( .. "the Earth is flat and that's that" .. )
(From the archives)
A seat in the front row - and a contemplative mo.
Sunset. There's just something about it, isn't there? Especially when we see it from some westwards vantage overlooking the sea, and pause to consider that yet another day of our allotted three-score-and-ten has, with the setting of the sun, sunk beneath the waves.
Breathtaking in its beauty, magisterial in its command over all earthly things, the sun descends to our line of sight and reminds us once more of our impermanence and the cold night that follows its beneficence as the giver of life, and we are further minded to dwell on the unknowable that is at once magical, mysterious and portentous. But night is encroaching and there's a bus to catch, we have to go home, and do (whatever) all over again the next day.
And so these ephemera of the mind, sisters two - inscrutable mystery (with her hair up) and existential mundanity (with her hair down) - set with the sun.
But up-and-down, in-and-out, back-and-forth, over time we're getting there, .. working it out, often by reinventing the wheel as we back-track to undo the errors that were first thought to be 'progress'. The world turns and the sun sets, and the cold, cold nights of encroaching destiny are shoving plates of crust down the gurgler, causing (as S.W. Carey once said), the Pacific to disappear up (/down) it's own "Rim of Fire".
"But the notion of a spreading ridge crabbing obliquely down its own subduction sink under California, while continuing to excrete towards the Pacific but swallow from the Atlantic; is as hallucinatory as a maw vanishing into its own anus, or really the reverse, if that is any easier to conceive." (1976, Expanding Earth, p.57)
So the world turns and the sun sets. There is even a rate of exchange for gurgling as night falls and the Earth gets cold.
However 'modern' we might consider ourselves to be we should not assume that we are any more mindful than those who have gone before. Indeed it is by their collective efforts that we are where we are today, but denied a window to the future we cannot see where the endeavours of past and present will lead. And certainly we should not assume that any 'advance' is necessarily towards veracity or benefit. Though it might seem so at the time, history tells us that otherwise is often the case.
And in a very considerable way this is where understanding of our world begins, with interrogating those terrestrial elements in the picture - Earth, sun, sea and sky of which we ourselves are made - Earth, both above and below the sea, with its hills and mountains, plains and strands and all growing /living things that either eat or are eaten, .. the sea itself (water, the giver of life), and the air we breath - the three foundations to our understanding of our immediate environment), which, tellingly, we now call 'spheres' when obviously the Earth is flat (well it is, .. isn't it?). (twitink to round earth).
'Tellingly', ..because it is in the transition of our perceptions of scale, of flatness to curvedness, wherein lies the key to understanding the geological history of the Earth.
More than two thousand years ago the Greeks discerned the spherical shape of the Earth and that the flatness apparent in the picture above was an illusion of scale, but more than two thousand years later there are still people who (it is said) are impervious to logic, and believe the Earth to be as flat as they see it. And they do make a good point - which is that skepticism is, or should be (regretfully it seems no longer to be so) the essence of science, raising the question where, exactly, do we draw the line between believing what others in supposed intellectual authority tell us, and what our own common sense tells us? Surely scepticism can be taken to extremes. But it is the extreme that makes the point :-
" In an age where astronauts send photographs of a spherical planet from an orbiting space station, how can the concept of a flat Earth persist? Shenton says, "Look at what special effects are capable of: you can produce any photograph, any video. I don't think there is solid proof. I'm not intentionally being stubborn about it, but I feel our senses tell us these things, and it would take an extraordinarily level of evidence to counteract those. How many people have actually investigated it? Have you?" [Good question? How much do we unquestioningly take on authority? d.f.] Zeteticism, Shenton says, emphasises experience and reason over the "trusting acceptance of dogma" – or, it seems, overwhelming evidence. Only a personal trip into space to see the world as it is for himself would persuade him. "But even then, in seeing it, I would have to be convinced there weren't any tricks involved." [ David Adam, The Guardian, Wednesday 24 February 2010 09.39 AEST]
Flat-Earthers are usually the butt of ridicule (Link), but intentionally or not Shenton is actually drawing attention to a malaise that is more pervasive in society than is healthy. For if we cannot trust the leaders of our various institutions to tell it like it is, then we're on our way to hell in a handbasket. And confidence in our institutional leaders is not high for the simple reason that 'telling it like it is', is regarded as a hindrance, certainly not a priority. Too often, unfortunately, the priority is the power that high office offers to those who seek it. We can easily judge their caliber by their propensity for spin, slogans and management-speak, and we would hope that this might be an obvious disqualification, but almost universally it seems that those who excel in this come to be preferred candidates, aided by others who would exploit the darker side of social cohesion [group-think and mob-mentality]. Thus there is a broader indictment that reflects on those who would elect them. Shenton is simply illustrating what happens when we get a clue that our trust is being abused and scepticism overwhelms logic and reason, and there is a serious disconnect. If this happens in a community then it becomes pervaded by the inverse of those values that should hold it together. No need to spell them out.
Fossils origins. If two thousand years ago the Greeks could deduce a round Earth, and who else before them may also have (but for one reason or another were not able to enclose their findings in the pages of history) it seems hardly likely they would be stumped by the ordinary commonsense reasoning anyone could exercise to explain fossils simply by walking along a beach and witnessing the carnage of carcasses and skeletons of sea animals in the sand, and the clear correspondence with fossils in the sandstone cliffs behind, or further inland.
And of course the ancient Greeks were not stumped. W.N. Edwards writes, ..
" Among the Greeks at about the same time there were at any rate some who have grasped the true nature of fossils. Thus in the sixth century BC Xenophanes is said to have observed impressions of small fishes in the rocks of Paros, and marine shells on inland mountains. Pythagoras (according to Ovid) and Xanthus of Sardis are also reported to have accepted the occurrence of these shells as an indication that the mountains were at one time under the sea. There is a well-known passage on the same subject in Herodotus, who observed marine shells in Egypt and concluded that they had been left there by the sea. "Yet for the following centuries :-
".. The common-sense views of Herodotus and others were replaced by fantastic and mystical explanations of all sorts. For some ten centuries there is indeed little to record concerning fossils. The barren disputes of the Schoolmen, and the strange hypotheses founded on current dogmatic theology, then occupied the field for several hundred years, and not until the end of the seventeenth century was the battle over the origin of fossils really won. "Instead of solid and experimental philosophy," wrote Henry Power in 1663, "it has been held accomplishment enough to graduate a student if he could but stiffly wrangle out a vexatious dispute of some old peripatetic qualities, or the like, which (if translated into English) signified no more than a heat 'twixt two oyster wives in Billingsgate." [W.N. Edwards, The early history of palaeontology.p.1, British Museum of Natural History, London 1967; 2nd edition (1976) - originated as a guide to a temporary exhibit in 1931.]And from China in the year ~ ` 527A.D. :-
"At Stone-Fish Mountain in Hsiang-Hsiang Hsien there is a lot of non-magnetic iron ore (hsian shih). It is dark in colour and veined like mica. If you split open the outer layer there are always shapes of fishes inside, with scales and fins, heads and tails, just as if they were carved or painted. They are several inches long, and their details are perfect. If burnt they will even give off a fishy smell." .. [Li Tao-Yuan (?-527), Shui Ching Chu, Chapter 38, p.3a)For an example of this dichotomy of the mind, the medieval notions of fossils are particularly instructive because they illustrate, first sight at least, how skewed simple and ordinary logic can become. However it seems (to me at least) hardly likely that the purveyors of such fantastical 'views' as those described later during the Middle Ages [e.g., Edwards reference above] were serious, but if they were, then possibly those views may be read as much as anything as attempts to remain within the religio-political mores of the time.
Reading such accounts for a second time - of "sports of nature" caused by "plastic forces and formative virtues" and "seminal auras' within the Earth - leads one to consider if a code of sorts was being employed to subvert the inquisitorial intentions of the Catholic Church. Given the creepy treatment that Galileo endured at the hands of the Church it is highly possible that science, being forced underground, might have been resorting to tactics similar to those used in more recent times by the Arts in the former Soviet Union where doublespeak was employed to communicate views that clearly contravened the Church's (Religionism or Communism) views and could earn the death penalty. Either that or they were perhaps the views of 'willing idiots', being voiced to gain favour with more powerful interests. Even such as getting a job in a school? Maybe.
It hardly seems likely that people with an ounce of common sense could ignore the obvious when a simple walk along a beach would tell all that was necessary of fossil origins, and had been spelt out centuries before by the Greeks. How hard was it then to make the connection between sands of the beach and the shells buried them, and the stony shells that were buried in the sandstone beds that formed the adjacent shore? Lithifaction, whatever words are used to describe it ('fluxing salts', 'plastic virtues', 'seminal auras'), is still lithifaction. But in the face of possible denouncement by friends and neighbours it may be no wonder that a person might feign fantastic views if he thought they gained favour with standard religious ones. The Church (both scientific and religious) has a lot to answer for when it comes to holding up progress in science, particularly for its influence on the malleable mind of youth and its consequently neutered adult one.
The social media hype of today evidences a powerful need to belong, and with that comes, for some, a license to want to be seen to belong more than others. Can we wonder, then, at the inventiveness of some explanations for something that seems virtually self-evident? Though with "failed seeds of life", and reasoning such as (quote from Edwards cited above) :-
" Eduard Lhuyd (1660-1709) maintained .. "that fossils developed from "moist seed-bearing vapours" which rose from the sea and penetrated the earth, perhaps carried down by rain."... we do have to wonder at the relative importance of artificial device over genuine dopeyness - or the role played by bandwagoners hoping for limelight. However we must remember too that times change and that a written opinion then may have meant something quite different from one of today. Were Moses alive today, would his commandments carry the same weight if disseminated by email? Or what if he put an entry in the personal column of the evening newspaper? I think not. There has been an irreversible shift in communication by the media available to us - "the medium is the message" and all that - and we are not entitled to make judgements on any 'outlandish media-evil views' when we fail to account for context and intent coloured by social mores of the time.
I guess we'll never know exactly how to read those views. But one thing is certain - the minds that invented them - if they got to writing them down the way they did - were no different in their intellectual capacity from those that write today. In fact given the hurdle of challenges to actually do that - commit word to paper in the cold and darkness of winter - they were probably substantially superior, or at least more driven.
Mountains. In conclusion and to further illustrate the point (of the 'then-and-now' similarites and the things that get in the way) this quotation, also from Edwards, seems particularly apposite. : -
"Concerning mountains and the fossils found in them, Avicenna [980-1037A.D.] writes :- Mountains may be due to two different causes. Either they are effects of upheavals of the crust of the earth, such as might occur during a violent earthquake, or they are the effect of water, which, cutting for itself a new route, has denuded the valleys, the strata being of different kinds, some soft, soft hard. The winds and waters disintegrate the one, but leave the other intact. Most of the eminences of the earth have had this latter origin. It would require a long period of time for all such changes to be accomplished, during which the mountains themselves might be somewhat diminished in size. But that water has been the main cause of these effects is proved by the existence of fossil remains of aquatic and other animals on many mountains." (From A History of the Intellectual Development of Europe, by J.W. Draper, who does not state the exact source of the quotation.) "A thousand years ago? I don't think it is said any better today. The Church of course appropriated fossils as evidence for The Flood, thereby imbuing common sense with a superfluous religiosity (and Plate Tectonics speaks in tongues of "colliding plates") but I guess we could say that water such as constitutes the oceans of the Earth *is* very much a flood of sorts. It just didn't happen in Moses' time - whenever that was, given that the Moses Story was handed down by word of mouth until the old testament was committed to paper (/papyrus).
The Flood :- is not a theological issue - it is simply a question of dates. Walking the beach and doing the sunset thing goes back to antiquity. Writing it down in the fifth and sixth centuries BC utilised the then existing technology to create a record. An Old Testament some three hundred years later and a new post-Jesus Christ one speaks for itself as regards Johnnies-come-lately :-: fossils representing the remains of animal life preserved in cemented beach material by some sort of "plastic salty virtues" in rocks that all around the Mediterranean were flat-as-a-tack and hardly differentiated from the beach material itself, .. well, .. lithifaction would have been virtually tacit knowledge long before the writing down of any old testament that these were the remains of sea animals that once lived, and, in a curious way, give a clue to the essence of life. Religion has no copyright whatsoever on common sense, and we should beware of anyone who speaks in tongues to (dis-)colour reality (including government) (and much of Earth science too). .
Any religious canon talking about Earth Sea and Sky and the creation of All Living Things would naturally have incorporated such-like common-sense lore as best it could ..
"She sells sea-shells on the sea-shore .. " [.. even children .. .. .. ]
.. though giving emphasis of course to the theological, rather than geological, intent in the writing. In other words, the natural origin of fossils even then would have been tacit knowledge regardless of religious texts written afterwards attributing them to some heeby-jeeby jumbo-mumbo. Of course the land was flooded. Its littoral margins still are. It's not a theological issue, .. probably wasn't then either. It's just a beat up by the 'Shentons' who prefer to adhere to their own religious version of the world, rather than common sense.
.......................
Religion is comforting, where common sense can be greatly disturbing, particularly when it hits on a truth with implications for other truths in a domino-like chain reaction. Avoid both and be your own person. Make it up as you go and why not 'cos everybody else does - merchants of spin and management speakers - rolling it out and going forward, working towards something that you can bet your bottom dollar has nothing to do with you.
.......................
And so, by a series of retrospectives and fast-forwards we have travelled to the Greece of two-and-a-half thousand years ago and back again - twice, .. once to juxtapose the recorded origins of roundness of the Earth with today's flat-Earth believers (and thereby to highlight the importance of scepticism in science), .. then again to juxtapose the ancient but commonsensical and right view of the origin of fossils with the peculiar but much later views of the Middle Ages - probably skewed by an Inquisitorial Church. And finally ending with fossils again, getting a forty-days and forty-nights beat-up by The Biblical Flood. Along the way we have also noted the views of a thousand years ago on mountains being no different from those of today. [So much for two thousand years of progress in thinking - or observing.]
Thus we have highlighted :- That just as the Catholic Church sought to skew the common sense of the biological origins of fossils towards the great big jumbo-mumbo of "The Flood", geophysics has sought to skew geological reality by conflating earthquakes, the faults they represent and the destruction wreaked when they happen, with "slab strength" in order to introduce what has become the dogma of "The New Global Tectonics".
Where will it all end?
( Who knows. We haven't even started yet. )
--->
With Earth expansion, that's where, when the slabs of subduction zones are discarded and the Wadati-Benioff zone is reinstated as Benioff originally had it - as a great big MOAF - (Mother Of All Faults), .. the one dislocating the continental lithosphere from the asthenosphere - in a hugely extensional way.
[There are probably a few views here I might take issue with myself tomorrow, so don't hold me to them.]
".. The Earth is flat - and that's that. .."
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