The Dawn of a Mindful Universe
A Manifesto for Humanity's Future
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- $18.99
Publisher Description
An award-winning astronomer and physicist’s spellbinding and urgent call for a new Enlightenment and the recognition of the preciousness of life using reason and curiosity—the foundations of science—to study, nurture, and ultimately preserve humanity as we face the existential crisis of climate change.
Since Copernicus, humanity has increasingly seen itself as adrift, an insignificant speck within a large, cold universe. Brazilian physicist, astronomer, and winner of the 2019 Templeton Prize Marcelo Gleiser argues that it is because we have lost the spark of the Enlightenment that has guided human development over the past several centuries. While some scientific efforts have been made to overcome this increasingly bleak perspective—the ongoing search for life on other planets, the recent idea of the multiverse—they have not been enough to overcome the core problem: we’ve lost our moral mission and compassionate focus in our scientific endeavors.
Gleiser argues that we’re using the wrong paradigm to relate to the universe and our position in it. In this deeply researched and beautifully rendered book, he calls for us to embrace a new life-centric perspective, one which recognizes just how rare and precious life is and why it should be our mission to preserve and nurture it. The Dawn of a Mindful Universe addresses the current environmental and scientific impasses and how the scientific community can find solutions to them.
Gleiser’s paradigm rethinks the ideals of the Enlightenment, and proposes a new direction for humanity, one driven by human reason and curiosity whose purpose is to save civilization itself. Within this model, we can once again see ourselves as the center of the universe—the place where life becomes conscious—and regain a clear moral compass which can be used to guide both science and the politics around it.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Dartmouth College physicist Gleiser (The Island of Knowledge) comes up short in this underwhelming call to "reinvent ourselves as a species." To unite humanity in the fight against climate change, he urges readers to view themselves as sharing a "spiritual connection" with all other life on Earth, suggesting that the planet's unique status in the universe makes it "a sacred realm that deserves respect and veneration." He laments the pragmatic focus of the "orthodox scientific worldview," positing that Copernicus's discovery that Earth isn't the center of the universe led people to disregard the planet as "irrelevant in the big scheme of things" and that Isaac Newton's mechanistic explanations of the laws of motion and gravity undermined humanity's reverence for the natural world. Unfortunately, Gleiser's plan for a brighter future, which hinges on forging a "spiritual reconnection with Earth and the biosphere," is vague and simplistic, and his assertions of humanity's need for "engagement of body and mind with the land" do little to clarify what such a reconnection would look like. The hazy bromides grate and Gleiser isn't persuasive in claiming that learning to appreciate the rarity of life in the cosmos will suffice in making people better stewards of the environment. Earth deserves a better defense.