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			EVOLVING IN A PLACE CALLED EDEN 
			IS A PROMISING YOUNG CIVILIZATION. WE 
			GROW MORE DANGEROUS YET WISER EACH DAY... 
			
				
				"The Cosmos is all that is, or ever was, or ever will be. Our 
			contemplations of the Cosmos stir us. There’s a tingling in the 
			spine, a catch in the voice, a faint sensation as if a distant 
			memory, of falling from a great height. We know we are approaching 
			the grandest of mysteries. The size and age of the Cosmos are beyond 
			ordinary human understanding. Lost somewhere between immensity and 
			eternity, is our tiny planetary home, the Earth.  
				
				  
				
				For the first time, 
			we have the power to decide the fate our planet and ourselves. This 
			is a time of great danger, but, our species is young and curious and 
			brave. It shows much promise. In the last few millennia we have made 
			the most astonishing and unexpected discoveries, about the Cosmos 
			and our place within it. I believe our future depends powerfully on 
			how well we understand this Cosmos, in which we float like moat of 
			dust in the morning sky."  
				
				Carl Sagan  
				  
				  
				
				"The most beautiful and profound emotion we can 
			experience is the sensation of the mystical. It is the sower of all 
			true science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no 
			longer wonder, and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead. To know 
			that which is impenetrable to us really exists, manifesting itself 
			as the highest wisdom and the most radiant beauty, which our dull 
			faculties can comprehend only in their primitive forms. This 
			knowledge, this feeling, is the center of true religion."
				 
				
				Albert Einstein  
			 
			
			Despite the depth of our societal challenges, we have struggled with 
			all our imperfections to a pinnacle of knowledge, achievement, 
			judgment, wisdom, and justice never before seen in human history.  
			
			  
			
			We 
			can be incredibly proud of this accomplishment, including all 
			branches of civilization upon which it stands: science, religion, 
			industry, government, military, community, and individual. For all 
			the flaws in the ladder of history, it has supported our ascent to a 
			dizzying height. But in using our evolved talents of thought, from 
			faltering beginnings in the mists of prehistory, to the present day, 
			homo sapiens has struggled to understand its place in the universe. 
			We struggle to gain any glimpse of the root of the great ladder upon 
			which we stand.  
			 
			Contemplating the mysteries of the heavens, the awesome forces of 
			nature, and the cycle of life and death, our ancestors' effort to 
			extract meaning from their experience has helped give rise to myths, 
			religions and philosophies that have acted as beacons along the way.
			 
			 
			A relative newcomer to mankind's cultural journey is the beacon of 
			science, with its focus on objectivity and experimentation. As with 
			myths, religions and philosophies, science attempts to come up with 
			a "theory of everything," a unifying principle from which all else 
			follows.  
			 
			If we think of science as a process by which we gain knowledge and 
			understanding of things, then it is a phenomenon that should be 
			looked at over time. It will remain unfinished, as there will always 
			be more to learn. In the January 1999 issue of Scientific American, 
			a revolution in Cosmology is unfolding before our very eyes: the 
			rate of expansion of the Cosmos is accelerating. It appears that the 
			gravitation of matter is not the fundamental arbiter of the Cosmos 
			after all. Something else is, and we shall discuss it later.  
			 
			But to a scientist this is a fundamental discovery: when considered 
			as a single space-time unit, the universe is now seen to be 
			infinite: perhaps bounded in space, but infinitely growing in time.
			 
			 
			The progression of orders of space through the function of time is 
			studied by the disciplines of science. Cosmology is the study of the 
			origin of spacetime, or the fountain of creation. Physics is the 
			study of how the Cosmos behaves in its simplest forms energy and 
			matter. Chemistry is the study of how the energy and matter of 
			physics have joined with themselves to form more complex structures, 
			such as molecules. Astronomy and astrophysics are the studies of how 
			the processes of physics and chemistry have formed galaxies, stars, 
			planets, moons, comets, and asteriods. Geology is the study of how 
			the chemistry and astrophysics of planets has formed into mountains, 
			oceans, rocks, and soil.  
			
			  
			
			Ecology is the study of how geology has 
			formed into systems hospitable for life. Biology is the study of the 
			systems of ecology that have evolved into organisms such as you and 
			I. Philosophy and neurosciences are the studies of why and how the 
			conscious biology within us thinks the thoughts we do. Together, the 
			disciplines of science give us a window into time, with an ever 
			clearer picture of how nature herself has evolved into the spacetime 
			machine we call the universe. Through this very same science of the 
			universe, we continue to advance our understanding of the astounding 
			spacetime machines we call human beings.  
			 
			The question of which is more remarkable, the advances we make at 
			the close of this millennium or those that were made in earliest 
			recorded history, is a subject which can be debated passionately on 
			either side. If you think of prehistoric man 10,000 or more years 
			ago figuring out how to harness fire or devise the wheel for 
			transportation, is that not on a relative basis as awesome as space 
			exploration or the routine transplant of vital organs?  
			 
			If you think of man starting out with his survival instinct and 
			building on his experience, it is clear that we are the product of a 
			brilliant accumulation of what came before us. Yet there was a time 
			when the only means of communicating what man learned was by passing 
			it on verbally to the next generation, since there was no other form 
			of communication. He couldn’t even write it down.  
			 
			For as long as man has inhabited the earth, he has looked to the 
			heavens. Why? Because it was always there. Because he could learn 
			more about himself and the world in which he lived. Because he could 
			learn how to get along in that world. Today we continue to look at 
			the heavens for the same reason. Some things never change. Or do 
			they?  
			 
			We take for granted the most mundane things in our lives. When it is 
			dark, we turn on the lights. When we are hungry, we heat food in the 
			microwave oven. If we want to talk to someone, we pick up the 
			telephone, and if they are not there, we can leave a voicemail 
			message. The news of the world is delivered to our door, our TV and 
			our computer. Most of us can’t conceive of life without these things 
			and yet, for most of our history, none of them existed.  
			 
			These are stunning technological powers, and we take them for 
			granted. Yet as wondrous as they are, and even in full view of the 
			majestic history of science that has illuminated their underlying 
			phenomena, they pale in comparison to the wonders that await us at 
			the turn of the millennium.  
			
			  
			
			As we now look up again through our 
			telescopes, and down again through our microscopes, we see the 
			fingerprints of the gods, the evidence of revolutions more wondrous 
			than any seen this century, revolutions to boggle the imagination.
			 
  
			
			 
			The Leading Edge of Biology 
			 
			
				
					
					"Life is understood backwards, but must be lived forwards." 
					 
					--Soren Kierkegaard  
				 
			 
			
			The single greatest power which science has developed is the power 
			to observe. A special role for observation is found all across 
			nature: in the foundation of creation known as quantum mechanics, in 
			living beings, and indeed in the evolution of life itself.  
			
			  
			
			With 
			observation, all things, from the smallest bacteria through the 
			largest beast and the most knowledgeable human know what they need 
			to know to survive. Therein may lie a clue to motivate us to 
			reconsider physics in terms more familiar to biologists. What if 
			this same principle in a more general electromagnetic form did in 
			fact apply to all mass?  
			
			  
			
			Principles of evolution pervade all that we 
			seem to observe. Natural selection seems as well equipped a phrase 
			to describe all truth --the birth and death of galaxies, stars, 
			worlds, civilizations, religions, and even theories themselves, as 
			to describe the birth and death of life defined by biology alone.
			 
			 
			Biologists speculate that since biological life began on Earth a few 
			billion years ago, some five to 50 billion distinct types of life 
			forms – species – have existed. The Earth veritably swarms with life 
			--life in astonishing diversity. There appears to be almost no 
			locale too remote or too inhospitable for life in some form to take 
			a hold.  
			
			  
			
			Algal species, for example, thrive inside the frozen rocks 
			of Antarctica and in the superheated, acidic waters around deep sea 
			vents. Earth itself when life first appeared was such a hostile 
			environment: hot, volcanic, and surrounded by an atmosphere lacking 
			in oxygen but abundant in carbon dioxide, which is toxic to most 
			present life forms. Surprisingly, in view of less-than-ideal initial 
			conditions, life established itself on Earth just a few hundred 
			million years after the planet's formation --an unimaginably long 
			time by human standards, but a relatively brief period in 
			cosmological terms, particularly so in view of the seeming 
			improbability of the event.  
			
			  
			
			Since then, life, displaying equally 
			amazing creativity, has expanded into and adapted to every nook and 
			cranny on the planet.  
			 
			Two fundamental questions immediately suggest themselves. How, in 
			spite of what would appear to be almost impossible odds, could life 
			of any kind come into being, and how has it been able to develop 
			with such diversity? In the eighteenth century, when naturalists, 
			most of them good Christians, first began to ask such questions, the 
			answer seemed obvious: God had created the species.  
			
			  
			
			Such a belief 
			was of course not new to the eighteenth century; it had been held by 
			many different cultures since prehistoric times. What the eighteenth 
			century could add to traditional belief was new, detailed zoological 
			and botanical knowledge about how species manifested characteristics 
			that ideally suited them to their peculiar environment and to each 
			other. The hand-in-glove fit of a species to its habitat seemed to 
			bespeak design, which therefore implied a designer, God.  
			
			  
			
			Biological 
			science thus supported believers against skeptics of religion, who 
			began to appear in increasing numbers as the century waned.  
			 
			The romance of biological science and religion was short-lived, 
			however, for soon evidence began to appear that seemed to call into 
			question the assumption that the Bible was a reliable guide to the 
			study of life's beginnings. Such evidence came from two quarters, 
			first the fossil record. Quarries began to yield fossilized remains 
			of some species that clearly had long since died off and of others 
			that had appeared suddenly in the fossil record. The problem was 
			that if God had established species in the beginning, how could they 
			appear and disappear on their own?  
			
			  
			
			The other source of disquieting 
			discovery was the new science of geology, which was beginning to 
			uncover evidence that the Earth was far older than anyone had 
			imagined, certainly far older than the Bible seemed to allow.  
			 
			What emerged from these facts was the notion that life and the Earth 
			itself had evolved. Evolution per se did not necessarily rule out a 
			role for a God, but it allowed for the possibility that independent 
			processes may have been at work, processes which, though perhaps 
			initiated by God, were self-sustaining. As an independent force of 
			nature, therefore, the evolution of species could be studied as a 
			science rather than as an adjunct to theology.  
			
			  
			
			It was into the 
			debate about the scientific mechanism of evolution that 
			
			Charles 
			Darwin burst like a supernova in 1859.  
			 
			What is new about Darwin's explanation of the development of species 
			is not that this happens by evolution, but that it happens through 
			natural selection. According to Darwin, only a handful of 
			fundamental forces are needed to explain the evolution of life. One 
			of these is mutation. Through mutation, new features are introduced 
			into the genetic pool. In point of fact, Darwin did not understand 
			how genetics works, but he correctly perceived that random variation 
			is the only apparent way for new genetic traits to enter what is 
			otherwise a closed system.  
			
			  
			
			We now know that genetic mutation can 
			also occur through biotechnology, but Darwin couldn't even have 
			conceived of such a possibility 150 years ago.  
			 
			Certain types of variation will have no appreciable affect on an 
			individual life form's odds of survival. Other changes will make a 
			difference, however small, for good or ill, and this is where 
			Darwin's second and most important factor, natural selection, comes 
			into play. If, for example, I inherit from my father a mutation that 
			makes me less likely than my neighbor to contract skin cancer, then 
			chances are that I'll live longer and be more likely to have 
			children and pass on this beneficial trait to them.  
			
			  
			
			Those of my 
			children that inherit this trait will in turn be more likely to 
			survive than other children who lack the trait. If I live in a sunny 
			environment, this trait may prove to be a factor in the differential 
			selection of my offspring for survival, and more and more of my 
			offspring will be represented in the total population. Over time, 
			resistance to skin cancer could become a differentiating trait of an 
			entire population as against other populations, for whom sun and 
			skin cancer are not problems, and who therefore lack any genetic 
			inheritance to resist the disease.  
			 
			Thus, in response to pressures arising from the environment, natural 
			selection amplifies the effect of random mutation and, together with 
			inheritance, provides a means by which the amplified effect can 
			propagate through a population. Life responds to the diversity of 
			physical environments by spawning diversity.  
			 
			Like most great scientific insights, Darwin's explanation of 
			evolution, though simple, is not intuitively obvious. Indeed, it 
			appears downright improbable. If mutation is random, and if, as 
			Darwin asserted, natural selection operates to no particular end, 
			then how do complex organisms emerge? How, for example, could 
			something as intricate as the human eye or brain be formed by a 
			random process?  
			
			  
			
			And, if it's hard to imagine how even one such organ 
			could evolve through random combinations, then how much more 
			unlikely is it that millions of complex life forms, each with a host 
			of intricate subsystems such as eyes and brains, could come into 
			being? The answer, and the seeming paradox of Darwinian evolution, 
			is that, although it involves an inconceivable number of random 
			events, the process itself is not random. It is not directed per se, 
			but it is also not random.  
			 
			It's cumulative self-organization. In other words, absent external 
			genetic engineering, evolution is directed by itself.  
			 
			In a random process where there is no link between what happens in 
			one generation and the next, whatever success evolution achieves in 
			one generation toward the development of, say, an eye, will likely 
			be lost in the next generation. Time therefore becomes largely 
			irrelevant, for the odds of developing an eye in one million steps 
			are the same as those of doing it in a single step. In evolution 
			through natural selection, however, nature improves upon itself with 
			each generation. The cumulative effect is radically different.  
			
			  
			
			To 
			illustrate the point, Richard Dawkins, one of Darwin's cleverest 
			modern proponents, poses a variant of the famous example of the 
			monkey that randomly types away at a keyboard and manages to 
			recreate the works of Shakespeare.  
			 
			Instead of having to come up with the works of Shakespeare, all the 
			monkey has to do in Dawkins's simplified version is to generate the 
			single sentence from Hamlet, "Methinks it is like a weasel", which 
			contains just 28 characters. If the monkey used a stripped-down 
			keyboard of 27 characters (26 letters of the alphabet plus the space 
			bar), the probability of randomly generating the sentence is 
			(1/27)28, or 10e41. That's one in a 100,000 trillion trillion 
			trillion. Such an event would almost certainly not occur within the 
			lifespan of the universe, even if the process were carried out on a 
			computer capable of executing millions of tries per second.  
			 
			But now let's change the rules. We'll let the monkey type 28 
			characters at a time, and we'll keep any matches from one turn or 
			"generation" to the next. Dawkins designed a Macintosh computer 
			program to do just that. The program starts with a random phrase of 
			28 letters and duplicates it repeatedly, but with certain chance of 
			random error or mutation in the copying. The computer then selects 
			from each generation's progeny the one that is closest to the target 
			phrase. The selected phrase becomes the basis for the next 
			generation, and so on.  
			
			  
			
			Depending on the initial set of random 
			characters chosen, the program was able to generate the target 
			phrase in as little as 41 generations (a few seconds of computer 
			time).  
			 
			Now, as Dawkins notes, this test is not an altogether proper 
			analogue, since evolution is not directed at producing any 
			particular result. Nonetheless, the example does illustrate the 
			radical difference between random, single-step operations and 
			cumulative selection. Results that are highly improbable as a 
			sequence of unconnected, single-step operations can be achieved 
			through selection. In evolutionary terms, the time scale may still 
			be on the order of thousands or millions of years, but far less than 
			would be required by simple random mutation.  
			
			  
			
			Dawkins summarizes as 
			follows:  
			
				
				"...if any entity, anywhere in the universe, happens to have the 
			property of being good at making copies of itself, then 
			automatically more and more copies of that entity will obviously 
			come into existence. Not only that but, since they automatically 
			form lineages and are occasionally miscopied, later versions tend to 
			be 'better' at making copies of themselves than earlier versions, 
			because of the powerful processes of cumulative selection. It is all 
			utterly simple and automatic. It is so predictable as to be almost 
			inevitable. Evolution, then, while still requiring many generations 
			to yield results, is inherently less improbable than one might at 
			first have supposed."  
			 
			
			Evolution is the process of life, and for the first time in the 
			known history of Earth, a species of animal has learned how to 
			control and shape evolution using technology. What we've learned 
			from the application of biotechnology in the past 10 years has 
			fundamentally reshaped our comprehension of the power of biological 
			knowledge itself.  
			 
			We are now on the verge of possessing a complete genetic map of the 
			homo sapiens animal. At our choice, we will have a similar map for 
			any other life form on this world. This is the instruction manual 
			used by the Cosmos to construct and operate you. It took 15 billion 
			years to make, and at the turn of the second millennium since Christ 
			into the third, humanity will see its own temporal blueprint for the 
			very first time.  
			
			  
			
			How rare or common is such an event in the history 
			books of a galaxy?  
			 
			We will soon be faced with the exceptionally high-stakes task of 
			determining how knowledge of the human genome should be used. We all 
			seem to agree that we will use it to cure disease. But how? What 
			should we do when an incurable disease is found in genetic testing 
			of a fetus? Shall we terminate after pregnancy? Shall we sterilize 
			children carrying lethal genetic defects? Shall we culture new body 
			organs from stem-cell tissue? Shall we enable parents to select 
			their child's sex? If so, then why not eye color? Prevent baldness? 
			Determine height? Skin and muscle tone? Sexual orientation? Athletic 
			performance? Intellectual traits?  
			 
			Is cloning ethical? If not, why do some animals reproduce that way? 
			Would we allow parents to clone a child who has passed away in a car 
			accident? Could you one day clone your own DNA into a new embryo, 
			upon your death? What would it be like to see a home video of your 
			great grandfather, and see a human with appearance and traits 
			exactly like yourself? Shall we allow homo sapiens to make these 
			decisions for other animals as well? Shall we one day create new 
			forms of animal, as we have already created new forms of plants?  
			 
			Isn't it virtually certain that, somewhere in this galaxy, these 
			questions have been asked and answered before? Profound questions.
			 
  
			
			 
			The Leading Edge of Computing  
			 
			In the January 1999 issue of Discover magazine, David Freedman 
			presents a stunning portrait of a new field of computer science just 
			now emerging into view.  
			
			  
			
			A new type of computer, called a quantum 
			computer, appears to hold dramatic promise for complete revolution 
			in information technology.  
			
				
				"What's the big deal about quantum computing? Imagine you were in a 
			large office building and you had to retrieve a briefcase left on a 
			desk picked at random in one of hundreds of offices. In the same way 
			that you'd have to walk through the building, opening doors one at a 
			time to find the briefcase, an ordinary computer has to make its way 
			more or less serially through long strings of 1's and 0's until it 
			arrives at an answer.  
				 
				
				  
				
				Of course, you could speed up the briefcase 
			hunt by organizing a team, coordinating a floor-by-floor search, and 
			then getting them all back together again to compare results. 
			Ordinary computers can do this sort of thing, too, by breaking up 
			the task and running the components in parallel on several 
			processors. That sort of extra coordinating and communicating, 
			however, exacts a huge toll in overhead. 
  But what if instead of having to search yourself or put together and 
			manage a team, you could instantly create as many copies of yourself 
			as there were rooms in the building, all the versions of yourself 
			could simultaneously peek in all the offices, and then – best of all 
			– every copy of yourself would disappear except for the one that 
			found the briefcase? 
  That's an example of how a quantum computer could work." 
				 
			 
			
			A stunning concept, to say the least.  
			
			  
			
			It's particularly appealing 
			because it sketches a possible solution to a long-standing challenge 
			that has confounded even the faster modern computers: pattern 
			recognition. Traditional binary digital logic is notoriously poor at 
			pattern recognition. While even a young child can instantly 
			recognize her mother's face, this simple kind of task is falteringly 
			primitive even in the most advanced computers. Today's "speech 
			recognition" in some new computers is exceedingly primitive and 
			slow, and is thus largely unusable.  
			 
			However, a quantum computer might one day be able to approach the 
			problem of pattern recognition from a fundamentally new angle. 
			Instead of breaking down an image or sound into tiny pieces for 
			serial processing, it might be able to conduct an overall "macro" 
			comparison of one pattern with another in a manner more similar to 
			that within our own brains. More speculatively, it has been 
			suggested by many researchers that quantum computing may ultimately 
			lead to the ability to create technology that is conscious!  
			 
			Will the concept depicted in Star Wars of conscious droids not 
			ultimately turn out to be fictional after all?  
			 
			Although we are getting ahead of ourselves to mention it here, those 
			with inside knowledge of the UFO phenomenon quite uniformly assert 
			that the technologies employed with these craft respond directly to 
			conscious thought.  
			 
			Taking this speculation yet a further step forward, shall we one day 
			marry biology and computing in some way, perhaps to serve our needs? 
			Might other advanced civilizations elsewhere in our galaxy have 
			already accomplished this?  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			The Leading Edge of Physics 
			 
			
				
				"The whole of science consists of data that, at one time or another, 
			were inexplicable."  
				--Brendan O'Regan  
			 
			
			The search for a unifying principle in physics has led to the 
			development of theories whose names are becoming household words, 
			even though their content may be accessible only to the specialist 
			-relativity theory, quantum theory, superstring theory.  
			 
			Echoing pre-scientific roots in the concept of an all-pervasive 
			energetic flow, these modern scientific disciplines similarly posit 
			an underlying energetic matrix, the void or vacuum out of which 
			springs all manifestation. In relativity theory we hear of the 
			spacetime metric, with its curving warp and woof; in quantum theory, 
			the vacuum fluctuations or zero-point energy, so-called because of 
			its unceasing activity even at a temperature of absolute zero.  
			
			  
			
			As 
			before, called by many names in many disciplines, such terms conjure 
			up images of a pregnant void, full of potential, and indeed this is 
			where modern scientific theory has led us. It would appear that, 
			like fish discovering the ocean, we have finally discerned the ocean 
			of energy in which we move and have our being.  
			 
			In Western traditions the genesis of the scientific concept of an 
			energetic void underlying all manifestation can be traced back to at 
			least the time of the Greek philosophers. Democritus argued that 
			empty space was truly a void, otherwise his postulated atoms would 
			not have room to move around. Aristotle countered that what appeared 
			to be empty space was in fact a plenum, filled with substance, for 
			did not heat and light travel from place to place as if carried by 
			some kind of medium?  
			 
			The debate ricocheted back and forth through the centuries until its 
			essence was distilled by the 19th-century British physicist James 
			Clerk Maxwell. As mentioned previously, Maxwell postulated the 
			existence of a luminiferous ether, a medium that carried 
			electromagnetic waves, including light, much as a lake carries water 
			waves across its surface (Whittaker, 1960).  
			
			  
			
			All attempts to measure 
			the properties of this ether, however, or to measure the Earth’s 
			velocity through the ether (the famous Michelson-Morley experiment), 
			met with failure.  
			 
			Furthermore, Einstein’s development of the theory of special 
			relativity in 1905 did not require reference to such an underlying 
			substrate, and thus the concept of the ether seemed superfluous, and 
			fell out of favor. Maxwell’s ether was banished in favor of the 
			concept that empty space constitutes a true void. Ten years later, 
			however, Einstein’s own development of the theory of general 
			relativity, with its emerging picture of curved space and distorted 
			geometry, brought back the idea of a richly endowed plenum, this 
			time under the new label spacetime metric.  
			 
			It was the advent of modern quantum theory, however, that 
			established the quantum vacuum, so-called empty space, as a very 
			active place, with electromagnetic and other fields continuously 
			fluctuating on a microscopic scale, and with particles fleeting into 
			momentary existence, only to vanish back into the restless void, 
			like foam tossed at the base of a waterfall. Thus empty space began 
			to look more like a frothy, bubbling cauldron than a serene silence. 
			And its fluctuations led to a statistical uncertainty in all 
			measurement that is so fundamental to quantum processes as to be 
			raised to the status of a Principle -Heisenberg’s Uncertainty 
			Principle -named for physicist Werner Heisenberg who stressed its 
			importance.  
			 
			When physicists calculated the energy density of the quantum foam, 
			they were amazed to find that even the most conservative estimates 
			placed its value at greater than nuclear energy densities (Feynman 
			and Hibbs, 1965). At first it was thought that perhaps some 
			fundamental aspect of the theory used to perform the calculation was 
			in error. However, it was soon discovered that the energy densities 
			so calculated had to be taken seriously for certain experimental 
			observations to be explained.  
			
			  
			
			For example, an observed discrepancy 
			(shift) between the predicted and observed frequency of emission 
			from excited hydrogen gas could only be explained if one took into 
			account the "jittering" of the electron’s orbit around the nucleus 
			due to the underlying quantum field fluctuations. This convergence 
			of theory and experiment is known as the Lamb shift, and won for its 
			researcher Willis Lamb, Jr., a shared Nobel Prize in physics.  
			 
			At this point, although the vacuum fluctuation energy concept had 
			been demonstrated, as far as physical effects were concerned it 
			appeared to be of significance only for such esoteric concerns as 
			the calculation of small corrections with regard to the properties 
			of fundamental particles, or for atomic processes. In 1948, however, 
			H. G. B. Casimir of the Philips Laboratories in the Netherlands 
			predicted an entirely new effect based on the fluctuations of the 
			vacuum electromagnetic field -an attractive force between closely 
			spaced metal plates.  
			
			  
			
			This force, now known for its discoverer as the Casimir force, derives from partial shielding of the interior region 
			of the plates from the background fluctuations, much as a metal 
			building shields incoming radio waves and thus interferes with radio 
			reception. This partial shielding of the external electromagnetic 
			fluctuations results in unbalanced forces that push the plates 
			together (Milonni, Cook and Goggin, 1988).  
			
			  
			
			The Casimir force has 
			recently been measured with high accuracy at the University of 
			Washington (Lamoreaux, 1997), a scientific event considered of 
			sufficient importance as to be given prominent coverage in the New 
			York Times (Browne, 1997).  
			 
			Step by step the concept of a rich and active vacuum began moving 
			from the periphery of physics toward center stage. As stated on the 
			dust cover of a recent collection of essays on the vacuum by 
			well-known physicists (including Einstein), "The vacuum is fast 
			emerging as the central structure of modern physics" (Saunders and 
			Brown, 1991).  
			
			  
			
			And, as if to emphasize the concept that this has 
			meaning not only for the academic pursuit of fine points in the 
			development of physical theory, but also potentially for 
			application, Nobel Laureate T.D. Lee (1988) introduced the concept 
			of vacuum engineering with the words,  
			
				
				"The experimental method to 
			alter the properties of the vacuum may be called vacuum 
			engineering..... If indeed we are able to alter the vacuum, then we 
			may encounter some new phenomena, totally unexpected." 
				 
			 
			
			One of the first breakthroughs in application of the concept of 
			vacuum engineering involved the phenomenon that excited atoms -for 
			example, electrically-excited gas atoms in a neon tube -do not stay 
			excited for very long. Like a pencil poised on its point, an excited 
			atom hovers in an excited state for a brief moment and then falls to 
			a ground state, emitting its energy in the process -in the case of 
			the neon tube, emitting light. This process is called "spontaneous 
			emission."  
			 
			As it turns out, "spontaneous emission" is not so spontaneous after 
			all. Rather, spontaneous emission is triggered by quantum 
			fluctuation fields, much as the fallover of the poised pencil is due 
			to such disturbances as microscopic acoustic vibrations. Therefore, 
			if excited atoms are passed through specially-constructed Casimir-like 
			cavities in which the resonant field modes are suppressed -and 
			likewise the quantum fluctuation energy in those modes -the time 
			before spontaneous emission occurs can be lengthened considerably, 
			by factors of ten, for example.  
			
			  
			
			As stated in a review article in 
			Scientific American,  
			
				
				"An excited atom that would ordinarily emit a 
			low-frequency photon cannot do so, because there are no vacuum 
			fluctuations to stimulate its emission..." 
				
				
				(Haroche and Raimond, 
			1993).  
			 
			
			In a similar fashion the cavity can be designed to enhance 
			spontaneous emission and thereby speed up the process. This form of 
			vacuum engineering has led to the development of a whole new field 
			of research called cavity quantum electrodynamics.  
			
			  
			
			It is only a 
			matter of time and engineering before manipulation of atomic 
			emission times by this process will find useful application.  
  
			
			 
			Overunity Energy?  
			 
			A continuing search for energy alternatives to fossil and nuclear 
			fuels has intensified over the past few years. This search includes 
			a national commitment of several billion dollars to develop 
			high-energy ("hot") fusion -to reproduce the sun on a small scale 
			-which is still controversial in the physics community as to 
			probable success. Complementing this are the so-called renewable 
			energy resources, such as solar and wind energy alternatives that 
			have been under development for many years.  
			 
			Given the apparent energy density of the vacuum fluctuation fields, 
			which can be traced to radiation from the fluctuating quantum motion 
			of charged particles distributed throughout the universe (Puthoff, 
			1989, 1991), the question naturally comes to mind as to whether this 
			reservoir of energy can be tapped. Can the energy be "mined" for 
			practical use? If so, it would constitute a virtually ubiquitous 
			energy supply, a veritable "Holy Grail" energy source.  
			 
			Looking to whether Nature herself may have already taken advantage 
			of energetic vacuum effects, physicist I.Yu. Sokolov (1996) of 
			Toronto University suggested just this in a paper entitled "The Casimir effect as a possible source of cosmic energy."  
			
			  
			
			In this paper 
			he presents calculations to support the concept that the anomalously 
			high energies associated with certain supernova explosions or with 
			quasars might constitute examples of the conversion of vacuum energy 
			into other forms.  
			 
			In yet another example, researchers A. Rueda of California State 
			University at Long Beach, B. Haisch of Lockheed-Martin and D. Cole 
			of IBM proposed that the vast reaches of outer space constitute an 
			ideal environment for energetic vacuum effects to accelerate nuclei 
			and thereby provide a mechanism for "powering up" cosmic rays (Rueda, 
			Haisch and Cole, 1995). Details of the model would also appear to 
			account for other observed phenomena, such as the formation of 
			cosmic voids.  
			 
			As utopian as the possibility of tapping vacuum fluctuation energy 
			might seem, researcher R. Forward (1984), while at Hughes Research 
			Laboratories in Malibu, CA, demonstrated proof-of-principle in a 
			paper, "Extracting electrical energy from the vacuum by cohesion of 
			charged foliated conductors." Furthermore, follow-up proof that such 
			a process violates neither energy nor thermodynamic constraints can 
			be found in a paper with the title "Extracting energy and heat from 
			the vacuum" (D. Cole and H. Puthoff, 1993).  
			
			  
			
			Forward’s approach 
			exploited the Casimir effect described in detail earlier. In brief, 
			as metal plates are pushed together by vacuum fluctuation forces, 
			one obtains heat when they collide, or, if electrically charged, a 
			buildup of electrical field energy as they approach. In either case, 
			vacuum energy is converted to another, potentially useful, form. 
			 
			
			  
			
			Though of insignificant magnitude in the simple configurations 
			described, proof-of-principle has nonetheless been demonstrated, 
			paralleling earlier demonstrations of the release of small amounts 
			of energy from early experiments in nuclear fission. Fortunately, 
			all indications to date are that, unlike its nuclear predecessor, 
			vacuum fluctuation energy release is environmentally benign.  
			 
			Attempts to harness the Casimir and related effects for vacuum 
			energy conversion are ongoing at the Institute for Advanced Studies 
			at Austin (Austin, Texas) and elsewhere. One approach utilizes pinch 
			effects in non-neutral plasmas (Puthoff, 1990), the plasma 
			equivalent of Forward’s electromechanical charged-plate collapse.  
			
			  
			
			A 
			patent issued on this process contains the descriptive phrase,  
			
				
				"...energy is provided... and the ultimate source of this energy 
			appears to be the zero-point radiation of the vacuum continuum" 
				 
				
				(Shoulders, 1991). 
				 
			 
			
			Yet another technique under investigation is based on an argument 
			suggested by Boyer (1975) and elaborated by Puthoff (1987) that 
			(stable) atomic ground states are states of dynamic equilibrium in 
			which radiation due to ground state motion is compensated by 
			absorption from vacuum fluctuations. If verified, a corollary is 
			that appropriate perturbation of this equilibrium state would result 
			in a release of energy.  
			
			  
			
			Finally, an approach described in a recent 
			patent proposes the use of finely-tuned dielectric antennas to 
			convert energetic high-frequency components of the 
			vacuum-fluctuation spectrum into a more useful lower-frequency form 
			(Mead and Nachamkin, 1996).  
			 
			Though remaining to be developed, what has been shown is that the 
			basic concept of the conversion of vacuum energy to other 
			potentially useful forms is a legitimate and viable physics 
			principle. What remains, however, as with solar and thermonuclear 
			energy, is the matter of engineering and demonstration as to whether 
			vacuum energy conversion can be developed to the point that it 
			constitutes a significant energy resource. Given global energy 
			concerns, however, disregard of any possible energy solution is a 
			luxury that we can ill afford. Therefore, robust pursuit of the 
			vacuum energy option is essential.  
			 
			That such a concept has attracted interest in the broader 
			engineering community is reflected by an Air Force request for 
			proposals for the Fiscal Year 1986 Defense SBIR (Small Business 
			Innovative Research) Program.  
			
			  
			
			Under entry *AF86-77, Air Force Rocket 
			Propulsion Laboratory (AFRPL), Topic: Non-Conventional Propulsion 
			Concepts* we find the statement:  
			
				
				"Bold, new non-conventional 
			propulsion concepts are solicited.... The specific areas in which AFRPL is interested include.... (6) Esoteric energy sources for 
			propulsion including the zero point quantum dynamic energy of vacuum 
			space."  
			 
			
			
			 
			Gravity and Inertia - Last Steps to the Frontier of Space  
			 
			 
			The launch of a mighty rocket is truly an awe-inspiring sight. As it 
			strains against the twin forces of gravity and inertia, we can only 
			marvel at the progress we have made in our attempt to throw off the 
			shackles that bind mankind to earth.  
			 
			But what of the fundamental forces of gravity and inertia? We have 
			phenomenological theories that describe their effects (Newton’s Laws 
			and their relativistic generalizations), but what of their origins? 
			 
			
			  
			
			
			The suggestion that these phenomena might themselves be traceable to 
			roots in the underlying fluctuations of the vacuum was first put 
			forward in a short paper published by the well-known Russian 
			physicist Andrei Sakharov (known also for his human rights 
			activism).  
			
			  
			
			Searching to derive Einstein’s equations for general 
			relativity from a more fundamental set of assumptions, Sakharov came 
			to the conclusion that general relativistic phenomena could be 
			understood as induced effects brought about by changes in the 
			quantum fluctuation energy of the vacuum due to the presence of 
			matter (Sakharov 1968). Although still in its exploratory stage, 
			this hypothesis has led to a rich and ongoing literature on 
			quantum-fluctuation-induced gravity, a literature that continues to 
			yield insight into the role played by vacuum fluctuations (Puthoff, 
			1989, 1993, and references therein).  
			
			  
			
			Thus, once again, the 
			underlying quantum fluctuation reference frame is called into play, 
			in this case to be restructured in its role as the very fabric of spacetime itself.  
			 
			Given an apparent deep connection between gravity and the quantum 
			fluctuations of the vacuum, a similar connection must exist between 
			these self-same vacuum fluctuations and inertia. Why? It is an 
			empirical fact that the gravitational and inertial masses have the 
			same value, even though the underlying phenomena are quite distinct. 
			Why, for example, should a measure of the resistance of a body to 
			being accelerated, even if far from any gravitational field, have 
			the same value that is associated with the gravitational attraction 
			between bodies? Indeed, if one is determined by vacuum fluctuations, 
			so must the other.  
			 
			We have all experienced inertia. A train lurches with a sudden jolt, 
			and one is thrown to the floor. What is this force that knocks one 
			down, seemingly coming out of nowhere?  
			
			  
			
			This phenomenon is an inbuilt 
			feature of the universe that has perplexed generations of physicists 
			from Newton to Einstein. Since in this example the sudden 
			disquieting imbalance results from acceleration "relative to the 
			fixed stars," one could provocatively say that it was the "stars" 
			that delivered the punch. This key feature, emphasized by the 
			Austrian philosopher of science Ernst Mach, has become known as 
			Mach’s Principle. Nonetheless, the mechanism by which the stars 
			might do this deed has eluded convincing explication.  
			 
			This issue was recently addressed in a paper entitled "Inertia as a 
			zero-point field Lorentz force," in which it was argued that the 
			resolution of the question of inertia and its connection to Mach’s 
			Principle, as with gravity, could be traced to the vacuum 
			fluctuations (Haisch, Rueda and Puthoff 1994). In a sentence, 
			although a uniformly moving body does not experience a drag force 
			from the vacuum fluctuations, an accelerated body meets a resistance 
			proportional to the acceleration.  
			
			  
			
			By accelerated we mean, of course, 
			accelerated relative to the fixed stars. Since the argument can be 
			made (Puthoff, 1989) that the local vacuum-fluctuation frame of 
			reference is due to the quantum fluctuations of distant matter -the 
			fixed stars -in the train example one can say that the punch was 
			delivered by the vacuum fluctuations acting as proxy for the fixed 
			stars through which one attempted to accelerate.  
			 
			If further research continues to support the vacuum-fluctuation 
			genesis of gravity and inertia -and it appears that this is likely 
			to be the case (Haisch, Rueda and Puthoff, 1997, 1998) -then we are 
			led to a remarkable implication: Given experimental evidence that 
			vacuum fluctuations can be altered by technological means (for 
			example, by the techniques of cavity quantum electrodynamics cited 
			earlier), then, in principle, gravitational and inertial masses can 
			also be altered.  
			 
			Does anyone take such a concept seriously, that it might be possible 
			to alter mass? In fact just this possibility was the basis of an 
			investigation by the Advanced Concepts Office of the Propulsion 
			Directorate of the Phillips Laboratory at Edwards Air Force Base in 
			California. This office is charged with initiating research relevant 
			to the development of 21st century space propulsion, and it is well 
			understood that a fundamental understanding of gravity and inertia 
			could well contribute new concepts in this area.  
			 
			With a view to easing the energy burden of future spaceships, Robert 
			Forward, a respected authority in the area of gravitation theory and 
			measurement, accepted a Phillips Laboratory assignment to review the 
			mass-alteration concept. After a one-year study investigating the 
			present status of vacuum fluctuation research, Forward (1996) 
			submitted his report to the Air Force, who published it under the 
			title Mass Modification Experiment Definition Study.  
			 
			The Abstract reads in part:  
			
				
				".... Many researchers see the vacuum as a central ingredient of 
			21st-Century physics. Some even believe the vacuum may be harnessed 
			to provide a limitless supply of energy. This report summarizes an 
			attempt to find an experiment that would test the Haisch, Rueda and 
			Puthoff (HRP) conjecture that the mass and inertia of a body are 
			induced effects brought about by changes in the quantum-fluctuation 
			energy of the vacuum.... It was possible to find an experiment that 
			might be able to prove or disprove that the inertial mass of a body 
			can be altered by making changes in the vacuum surrounding the 
			body."  
			 
			
			With regard to action items, the Forward Report in fact recommended 
			a ranked list of not one but four experiments to be carried out to 
			investigate the vacuum-fluctuation inertia concept and its broad 
			implications. These implications are being pursued in laboratories 
			around the globe.  
			 
			As we peer with longing into the heavens from the depth of our 
			gravity well, hoping for some "magic" solution that will launch our 
			spacefarers first to the planets and then to the stars, we are 
			reminded of Arthur  
			 
			C. Clarke’s phrase that highly advanced technology is essentially 
			indistinguishable from magic. One of the more magical possibilities 
			that looms on the scientific horizon is the portent of metric 
			engineering, restructuring the vacuum to order -a designer vacuum, 
			as it were. With gravity and inertia traceable to the underlying 
			vacuum fluctuation fields, and with the field of cavity quantum 
			electrodynamics giving us demonstration that such fields can be 
			structured by technological means, the possibility of engineering 
			the metric for space travel has moved from the pages of science 
			fiction to peer-reviewed physics journals.  
			
			  
			
			With titles like 
			*Wormholes in spacetime and their use for interstellar travel*, and 
			*The warp drive: Hyper-fast travel within general relativity*, the 
			potential with regard to exotic approaches can be said to have moved 
			a little closer, in theory if not yet in practice.  
			
			  
			
			But who is to say 
			what the 21st-century will bring?  
			 
			To elaborate the metric engineering perspective, we begin with the 
			oft-quoted velocity-of-light limitation. This restriction has its 
			origin in the special theory of relativity, wherein equations show 
			(and experiments confirm) that the mass of a body increases 
			catastrophically as its speed approaches the velocity of light, with 
			the corollary that it would take an infinite amount of energy to 
			accelerate it to this speed. In the general theory of relativity, 
			however, the possibility of tricks and shortcuts comes to the 
			rescue, one trick being to increase the local velocity of light by 
			manipulating the parameters of the vacuum.  
			 
			With regard to the "trick" of manipulating the parameters of the 
			vacuum to alter the velocity of light to advantage with regard to 
			space travel, it is useful to begin with an analogy. It can easily 
			be demonstrated that the velocity of sound in various substances, 
			such as water or steel, differs from that in air. This is because 
			the velocity of wave propagation in a substance depends upon the 
			characteristics or parameters of that substance.  
			 
			Similarly, the velocity of light in a material depends on the 
			parameters of the medium through which it propagates. The velocity 
			of light in glass, for example, is only about two-thirds that in 
			air. Specifically, in engineering terms the velocity of light in a 
			medium is given by an expression c = 1/(me)1/2, where me are 
			parameters called, respectively, the magnetic permeability and 
			dielectric permittivity of the medium. These are simply parameters 
			that indicate how polarizable (responsive) the medium is to magnetic 
			and electric fields, how much magnetic or electric flux will result.
			 
			 
			Polarizability of the vacuum is similar to the polarizability of 
			more familiar substances such as solids, liquids or gases. Thus, the 
			vacuum itself has properties characteristic of physical media. 
			Indeed, a lecture, given by Nobel Laureate T. D. Lee (1994) in honor 
			of the 150th birthday of one of physics’ patriarchs Ludwig Boltzmann, 
			was entitled Vacuum as a Physical Medium.  
			 
			What might be surprising to the nonspecialist, within the context of 
			general relativity and vacuum-energy physics the velocity of light 
			in a vacuum is not as fixed as widely believed, but is 
			context-dependent (Wesson 1992). For the case of light propagation 
			near a massive body like the sun, for example, a distant observer 
			would note that the velocity of light is reduced from its usual 
			value by an amount proportional to the gravitational potential, a 
			result first predicted by Einstein (1911).  
			
			  
			
			For the case of light 
			propagation between closely-spaced Casimir plates, the velocity of 
			light is increased due to the reduction of vacuum fluctuation energy 
			between the plates (Scharnhorst, 1990).  
			 
			Such effects can be conveniently modeled in terms of a variable 
			vacuum polarizability. In this approach the conventional 
			curved-space formalism of general relativity finds expression in 
			terms of easily-understood, engineering-like concepts. The slowing 
			and bending of a light ray near a massive body, for example, can be 
			seen as deriving from spatial variation of the polarizability (or 
			refractive index) of the vacuum, not unlike that of a light ray 
			passing through a lens. This approach, often used in comparative 
			studies of gravitational theories, has been formalized in the 
			scientific literature (Lightman and Lee, 1973) and is especially 
			useful with regard to a metric engineering perspective (Puthoff, 
			1996, and references therein).  
			 
			Now if the vacuum polarizability were to be subject to manipulation 
			by technological means such that within a localized region the value 
			c could be made to assume a new value, say c’ = 10c, then, without 
			violating a local velocity-of-light constraint, travel at speeds 
			greater than the conventional velocity of light within that region 
			would be possible; it’s only that a new constraint would apply 
			within the localized region based on the local elevated velocity of 
			light.  
			 
			A recent speculative, but nonetheless scientifically-grounded, 
			proposal to take advantage of just this possibility is the so-called 
			"Alcubierre Warp Drive" (Alcubierre, 1994). Taking on the challenge 
			of determining whether Warp Drive a là Star Trek was a scientific 
			possibility, general relativity theorist Miguel Alcubierre set 
			himself the task of determining whether faster-than-light travel was 
			possible within the constraints of standard theory.  
			
			  
			
			Although this 
			clearly could not be the case in the "flat space" of special 
			relativity, general relativity permits consideration of altered spacetime metrics (vacuum characteristics) as presented here where 
			such a possibility is not a priori ruled out. Alcubierre’s further 
			self-imposed constraints on an acceptable solution included the 
			requirements that no net time distortion should occur (breakfast on 
			earth, lunch on Tau Ceti, and home for dinner with the wife and 
			children, not the great-great-great grandchildren), and that the 
			occupants of the spaceship were not to be flattened against the 
			bulkhead by unconscionable accelerations.  
			 
			A solution meeting all of the above criteria was found and published 
			in a peer-reviewed journal, referenced above. The solution involved 
			the creation of a local distortion of spacetime such that spacetime 
			itself is expanded behind the spaceship, contracted ahead of it, and 
			yields a hypersurfer-like motion faster than the speed of light as 
			seen by observers outside the perturbed region (though without 
			violating an elevated local velocity-of-light constraint within the 
			region). In essence, on the outgoing leg of the journey the 
			spaceship is pushed away from the earth and pulled toward its 
			distant destination by the engineered local expansion of spacetime 
			itself.  
			 
			The Alcubierre Warp Drive and other marvels that can be envisioned 
			as products of metric engineering have yet to leave our drawing 
			boards, unfortunately, for both theoretical and practical reasons. 
			With only a decade or so of focused development, many theoretical 
			questions remain unanswered. Those that have been tentatively 
			answered would appear to require technological solutions beyond 
			reach without unforeseen breakthroughs. Therefore we must question 
			anew whether the vacuum can be engineered for spaceflight 
			applications in the foreseeable future.  
			 
			The answer to the above question is:  
			
				
				"In principle, yes"  
				
				(Puthoff, 
			1998).  
			 
			
			However, it is clear that there is a long way to go. 
			Nonetheless, in keeping with the cliché "a journey of 1000 miles 
			begins with the first steps," those first steps are now being taken 
			in the universities, laboratories, and research institutes around 
			the globe.  
			
			  
			
			Given that Casimir and related effects indicate the 
			possibility of tapping the enormous residual energy in the vacuum 
			fluctuations, and the demonstration in cavity quantum 
			electrodynamics that the vacuum fluctuations can be manipulated to 
			produce technological effects such as the inhibition or enhancement 
			of spontaneous emission of excited states in quantum systems, the 
			first steps along this path have already produced visible results. 
			Combining this observation with the newly-emerging concepts of the 
			relationship of gravity, inertia and warp drive as properties of a 
			manipulable vacuum, our reach for those unforeseen breakthroughs is 
			imperative.  
			 
			And we must also ask whether in a universe of such magnificent 
			proportions might not other species have asked the same questions, 
			trod the same path? And perhaps found solutions?  
			
			  
			
			Humility would 
			dictate that such may well be the case.  
			 
			As cosmologies have developed and matured, only to be replaced by 
			yet others, one common theme emerged again and again -the 
			recognition that all things, living and nonliving, constituted an 
			interactive and interdependent tapestry of existence in which each 
			thread was but part of a greater whole. Out of this recognition one 
			can discern a metaphysics in which man and Cosmos are seen as 
			inextricably intertwined, interconnected by a ubiquitous, 
			all-pervasive cosmic flow of energy that undergirds, and is manifest 
			in, all phenomena.  
			
			  
			
			Called by many names in many traditions -soul, 
			chi, élan vital -this pre-scientific cultural concept of an 
			underlying energy flow made manifest expresses recognition of unity 
			in diversity, a oneness that stands behind all things.  
			 
			Our future is the Cosmos of worlds uncounted. Our survival as a 
			species requires that we dare not shrink from this destiny. And the 
			one companion from which we will never be separated on our long 
			journey is the underlying ocean of energy on which we travel and 
			from which springs all manifestation. What is certain to emerge as 
			the Cosmos becomes part of our heritage is an ever-increasing 
			recognition that we are, each and every one, in ecological balance 
			with the Cosmos as a whole, immersed in an overall interpenetrating 
			ground of being.  
			
			  
			
			Indeed, such an interpenetrating field of energy 
			may be the true medium of life and consciousness itself.  
			
			 
			 
			Lessons For the Future 
			 
			What can we learn from the first part of this book? What can we 
			learn from these studies of the Cosmos, life, humanity, history, 
			civilization and science?  
			 
			First, we can learn to be both soberly concerned and thrilled beyond 
			imagination about our future. The new technologies science is 
			approaching will have a stunningly large impact on civilization. 
			Indeed, they will record the greatest single exclamation mark of an 
			inflection point in the lifespan of homo sapiens to date.  
			
			  
			
			Why? Two 
			reasons.  
			 
			The money sitting in your bank account right now is in reality a 
			metric system for the one thing of value it represents: energy. The 
			more money you have, the more energy you can buy from others, in the 
			form of resources, labor, services, and their resulting products. 
			The less money you have, the more you are forced to give your 
			resources to others. What happens if energy becomes "free"? The 
			economy will be restructured such that any process requiring energy 
			alone will be reduced in value nearly to zero, and thus available to 
			nearly everyone.  
			
			  
			
			That's a complicated and destabilizing 
			transformation. We're seeing this effect in a smaller way with the 
			rise of the Internet, as it reduces the cost of rich communications 
			nearly to zero. The upside of overunity energy is that vast numbers 
			of wondrous advances can be made, more useful to all people of the 
			world than just the super-rich. Sea water can be converted to 
			irrigation and drinking water, for free. Electricity and heat can be 
			supplied within homes themselves, for free. Purely automated 
			electronic services can be offered almost for free, and the cost of 
			innumerable manufactured products will drastically drop.  
			 
			A related technology will enable gravitational propulsion. With this 
			new kind "propellantless" propulsion, we will be able to skip from 
			place to place on Earth with the precision of a helicopter, the size 
			of a one-man plane, the sound level of an automobile, at any speed 
			we desire, with essentially no fuel bill. We will ultimately be able 
			to dispense with the freeway system. And we will ask ourselves the 
			meaning of a national border when individual space-time 
			transportation devices emerge.  
			 
			These are massive changes, and they must be approached with great 
			care. The rapid progression of scientific advancement is today 
			dangerous if not preceded by ethical belief systems with the power 
			of religious morals.  
			
			  
			
			Since its origin in a divorce from religion, 
			modern science has deeply lacked a foundation in experience. Today 
			it lacks an ethical fabric of its own to bound, pace, and frame the 
			consequences of its processes. Science is deeply amoral. Not 
			immoral, amoral. In a sense this is an obvious product of its 
			necessary opposition to an arthritic and over-interpreted orthodox 
			religious moral paradigm. Through its neutrality, science has opened 
			our eyes to our nature.  
			 
			Science has taught us how to distinguish between lie and truth, and 
			build order upon the latter. This knowledge has given us tremendous 
			powers to control our lives, and to others to control our lives for 
			us. We have imagined, communicated, and engineered our way towards 
			wondrous revolutions in technology not even thinkable by homo 
			sapiens 100 years ago. The idea that such revolutions are largely 
			behind us is laughable. Yet science today laughs at the evidence 
			that will come to represent its next renaissance. Indeed, the 
			evidence for the greatest scientific revolutions of them all to date 
			may be before our very eyes.  
			 
			When science does wake itself from its present slumber on these 
			issues, it must face first a critical fact: the failure of science 
			through the centuries to control the use of its own discoveries and 
			inventions is a sign of the depth of its fundamental disconnection 
			between emotion and fact, between meaning and truth. This 
			disconnection is perhaps now its greatest liability. It might not be 
			such a complex problem if it weren't for the fact that science now 
			undergirds Western society as much as religion, and science cannot 
			match faith in terms of an expressed paradigm of ethics to guide 
			behavior and to give meaning to experience.  
			 
			Where can we find middle ground here? Is there a new intellectual 
			place for both science and faith to cohabit?  
			
			  
			
			We now know for certain 
			that natural evolution is a force of life more powerful than all 
			forms of civilization, science, and technology combined. We are thus 
			advised to look to principles of evolution evident in history for 
			the guideposts to our distant future. What core principles can we 
			learn from evolution? I believe we can learn several lessons, and 
			they’re not ones that are often taught.  
			 
			The first lesson regards the core principle of evolution most people 
			know as "survival of the fittest", as mentioned above. The argument 
			goes that only the strongest, richest, most aggressive, with the 
			most might and right will survive. Many biologists have termed this 
			literally a "war of survival". If evolution is indeed a war, then 
			survival of the fittest can only be a tactic used to win a battle, 
			for it is the one certain recipe for the ultimate loss of the war.
			 
			 
			The key to correct this grievous mistake is to understand that if 
			there is war, we will lose. We will only survive in peace. 
			Throughout history, we have learned that every action has an equal 
			and opposite reaction. Whether it is an eye for eye, the Golden 
			Rule, the equation of Newtonian motion, or a decision and its 
			consequence. Any force we send out, we will receive back. If we 
			indiscriminately destroy natural microbes, they will so destroy us. 
			If we lie to nature, nature will lie to us. If we murder nature, 
			nature will murder us. If we murder the future, the future will 
			murder us.  
			
			  
			
			The Cosmos behaves like a mirror to our minds.  
			 
			It is thus not the survival of the fittest that we should worship, 
			it is balance and equilibrium we should worship and remember – the 
			survival of diversity, or the survival of all. It is the concept of 
			being in peace with all kinds of truths, experiences, institutions, 
			civilizations, people, animals, plants, and microbes. These are the 
			tools with which to survive, evolve, and thrive across eternity, and 
			peaceful life will create uncounted new tools, whereas devastation 
			driven by instability will not.  
			 
			Without enough peaceful diversity to add fiber, the fractured branch 
			of evolution upon which we stand will be pruned from the tree of 
			life. Whatever battles we choose to wage in our "war" of evolution, 
			we must remember that ultimately the diversity of life will win, it 
			is only a question of the scale of time within our microscope, 
			telescope, or history book.  
			 
			An intelligent person at the end of this century simply cannot and 
			must not deny the truth of this. And we must act on this truth.  
			 
			We cannot live by the power of lies or fear or mindless destruction. 
			This is a scientific fact. The direct implication is that the 
			mystical concepts of truth and love simply must be actual and real 
			fundamental principles of the Cosmos that will ultimately be 
			understood in terms of an expanded concept of physics. I believe you 
			will one day see something akin to equations of emotion and thought, 
			and understand how they manipulate the medium of the Cosmos. 
			 
			
			  
			
			Remember the quotes from Einstein and Sagan at the beginning of this 
			chapter. They drip with emotion, and only in so doing carry their 
			power. Is that power not real? Emotion is real, for it conveys 
			meaning in experience. Emotion conveys the temporal significance of 
			a truth.  
			 
			Such an important lesson as this must be taught to our children from 
			the first instant. For all the generations preceding the most recent 
			one, we have employed devices to perpetuate the emotions surrounding 
			our most important truths. We call these devices rituals, and life 
			throughout evolution is replete with examples.  
			 
			Life has always used rituals. Rituals are used throughout the 
			activities of eating, sleeping, playing, and mating. Humans have 
			used rituals since our time began, from the simplest body painting 
			to the most sacred rites of passage. We gather when a child is born. 
			We all name the child. Some of us are circumcised. Some of us are 
			baptized. Some of us are blessed. Some of us are swaddled. As we 
			grow into youth, all of us are schooled. We learn to speak. Some of 
			us are sung to. Some of us learn to sing. Some of us learn to read. 
			Some of us learn to write. Some of us even learn to calculate. We 
			learn the difference between truth and lie.  
			 
			When we reach adolescence, all of us search for both collective and 
			individual meaning. Some of us learn to hunt, some of us learn to 
			fight, some of us learn to smoke, some of us learn to sport, some of 
			us learn to learn. Some of us are given priesthood, most of us are 
			loved, and most of us learn to love. Most learn to hate, too.  
			 
			As we enter adulthood, we are confronted with responsibility, and 
			the responsibility of choice is felt with the greatest power ever. 
			Most of us choose most of our path through whatever future our 
			culture allows, and celebrate the major milestones along the way. We 
			ritualize graduation. We ritualize marriage. We ritualize 
			reproduction. We ritualize entertainment. We ritualize "success" and 
			"failure" by the ultimate macro construction of ritual, our culture. 
			We ritualize age through the birthday. And we ritualize death 
			through mourning.  
			 
			And our society ritualizes events from its history, in the form of 
			holidays. We celebrate the founding of our ideologies of all forms 
			and kinds.  
			 
			We celebrate the important things in life. Indeed, rituals are the 
			poetry of life.  
			 
			What rituals must we create to perpetuate the love for the things we 
			want to become in a million years? What systems of mental and 
			physical practice must we put in place, in order to convey to our 
			children’s children the vision we have for them? We must not ignore 
			billions of years of evolution, which have taught us that repetition 
			is a key to reproduction, and the repetition of a system of beliefs 
			is fulfilled by the ritual.  
			 
			As David Van Biema said, writing for the cover of Life in October 
			1991,  
			
				
				"Protect the spiritual ozone layer. Consider ritual."
				 
			 
			
			Without 
			ritual conveying the emotions of our beliefs, what are we?  
			
				
				"Just 
			interchangeable Nielson statistics? Are we plugged into 
			everything... or, in reality, connected to nothing? Should we 
			attempt to explain to our children how it all fits together, or 
			assure them that it just floats weightlessly, like unsecured objects 
			in a space capsule?"  
			 
			
			Actually, I believe that we are both entirely interconnected and 
			utterly unsecured, and these two states are two sides of one state 
			called being. The one being is the student and the teacher, separate 
			and together at once.  
			 
			The lesson to be learned from the first part of this book is that 
			the kind of faith in truth and love promulgated by the rituals of 
			religion, appropriately shorn of their dogmatism, may be the perfect 
			remembrance structure for humanity to use as a foundation upon which 
			to evolve for millennia to come, as a new foundation for science. 
			For in the history of the world, few rituals have done as good a job 
			as those of religion, despite its profound flaws, in perpetuating 
			the passing of sacred truth from generation to generation and from 
			people to people.  
			 
			Do I propose a return to orthodox concepts of religion?  
			
			  
			
			No, but I do 
			propose that science reunite with spirituality. I believe there are 
			greater reasons than just good sense to do this. I believe that this 
			is not the first time beings have asked and answered this question 
			in this way.  
			 
			As both a student and a teacher of sorts through this book, I ask a 
			question to scientists: would you reevaluate your posture against 
			the historicity of the greatest ritual traditions of our heritage – 
			religion – if I showed you how to use vacuum energy to warp gravity 
			upon convenience, enabling travel at effective speeds far greater 
			than the speed of light?  
			 
			If I showed you the way an "angel" could come down from the 
			"heavens" and teach, would you listen to my hypothesis?  
			
			  
			
			Would you 
			reconsider whether systems of belief in love and truth, ground in 
			faith to the ultimate power of a higher order to which we aspire, 
			are important to our future?  
  
			
			
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