ago—space travel, flight! For most of history, that seemed absolutely impossible. Birds can do it. We're stuck here on the ground, looking up.

Think of how many gods and mythical figures were given the power of flight. We wanted it so bad, and now we've managed to do it. The oldest living person in the world was alive when the Wright brothers flew the first flight at Kitty Hawk, and now we have a helicopter on Mars. The more we understand ourselves and our Universe, the more magnificent it is.

I'm Sasha Sagan, and I'm the author of a book called "For Small Creatures Such as We." I was brought up with a very scientific worldview. My dad was the astronomer Carl Sagan, and he and my mom, writer-producer Ann Druyan, fell in love working on the Voyager Record, which is a golden phonograph that is a compilation of the sounds of life on Earth. Greetings and human languages, and one whale language.

  • 'Hello from the planet Earth.' - Music from around the world. Sounds of a heartbeat. Brainwaves of a young woman in love who happened to be my mom. These two records are on the Voyager Spacecraft, and they have a shelf life of a billion years. Right now, the Voyager Spacecrafts are the furthest objects from Earth ever touched by human beings.

And then my parents wrote essays and books, and the television series "Cosmos," about the awe and wonder that we can find in the Universe. Things that we really do understand that we've managed to discover can be presented with enthusiasm and wonder and awe that makes people feel welcome in reveling in how astonishing things are in the natural world, as revealed by science.

  • 'In the last few millennia we have made the most astonishing and unexpected discoveries about the cosmos and our place within it.' - One of the things I learned from my parents is this idea of tolerating ambiguity. Sometimes when we make up an answer, it's just a placeholder because we're so bad at sitting with an empty question mark.

But I think we can all improve on sitting with the discomfort of not knowing. Tolerating ambiguity, waiting until you have evidence, knowing that sometimes the evidence will change, is central to any scientific advancement. My dad, one of the things he was most curious about in his life was: Are we alone in the universe? Is there anybody else out there?

  • 'Everyone wants to know how unique the human species are. How is it possible that in a galaxy of 400 billion stars that we are the only inhabited planet? Is that possible?' - He was so eager to understand. He wanted to find out what was really going on.

But the discomfort we sit with, even with the very small questions, reveals how we feel about the unanswered great mysteries in our lives. It's so hard to not know. Even the future tortures us with our inability to predict it. And we have struggled for eons with this problem. It's a source of so much stress, but science is the only, only tool that has given us any real shot.

I think about "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court": an eclipse was terrifying all over the world. The Sun goes away all of a sudden. What could be more petrifying? And now we know when they're coming, and we know it's safe. It won't hurt us. Little by little, we're getting some of the tools that we've always longed for through science.

Not that long ago, for our species, so much in life, even the most mundane, ordinary things would've seemed like a magic trick. And I think that's true for so much of science, and so much of the reality of our Universe. And the more we understand ourselves and our planet, the more magnificent it is.

My dad felt an enormous, joyful wonder about the Universe from his earliest childhood. If he had been born a few hundred years earlier, it would've been a lot harder for him to get the answers that he so deeply craved about our place in the Universe. A quote that you'll often hear of his is: "I don't want to believe, I want to know."

And I think that really sums up a lot of his philosophy. He really instilled in me this idea that reality, nature, is more astonishing and more breathtaking than the stories that we create for ourselves.

More Articles

View All
STOICISM | How to Worry Less About Money
If there’s something that stresses people out, it’s financial problems. On March 11th, 2020, the coronavirus outbreak was officially declared a pandemic. COVID-19 not only started to threaten people’s health on a global scale; it also severely affected th…
The Sixth Amendment | Civil liberties and civil rights | US government and civics | Khan Academy
Hi, this is Kim from Khan Academy. Today I’m learning about the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, one of four amendments in the Bill of Rights that concerns the rights of the accused. The Sixth Amendment guarantees defendants in criminal cases the…
Perfect Aspect | The parts of speech | Grammar | Khan Academy
Hello Garans. Today I want to talk to you about the idea of the perfect aspect of verbs. What that means is that it’s not, you know, beyond reproach or that it’s like beautiful and shiny. No, no, no. What it means is really that whatever we’re talking abo…
How To Get A PERFECT Credit Score For $0
What’s up, guys? It’s Graham here. So for the last 12 years, I have studied, researched, and analyzed every single aspect of building your credit score to the point where eventually I could brag on YouTube about achieving an 800, which is the threshold th…
The Next Great Depression - How To Prepare
What’s gram up? It’s guys, you here, and it’s official: as of today, the bear market just hit a brand new low. Most people believe the economy is about to fall even further. For instance, Michael Burry just went on record to say that the S&P 500 still…
3 books that changed my life
We all know that reading is vital for our growth, for our development, but we don’t really have that much time in order to read every single book that we see. And actually, you don’t really need to read that much in order to change your mindset or your be…