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Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Sat Mar 16, 2024 1:27 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy has not only taught us that there are laws, but that from these laws there is no escape, that with them there is no possible compromise.



— Henri Poincaré
In Henri Poincaré and George Bruce Halsted (trans.), The Value of Science: Essential Writings of Henri Poincare (1907), 86.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Sat Mar 16, 2024 1:27 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy has revealed the great truth that the whole universe is bound together by one all-pervading influence.



— William Leitch
God's Glory in the Heavens (1862, 3rd Ed. 1867) 327

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Sat Mar 16, 2024 1:27 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy is a cold, desert science, with all its pompous figures,—depends a little too much on the glass-grinder, too little on the mind. ’Tis of no use to show us more planets and systems. We know already what matter is, and more or less of it does not signify.



— Ralph Waldo Emerson
In 'Country Life', collected in The Complete Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson (1904), Vol. 12, 166.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Sun Mar 17, 2024 1:07 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy is a science in which you are not able to touch anything you study.



— Allan Rex Sandage
As quoted in John Noble Wilford, 'Sizing up the Cosmos: An Astronomers Quest', New York Times (12 Mar 1991), C10

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Sun Mar 17, 2024 1:08 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy is older than physics. In fact, it got physics started by showing the beautiful simplicity of the motion of the stars and planets, the understanding of which was the beginning of physics. But the most remarkable discovery in all of astronomy is that the stars are made of atoms of the same kind as those on the earth.



— Richard P. Feynman
In 'Astronomy', The Feynman Lectures on Physics (1961), Vol. 1, 3-6

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Sun Mar 17, 2024 1:08 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy is one of the sublimest fields of human investigation. The mind that grasps its facts and principles receives something of the enlargement and grandeur belonging to the science itself. It is a quickener of devotion.



— Horace Mann
In Thoughts Selected From the Writings of Horace Mann (1872), 41.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Mon Mar 18, 2024 11:29 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy is perhaps the science whose discoveries owe least to chance, in which human understanding appears in its whole magnitude, and through which man can best learn how small he is.



— Georg Christoph Lichtenberg
Aphorism 23 in Notebook C (1772-1773), as translated by R.J. Hollingdale in Aphorisms (1990). Reprinted as The Waste Books (2000), 35.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Mon Mar 18, 2024 11:30 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy is, not without reason, regarded, by mankind, as the sublimest of the natural sciences. Its objects so frequently visible, and therefore familiar, being always remote and inaccessible, do not lose their dignity.



— Benjamin Silliman
In Elements of Chemistry: In the Order of the Lectures Given in Yale College (1830), 11.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Mon Mar 18, 2024 11:30 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy may be revolutionized more than any other field of science by observations from above the atmosphere. Study of the planets, the Sun, the stars, and the rarified matter in space should all be profoundly influenced by measurements from balloons, rockets, probes and satellites. ... In a new adventure of discovery no one can foretell what will be found, and it is probably safe to predict that the most important new discovery that will be made with flying telescopes will be quite unexpected and unforeseen. (1961)



— Lyman Spitzer, Jr.
Opening and closing of 'Flying Telescopes', Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (May 1961), Vol. 17, No. 5, 191 and 194.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Tue Mar 19, 2024 10:48 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy teaches the correct use of the sun and the planets. These may be put on a frame of little sticks and turned round. This causes the tides. Those at the ends of the sticks are enormously far away. From time to time a diligent searching of the sticks reveals new planets. The orbit of the planet is the distance the stick goes round in going round. Astronomy is intensely interesting; it should be done at night, in a high tower at Spitzbergen. This is to avoid the astronomy being interrupted. A really good astronomer can tell when a comet is coming too near him by the warning buzz of the revolving sticks.



— Stephen Leacock
In Literary Lapses (1928), 128.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Tue Mar 19, 2024 10:48 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy was not studied by Kepler, Galileo, or Newton for the practical applications which might result from it, but to enlarge the bounds of knowledge, to furnish new objects of thought and contemplation in regard to the universe of which we form a part; yet how remarkable the influence which this science, apparently so far removed from the sphere of our material interests, has exerted on the destinies of the world!



— Joseph Henry
In 'Report of the Secretary', Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution for 1859 (1860), 15.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Tue Mar 19, 2024 10:48 pm
by messier 111
Astronomy was thus the cradle of the natural sciences and the starting point of geometrical theories. The stars themselves gave rise to the concept of a ‘point’; triangles, quadrangles and other geometrical figures appeared in the constellations; the circle was realized by the disc of the sun and the moon. Thus in an essentially intuitive fashion the elements of geometrical thinking came into existence.



— Cornelius Lanczos
In George Edward Martin, The Foundations of Geometry and the Non-Euclidean Plane (1982), 72.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Wed Mar 20, 2024 10:24 pm
by messier 111
Bacon himself was very ignorant of all that had been done by mathematics; and, strange to say, he especially objected to astronomy being handed over to the mathematicians. Leverrier and Adams, calculating an unknown planet into a visible existence by enormous heaps of algebra, furnish the last comment of note on this specimen of the goodness of Bacon’s view… . Mathematics was beginning to be the great instrument of exact inquiry: Bacon threw the science aside, from ignorance, just at the time when his enormous sagacity, applied to knowledge, would have made him see the part it was to play. If Newton had taken Bacon for his master, not he, but somebody else, would have been Newton.



— Augustus De Morgan
In Budget of Paradoxes (1872), 53-54

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Wed Mar 20, 2024 10:24 pm
by messier 111
But if anyone, well seen in the knowledge, not onely of Sacred and exotick History, but of Astronomical Calculation, and the old Hebrew Kalendar, shall apply himself to these studies, I judge it indeed difficult, but not impossible for such a one to attain, not onely the number of years, but even, of dayes from the Creation of the World.



— James Ussher
In 'Epistle to the Reader', The Annals of the World (1658). As excerpted in Wallen Yep, Man Before Adam: A Correction to Doctrinal Theology, "The Missing Link Found" (2002), 18.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Wed Mar 20, 2024 10:25 pm
by messier 111
But just as astronomy succeeded astrology, following Kepler's discovery of planetary regularities, the discoveries of these many principles in empirical explorations of intellectual processes in machines should lead to a science, eventually.
[Co-author with South African mathematician, Seymour Papert (1928- )]



— Marvin Minsky
Artificial Intelligence (1973), 25.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Thu Mar 21, 2024 10:30 pm
by messier 111
Chemistry must become the astronomy of the molecular world.



— Alfred Werner
Autograph Quotation for a Charity, (1905). In G. B. Kaufman, Alfred Werner (1966), iii.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Thu Mar 21, 2024 10:30 pm
by messier 111
Computer science is no more about computers than astronomy is about telescopes, biology is about microscopes or chemistry is about beakers and test tubes. Science is not about tools. It is about how we use them, and what we find out when we do.



— Edsger W. Dijkstra
In G. Michael Schneider, Judith L. Gersting, Sara Baase, An invitation to Computer Science: Java version (2000), 2.

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Thu Mar 21, 2024 10:31 pm
by messier 111
Cosmology does, I think, affect the way that we perceive humanity’s role in nature. One thing we’ve learnt from astronomy is that the future lying ahead is more prolonged than the past. Even our sun is less than halfway through its life.



— Sir Martin Rees

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Sat Mar 23, 2024 12:22 am
by messier 111
Da Vinci was as great a mechanic and inventor as were Newton and his friends. Yet a glance at his notebooks shows us that what fascinated him about nature was its variety, its infinite adaptability, the fitness and the individuality of all its parts. By contrast what made astronomy a pleasure to Newton was its unity, its singleness, its model of a nature in which the diversified parts were mere disguises for the same blank atoms.



— Jacob Bronowski
From The Common Sense of Science (1951),

Re: Quote of the day, mostly related to astronomy.

Posted: Sat Mar 23, 2024 12:23 am
by messier 111
Each science and law is … prospective and fruitful. Astronomy is not yet astronomy, whilst it only counts the stars in the sky. It must come nearer, and be related to men and their life.



— Ralph Waldo Emerson
From Notes to 'Progress of Culture' in The Complete Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson: Letters and Social Aims (1875, 1904), Vol. 8, 409.