Audiobook7 hours
Light of the Stars: Alien Worlds and the Fate of the Earth
Written by Adam Frank
Narrated by Kevin Pariseau
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
4/5
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About this audiobook
Light of the Stars is science at the grandest of scales, and it tells a radically new story about what we are: one world in a universe awash in planets. Building on his widely discussed scientific papers and New York Times op-eds, astrophysicist Adam Frank shows that not only is it likely that alien civilizations have existed many times before, but also that many of them have driven their own worlds into dangerous eras of change. He explains how dust storms on Mars, the greenhouse effect on Venus, Gaia Theory, the threat of nuclear winter, and efforts to prove or disprove the plurality of worlds from Aristotle to Copernicus to Carl Sagan have contributed to our understanding of our place in the universe and the growing challenge of climate change. And he raises what may be the largest question of all: If there has been life on other worlds, what can its presence tell us about our own fate?
Author
Adam Frank
Adam Frank is Professor of Astrophysics at the University of Rochester and a regular contributor to Discover and Astronomy magazines. He has also written for Scientific American and many other publications and is the co-founder of NPR's 13:7 Cosmos & Culture blog. He was a Hubble Fellow and is the recipient of an American Astronomical Society Prize for his scientific writing.
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Reviews for Light of the Stars
Rating: 4.107843117647059 out of 5 stars
4/5
51 ratings4 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Easy to listen to, well exposed arguments. Learned that: climate should be looked upon a planetary scale. Climate Change is inevitable for a growing civilization. Climate Change should be "managed" at a planetary level. Humanity as a whole has to decide that this a must for our civilization to survive, doing so would be a sign that we are an "adult" civilization, not a "teenager" anymore. I learned also what "astrobiology" is.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5How likely it is that a signal will be found, and what this might mean, are hard questions to answer.Yes, very hard. It might take up to a minute to stumble across the news that a repeating FRB had been discovered in 2019 - the first of its kind.Humanity became aware of Fast Radio Bursts over 10 years ago. But they were all singular events. However this signal is long-lasting and has a 16 day pattern to it. It comes from a galaxy 500 million light-years away. That raises the next point: that even if this is a sign of intelligence, of if the collaboration between SETI and the New Mexico array does reveal anything, it won't be a local phenomenon.And to discover "intelligence" (or signs of it) that are so distant we can't interact with it - even if it still exists, after taking millions of years to arrive here - makes the issue abstract in the extreme. The universe is so large there certainly is/has/will-be intelligence in it. Or another intelligence, depending on personal opinion. Whether it is detectable, contactable, and local or approaching makes all the difference regarding its scientific importance.There remain equally or more plausible explanations that don't employ extraterrestrial intelligence. One big problem for the alien idea is the variety of locations and distances involved. Of the FRBs that have been localised, some are from billions of light-years away; others are from hundreds of millions. As astronomer Seth Shostak of the SETI Institute has noted, that alone is reason enough to discount the hypothesis that FRBs are extraterrestrial communications.As Arthur C. Clarke said " Two possibilities exist: either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying"The immensely bizarre and fantastical prospect that life has only emerged once and will only emerge once in all of space and time throws up questions that could never be answered. And I'm speaking as someone who currently doesn’t believe in god.I believe that there must be or will be other life out there at some point,But if there really isn't, in the past or future?Unfortunately Frank's book is the wrost kind of book when it comes to Science. Humans were not the first on Earth?? WTF? I love SF, but when I want to read SF I'll go and get me one...I don't want to read SF disguised as Science.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5An interesting topic and history oriented book relating to life among the planets, including our own. This was an audio book for me and I found it easy and attention getting to follow.The questions delved into were how life begins, as we know it. And if we are the only ones out there or here. And as typical of humans we are still like the cavemen looking out of their caves wondering. The book gets very much into ecosystems and environment with a bent toward the save the planet crowd. Regardless of your persuasion on this topic, lots to chew on here.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5What practical use is research into possible extraterrestrial live and civilizations?
We need a new frame to think about our own planet and our relationship. It's just false to all the evidence that we don't affect the habitability of Earth. It's unhelpful, providing no useful path forward, to think of ourselves as a completely malign, destructive force.
We need a new story to tell ourselves, that correctly places us as an active force on Earth, currently doing a lot of damage out of our ignorance until now, but able to change direction and, through use of our growing knowledge, able to make different, more useful decisions.
Adam Frank looks at both the history of our thinking and investigation of the idea of alien life, up to and including the recent explosion of discovery of extrasolar planets and what that means for the likelihood that other technologically advanced civilizations at least have existed, and the history of our growing understanding of our real impact on the habitability of Earth for us and our technologically advanced civilization. It turns out that that history of growing understanding of the crucial factor of our contribution to global warming goes back not to the 1970s, but to the latter part of the 19th century.
He looks at how early life changed our planet to make in habitable for life like us, the crucial fact that it's not Earth we need to worry about protecting, but ourselves (Earth, and life, will go one almost regardless of what we do, but we might not), and how even the study of certainly lifeless Venus and so far not proven to harbor life Mars have enhanced our understanding of Earth and our relationship to it. Even understanding that planets, at all sizes and types, are fairly common in the universe, and that therefore it's wildly unlikely that we're the first technological civilization to exist, expands our understanding. We further need to understand whether it's common, possible, or wildly unlikely for civilizations to survive the technological and environmental bottleneck we are currently struggling through.
We want to be a civilization that survives.
It's a fascinating book, and well worth reading. Recommended.
I initially borrowed this book from my local library, and then bought it.