The Faber Book of Science (66 page)

BOOK: The Faber Book of Science
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Localism doesn’t even have the virtue of being useful in times of peace. The problems of the world today are planetary in scope. No one nation, not even if it is as rich as the United States, as centralized as the Soviet Union, or as populous as China, can solve its important problems today. No matter how a nation stabilizes population within its own borders, no matter how it rationalizes the use of its own resources, no matter how it conserves its own environment, all would come to nothing if the rest of the world continued its
rabbit-multiplication
and its poisoning of free will.

Even if every nation sincerely took measures, independent of each other, to correct the situation, the solutions one nation arrived at would not necessarily match those of its neighbors, and all might fall.

To put it bluntly, planetary problems require a planetary program and a planetary solution, and that means cooperation among nations,
real
cooperation. To put it still more bluntly, we need a world government that can come to logical and humane decisions and can then enforce them.

This does not mean a world government that will enforce conformity in every respect. The cultural diversity of mankind is surely a most valuable characteristic and it must be preserved – but not where it will threaten the species with suicide.

All these requirements for change go against the grain. Who really wants to downgrade motherhood and regard babies as enemies? Who is comfortable at the thought of dissociating sex and parenthood? Who is ready to submit his national pride to a truly effective world government? Who is willing to abandon the attempt to get as much as possible out of the world and settle instead for a controlled and limited exploitation?

Yet the logic of events is actually forcing us in that direction, willing or not. The birth rate is dropping in those nations that have access to birth-control methods. Sexual mores are loosening everywhere. The people are growing more concerned about the environment, and the clamour for cleaner air, water, and soil is becoming louder every day.

Most of all, and most heartening, localism is retreating. There is
increasing social and economic cooperation among neighboring nations; a stronger drive in the direction of regionalism. More important still, there is a clear understanding that a major war, particularly one between the United States and the Soviet Union, is inadmissable. These two superpowers have quarrelled at levels of intensity that at any time up to the 1930s would have meant war – and now those quarrels do not even bring about a rupture in diplomatic relations. Not only must these nations not fight; they must not even snub each other.

But this motion in the right direction does not seem to be a matter of choice. Rather, stubborn humanity is inching forward to help itself only because the pressure of circumstance has closed all other passageways.

And this motion in the right direction is not fast enough. The population increase continues to outpace the education for birth control; the environment continues to deteriorate more rapidly than we can bring ourselves to correct matters; and, worse, nations still stubbornly quarrel, and continue to place local pride over the life and death of the species.

We must not only reorient our thinking toward motherhood, sex, growth and localism as we are beginning to do; but we must do it more
quickly.
Our society cannot survive another generation of the steadily intensifying stresses placed on it. If we continue as we are and change no faster, then by 2000 the technological structure of human society will almost certainly have been destroyed. Mankind, having been reduced to barbarism, may possibly be on the way to extinction. The planet itself may find its ability to support life seriously compromised.

The good earth is dying; so in the name of humanity let us move. Let us make our hard but necessary decisions. Let us do it quickly. Let us do it now.

Steve Connor, reporting from San Francisco in the
Independent
on 22 February 1994, brings Asimov’s figures up to date.

Over-population threatens to become a global crisis unless drastic action to dramatically cut birth rates begins now, the American Association for the Advancement of Science was told yesterday. World population is already nearly 4 billion more than the 2 billion the planet
can comfortably sustain, according to an ecological study of natural resources to be published later this year. Fertile soil for growing crops, unpolluted water, fossil fuels and the flora and fauna on which humanity depends are all being depleted at a rate that will lead to catastrophic natural, social and political disasters by the end of the next century, a leading ecologist told the meeting.

David Pimentel, Professor of Ecology at Cornell University at Ithaca, New York, released the results of a year-long study into the optimum human population – the number of people the planet can comfortably support with a reasonable standard of living for all. The study concludes the present population of 5.6 billion will have to shrink to 2 billion. However, the projected population for 2100 is expected to be between 12 and 15 billion. Professor Pimentel acknowledged that drastic adjustments to cut the population to 2 billion will cause serious difficulties. ‘But continued rapid population growth will result in even more severe social, economic and political conflicts – plus catastrophic public health and environmental
problems
.’

Sources: Isaac Asimov,
The
Roving
Mind.
A
Panoramic
View
of
Fringe
Science,
Technology,
and
the
Society
of
the
Future.
Oxford University Press, 1987. The
Independent
,
22 February 1994.

For some years I have pestered friends and colleagues for help and suggestions. I should like to thank them all for their kindness and forbearance. I am particularly conscious of my debt to Dinah Birch, David Bodanis, David Cairns, Richard Dawkins, Michael Dunnill, Artur Ekert, Xandra Hardie, Harriett Hawkins, Kevin Jackson, Peter MacDonald, Sir John Maddox, Robert May and Claire Preston. Chris Reid and Julian Loose at Fabers have been unfailingly helpful and supportive. All the mistakes, of course, are mine.

J.C
.   

For permission to reprint copyright material the publishers gratefully acknowledge the following:

DANNIE ABSE
: to Sheil Land Associates for ‘In the Theatre’ from
Collected
Poems
1948–1976 (Hutchinson, 1977).
NEIL ARMSTRONG
 et al: to Time Warner Inc for
First
on
the
Moon:
a
Voyage
with
Neil
Armstrong,
Michael
Collins,
Edwin
E.
Aldrin,
with Grace Farmer and Dora Jane Hamblin (Little, Brown, 1970).
ISAAC ASIMOV
: to the Estate of Isaac Asimov, c/o Ralph M. Vicinanza Ltd for ‘Black Holes’ and ‘The Good Earth is Dying’, reprinted in
The
Roving
Mind:
A
Panoramic
View
of
Fringe
Science,
Technology,
and
the
Mind
of
the
Future
(Prometheus Books, 1983).
PETER ATKINS
: to Penguin Books Ltd for
Creation
Revisited:
The
Origin
of
Space,
Time
and
The
Universe
(Penguin Books, 1994; first published by W. H. Freeman). Copyright © Peter Atkins, 1992.
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Half
Mile
Down
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RUTH BENEDICT
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Man,
Culture
and
Society,
ed. Harry L.
Shapiro (1956).
HECTOR BERLIOZ
: to Victor Gollancz Ltd for
Memoirs,
trans. David Cairns (Cardinal, 1990).
DAVID BODANIS
: to June Hall Agency for
Web
of
Words:
The
Ideas
Behind
Politics
(Macmillan, 1988).
LYNDON BOLTON
: to Scientific American Inc for an essay in
Scientific
American
(5 February 1921). Copyright 1921 by Scientific American Inc. All rights reserved.
DANIEL J. BOORSTIN
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The
Discoverers.
Copyright © 1983 by Daniel J. Boorstin.
SERGE BRAMLEY
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Leonardo:
The
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the
Man,
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P. W. BRIDGMAN
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Harper’s
Magazine
(March 1929). Copyright 1929 by Harper’s Magazine. All rights reserved.
NIGEL CALDER
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The
Key
to
the
Universe:
A
Report
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the
New
Physics
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ITALO CALVINO
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Mr
Palomar,
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RACHEL CARSON
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The
Sea
Around
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By
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STEVE CONNOR
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FRANCIS CRICK
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Mad
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Madame
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PAUL DAVIES
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Space,
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Quantum
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New
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From
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VII
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MARTIN GARDNER
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Science:
Good,
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The
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The
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Story
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Chemistry
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Ancient
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The
Language
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Genes
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GEOFFREY KEYNES
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The
Life
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Harvey
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JAMES KIRKUP
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A
Correct
Compassion
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Other
Poems
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NICHOLAS KURTI
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But
the
Crackling
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Superb:
An
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Food
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Drink
by
Fellows
and
Foreign
Members
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the
Royal
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J. E. LOVELOCK
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Gaia:
A
New
Look
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Life
on
Earth
(1979).
EDWARD MACCURDY
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The
Notebooks
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Leonardo
da
Vinci,
Arranged, Rendered in English, with Introduction by Edward MacCurdy (Cape, 1938).
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The
Complete
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ANGUS MCLAREN
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A
History
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Contraception:
From
Antiquity
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the
Present
Day
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THOMAS MANN
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The
Magic
Mountain,
trans. H. T. Lowe-Porter (Seeker &
Warburg/Penguin, 1960).
JOHN MASEFIELD
: to the Society of Authors for commemorative poem to Ronald Ross from
The
Times
(20 August 1957).
ROBERT M. MAY
: to the author for programme note (‘From Newton to Chaos’) for Tom Stoppard’s play,
Arcadia
(Faber, 1993).
PETER MEDAWAR
: to Oxford University Press for
Pluto’s
Republic
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VLADIMIR NABOKOV
: to Orion Publishing Group Ltd and Smith/Skolnik Literary Management, New York for
Speak,
Memory
(Penguin Books, 1969).
BEAUMONT NEWHALL
: to Reed Consumer Books for
The
History
of
Photography:
From
1839
to
the
Present,
trans. Beaumont Newhall (Seeker & Warburg, 1982).
JOHN FREDERICK NIMS
: to New Directions Publishing Corporation for ‘Klutz’ from
The
Six-cornered
Snowflake.
Copyright © 1990 by John Frederick Nims.
ALFRED NOYES
: to Sheed &
Ward Ltd for
The
Torch-bearers
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CHARLES OFFICER
and
JAKE PAGE
: to Oxford University Press for
Tales
of
the
Earth:
Paroxysms
and
Perturbations
of
the
Blue
Planet
(1993).
GEORGE ORWELL
: to A. M. Heath & Co Ltd for ‘Toads’ from
Tribune
(April 1946), reprinted in
Collected
Essays,
Journalism
and
Letters:
Volume
4
(Penguin, 1970). Copyright © The Estate of the late Sonia Brownell Orwell and Martin Seeker & Warburg Ltd.
ADAM PHILLIPS
: to Faber & Faber Ltd and Harvard University Press for
On
Kissing,
Tickling
and
Being
Bored
(1993).
BERTRAND RUSSELL
: to Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation for
ABC
of
Relativity
(Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1925). Copyright © The Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation Ltd.
OLIVER SACKS
: to Gerald Duckworth & Co Ltd for
The
Man
Who
Mistook
His
Wife
for
a
Hat
(1985).
CARL SAGAN
: to Hodder Headline plc for
Broca’s
Brain:
The
Romance
of
Science
(Hodder &
Stoughton, 1979).
GEORGE B. SCHALLER
: to the author and University of Chicago Press for
The
Year
of
the
Gorilla
(1964).
CAROLINE SERIES
: to New Scientist for ‘Fractals, reflections and distortions’ from
New
Scientist
(22
September
1990).
GEORGE BERNARD SHAW
: to Society of Authors for Preface to
Back
to
Methuselah
(1921).
CHARLES SHERRINGTON
: to U. M. Sherrington, literary executor, and Cambridge University Press for
Man
on
His
Nature
(1951).
ANTHONY SMITH
: to Hodder Headline plc for
The
Mind
(Hodder & Stoughton, 1984).
C. P
.
SNOW
: to Curtis Brown Group Ltd, London, for
The
Physicists
(Macmillan, 1981). Copyright © 1981 the Estate of C. P. Snow.
JOHN STEINBECK
: to Reed Consumer Books and Viking Penguin, a division of Penguin Books USA Inc for
Steinbeck:
A
Life
in
Letters,
eds. Elaine Steinbeck and Robert Wallsten (Heinemann, 1975). Copyright © 1952 by John Steinbeck, © 1969 by The Estate of John Steinbeck, © 1975 by Elaine A. Steinbeck and Robert Wallsten; and
The
Log
From
the
Sea
of
Cortez
(Heinemann, 1958). Copyright © 1941 by John Steinbeck and Edward F. Ricketts. Copyright renewed © 1969 by John Steinbeck and Edward F. Ricketts, Jr.

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