Patterns in the Void

Why nothing is important.

Westview Press, June 2002
Amazon.com!

What is Space?

What is it really?

Look at the two images above for a few minutes and let your mind wander. What impressions do you get from the patterns of light and dark? If I were to tell you that the one on the left is a dark nebula in the constellation Orion, and the one on the right is a nebula in the Pleiades star cluster, would that completely define for you what your are experiencing...or is there something more going on?

Chances are that, in the image on the left, you are seeing what looks like the silhouette of the head and shoulders of some human-like figure being lit from behind by a light. You can't quite put your finger on it, but the image seems vaguely mysterious and perhaps even a bit frightening the more you stare at it.

The image on the left invokes something completely different. Perhaps you are connecting the translucence and delicacy with some image of a shroud or silken cloak floating in a breeze. The image seems almost ghost-like in some respects...spiritual

"But of course this is rather silly" you might say. "These are interstellar clouds, light-years across and all we are doing is letting our imaginations wander which is not a very scientific thing to do if you want to understand the universe." This rational response then tempts you to reach for your mouse and click to some other page on the web.

What has happened in that split second is that a battle has been fought between one part of your brain and another. The right side of your brain enjoys looking at things and musing over the patterns that it finds there. Alas, it cannot speak because the language centers of the brain live in the left cerebral hemisphere, and it is here that rules of logic and other 'scientific' reasoning tools exist. The left side of your brain is vocal, and talking to you right now. It gets rather upset when it is presented with vague patterns because it can't understand them and stamp them with a definite emotion the way the right hemisphere can. So it argues you into walking away from this challenge of understanding patterns.

If you can suspend this indignation for a moment or two, you will actually find yourself thinking about space in a way that more nearly resembles how a scientist does, though even some scientists don't spend much time thinking about space. This indifference has begun to change during the last 20 years, and we are now in the midst of a quiet revolution.

There are three child-like qualities that make for a successful scientist:

Curiosity. This is something that many people seem to outgrow as they get older, or if they maintain it as adults, it is not at the same undiluted strength that it was when they were a child.

Imagination. This is something that also wanes with age but becomes an asset to those that can hang on to even a small vestige of it. It is what 'Thinking out of the box' is all about.

Novelty. As a child, everything is new. As an adult we become hopelessly jaded about irrelevant experiences like yet another sunset, yet another meteor shower, yet another eclipse. In some ways we develop an aversion for new experiences preferring the familiarity what we have already experienced.

If you wish to understand what space is all about, and explore the patterns hidden in the darker regions of nature, you will have to re-acquaint yourself with that child within you. You will need to pull all the stops out and allow yourself to 'play' with nature and the many clues that scientists have uncovered about it.

My book 'Patterns in the Void' is a guidebook that will give you some of the mental tools you need to make sense of one of the greatest, and most subtle, discoveries in human history. To make reading this book more enjoyable, I have prepared the following pages with new material and quotes that I could not use in my original book. Thanks to the web, this topic now becomes a living document which I hope to enlarge as time goes on.

 

Enjoy!

A Visual Guide to Thinking about Space: Space Analogs

A Text-based guide to Space: "Just the Facts, Ma'm"

Synthesizing a New Internal Picture: Mind Games

A Handy Primer about Space and Fields A Field Guide