For all who deeply feel the environmental crisis, this is the story we all need to understand as a grounding context for action to promote the transition to the Ecozoic era and to avoid the end of life guaranteed by the current Technozoic disaster. Powerful description of the current understanding of cosmology told as a compelling and understandable story. A must read. What you were not taught in school. The primordial coming forth of improbably life on a planet in a solar system which has always hung between disaster and brilliance. A way forward.
Everyone should read this more than once. It's a modern myth, deeply rooted in the latest science and cosmology, which discusses how our universe burst forth from a spacetime singularity, how it evolved, and what role humans play in the grand scheme of unfolding creation.
It's an inspirational blend of object and subject, secular and sacred, science and poetry. It celebrates the universe as an awesome, self-organizing, autopoetic process which undergoes distinct and irreversible phases of transformation.
It's also a call for humanity to come together, to recognize the unity of all things, and to celebrate the universe as a magnificent, cosmogenetic process, a work of art in which we act simultaneously as witness and participant.
I haven't read anything quite like The Universe Story. Its praise of the universe as an evolving, creative force engenders feelings of reverence, humility, gratitude, harmony, awe, and peace. If we could all learn to contemplate this cosmic perspective more often, the planet would be a much healthier place.
This book was disappointing. I expected that I would enjoy it, or at least glean something positive from it, but I just couldn't stand it. First off, this book is pretty epic in scope. It starts with the big bang and goes all the way to the modern era. My main problem with the book is this; it personifies everything. It is irritating to read about the universe itself having a will and sentience. What does it do with these qualities you ask? It goes and creates galaxies and other things. It speaks of single-celled organisms having a will. The science is accurate, which makes this even more aggravating. Step by step, it talks about how life developed. It talks about the "Cybernetic system" so many times that you can make a drinking game out of it.
When I say it personifies everything, it does so by giving everything a name. The supernova preceding the solar system and our sun? Let's call it Tiamat! The first living being is a prokaryotic cell? Why don't we call it Aries? No, not after the Greek God of War, silly; we named him after some Egyptian thing. Not to belittle Egyptian mythology, which is actually awesome, but when you combine the two ideas of science and mythology it just irritates me.
I am used to the idea of the Universe being the end result of a number of stochastic processes. Just random stuff being reined in by some basic laws like Gravitation and the three other fundamental forces. When you personify the universe, it should be really compelling, but it isn't. I understand that there is a delicate Goldilocks zone that makes our entire existence possible. If Gravity was just slightly stronger, if we were just slightly further from or closer to our Sun, Life would not have happened. That doesn't mean you need to explain it by gving the Universe sentience.
Thankfully I got this book from the Library and didn't pay anything for it.
Wow: This is a lyrical account of cosmology from the time of the very beginning until now. Brian Swimme and Thomas Berry have teamed up well in this sweeping history which summarizes current scientific understanding of traditional cosmology and other natural sciences with human history. Their account is a fresh spin of spirituality as people have come to make sense of their world and lives. Thus, they tell a modern history which calls forth the future -- either as technologically dominated or as ecologically focused. I only have one fault with the book: their claim that no amphibian lives in the desert -- I give you spadefoot toads. (I am glad they did not also claim no fish live in trees or on land -- I give you mudskippers...Evolution is a tricky mistress.) At any rate, the book is delightful and very important. I believe this is the direction many intellectuals are headed -- making a whole of traditionally separate fields of study, especially as we face new and all encompassing challenges. Highly recommended.
A 250 page book of amazing scope from the earliest moments of the universe though billions of years to the rise of world governing bodies that argues for a fundamental shift from human-first to earth-first perspective. Swimme and Berry do a great job of highlighting the primordial "self organizing principles" that have guided and bound the entire course of the universe story.
The authors trace our presence back to the beginnings of the universe (Big Bang and the "flaring forth"). In a summary way, the book unravels the journey stage by stage, moving from matter and energy to life, to the development of life on earth, and then to human civilization (including its negative impacts on earth).
The authors theme is that humans reflect an underlying, universal pattern to come together, to form communities, to bond with the other. With gravity and the curvature of the universe, the authors write, all things are held together by "an intimate presence of all things to each other, each thing sustained in its being by everything else." This book is about the unfolding of this primordial impulse to come together.
This is one half of the story. The other half of life's impulse is not so nice. Life needs energy. Predators need prey. Ecosystems are communities where life consumes and incorporates the other as well as forming mutually beneficial relationships. Humans reflect this fuller dynamic, with many pushing for self-oriented advantage at the expense of others if need be, and with many others who form relationships based on love and compassion or mutual benefit.
The authors are not unaware of this. They note the violence of our civilized history, but this is contrasted with our neolithic past where there was equality and life was peaceful. That history is debatable. Rather than that either-or contrast, civilized conflict and violence may be an intensification of what has always been a part of our history. A truer picture might be that the universal and life impulse is better reflected, for example, by Vishnu (the Preserver) and Shiva (the Destroyer) where there is a perpetual battle between love and hate, between those who look after others and those who only seek self-advantage. Community, along the lines the authors' suggest, then becomes much harder to achieve. Is community formed and maintained only by love or does it also require in many instances active resistance against those who do not see the world the same way? Pleas for reason and love seldom work against those without an impulse for peace. Sometimes rebellion and war are necessary.
A unique and remarkable book. As the title indicates, it's nothing less than an attempt to relay the story of the universe, and thus to locate ourselves in the cosmic scope of things. The prologue alone is worth the price of admission, as it does all that in just a few pages.
The book that follows simply recapitulates the prologue in greater detail. The first chapter covers the Big Bang. The second chapter is on the emergence of galaxies. The third chapter is on supernovae. The fourth chapter is on our star, the sun. The fifth chapter is about Earth and the emergence of bacterial life here. The sixth chapter covers the evolution of eukaryotes — you know, cellular life with a well-organized nucleus. The seventh chapter talks about plants and animals.
We get to human beings in the eighth chapter, and after this it's all about us, with chapters on the neolithic village, classical civilizations, the rise of nations, the revelations of modern science, and a speculative chapter about what comes next.
The scale is epic, though as you might discern, each chapter covers an increasingly briefer time period than the one before. This creates the effect of a long, slow "zoom" to the present. In each chapter, the authors do their best not merely to explain what happened, but to understand what it all means. For example, what is the meaning of the emergence of hydrogen? Thus I found the first three chapters especially abstract and dense and difficult. The closer we "zoomed in" to the present, the more it clicked with me.
It's worth noting that, despite the fact that one of the authors was a Catholic priest of some renown, this is not a Christian book per se. In fact, I was led to this book by the decidedly Pagan writings of Glenys D. Livingstone. The perspective offered here is best described as "meta-religious," to use the authors' own terms. Personally, I find this "biggest picture" perspective a refreshing, rare, and much-needed dose of good medicine. Highly recommended to seekers of all stripes.
The first half of this book, devoted to the story of the universe creating itself, is awe-inspiring; almost magical. It is the synthesis of narratives from physics, astronomy, biogeochemistry, and natural history imbued with a tone of religious reverence. By establishing the processes at work in the world as not mere local events but as activities of the universe itself, the authors provide an understanding of science which does not dismiss the experienced, aesthetic, and sacred elements of existence but enhances them instead, something which is desperately needed to restore the wonder and curiosity of science to itself. The Cosmogenetic Principle and its components, named in Berry's The Dream of the Earth, are now related to their presence and action in history and to our present existence. Unfortunately the second half of the book isn't held together very well. It summarizes human history but fails to tie it back to the cosmic perspective established previously. In spite of this, the insights of the first half are more than enough to make this a masterpiece of cosmology.
Read this for an Indian philosophy class. I found this book to be very philosophically comforting. Great read. Highly recommend to everyone who wants to think a bit. The book may not present both sides of the coin, but it's still worth reading & thinking about.
Truly the story of the universe - from the "flaring forth" to the present day. Begins with the development of the first atom and ends with the sobering thought of our Earth in decay. This should be mandatory reading in schools so kids leave knowing that our mother, our home, Earth - is not immortal, and neither are they and that everyday on this beautiful planet is nothing short of a miracle. The future depends on our ability to change...everything. Change is not just good, it is vital...or else.
A beautiful, compelling and extraordinary story of how we came to be. Commingling the astrophycial perspective of Brian Swimme and the cultural imagination of Thomas Berry into a glorious synthesis of cosmic proportions. This is one of the most powerful stories ever told!
This was a wonderful book to take my time with, mulling over the concepts and allowing their meaning to sink in. I love a book that challenges and yet leaves you feeling hopeful. I began this just before reading The Universe if a Green Dragon, and then continued on with it once I'd finished the smaller book. There is such beauty and sense in the way this story has been told, so full of quotable quotes! As I finished the book I felt connected again, and better able to accept the risks of creativity in life on a personal level, and also to see and move closer to acceptance with regard to how the risk of creativity unfolds in the larger context of human society. My conclusion: a very special book.
I love science but I am not a scientist unfortunately. However, the style adopted by the author is very engaging and does not demand too much from the reader as far as previous scientific knowledge is concerned. They adopt a story telling approach to the whole mystery of life on earth, almost to the point of assuming a mythical quality. I found it very entertaining as well as informative but more serious minded individuals might not. Persaonally I support most attempts to popularise science and make it accessible by the average person. If you have even just a speck of curiosity as to how life began then this is a book that I would happily recommend to you.
Combine astronomy, physics, biology, anthropology, and history with poetry, modern mythmaking, and sheer awe, and you’ll have a rough idea of the scope of this profound volume. Approaching the cosmos as self-aware and self-organizing living system of immanent divinity, Swimme and Berry imbue this history of the universe and our planet with reverence and a plea for humanity’s awakening to its responsibilities and rightful role within the balance.
I found this one amazing, and amaazingly difficult at the same time. It begins with theoretical beginnings and is very poetic. It becomes less poetic as the story unfolds and there are greater amounts of written documented history to back up the story. Then it finishes with us, now, and what do we do?
a bit too scientific for me . i am fascinated that we all come from 'star dust' and a friend thought i might like it. now i know the name of the star that gave birth to our many elements and for that it was a good read...even tho' i didn't finish it!