maw lod qan Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 I'm sitting here waiting a minute before I go in to work. Its 3:38, Mars is brilliant just past the zenith, a beautiful moon rising in the East. Looking at them with just my eyes, sometimes I just cant help but think of all the humans that have done the same thing, stood there for just a moment to gaze up into the night sky in wonder, before going on with their day. Hopefully Wed. morning will be this clear. 10 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeDnight Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 (edited) "When I see your heavens, the work of your fingers, The Moon and stars that you have prepared, What is mortal man that you keep him in mind, And the son of man that you take care of him?" (King David - Psalm 8:3&4). When you take the time as you have, just to sit back and meditate on the awesomeness and history of observing the heavens, and contemplating all those who have gone before, we can't help but to be awestruck by the magnitude of everything we see. Of course many of those who went before had clearer and darker skies, but no telescopes. Which would be better? I'm not so certain! Edited October 12, 2020 by mikeDnight 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ScouseSpaceCadet Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 2 hours ago, maw lod qan said: I'm sitting here waiting a minute before I go in to work. Its 3:38, Mars is brilliant just past the zenith, a beautiful moon rising in the East. Looking at them with just my eyes, sometimes I just cant help but think of all the humans that have done the same thing, stood there for just a moment to gaze up into the night sky in wonder, before going on with their day. Hopefully Wed. morning will be this clear. There is something incredibly meditative about sitting there looking up. Even hunkered down in the dark corner of my urban garden. During breaks in an observing session, there's very few things more relaxing than just slouching in a garden chair, enjoying the quiet of the night and watching the heavens wonder around me. It's no wonder peoples past, unbound by modern knowledge and technologies, created stories and myths. Looking to the skies to inspire and guide their lives. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Peter Drew Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 Agree with all of this but I doubt if early mankind spent much time outside after dark due to predators. 🙂 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ScouseSpaceCadet Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 (edited) 10 minutes ago, Peter Drew said: Agree with all of this but I doubt if early mankind spent much time outside after dark due to predators. 🙂 All the evidence suggests otherwise, although it's possible the cavemen tied a vine around one person's waist, before chucking him out to see what the sky says... "Ugh screamin' pulllll, ugh" Edited October 12, 2020 by ScouseSpaceCadet 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alfian Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 15 minutes ago, ScouseSpaceCadet said: All the evidence suggests otherwise, although it's possible the cavemen tied a vine around one person's waist, before chucking him out to see what the sky says... "Ugh screamin' pulllll, ugh" Maybe the earliest form of "Clearoutside"?😁 That feeling of being lost in wonder is something that strikes at soul level and add to that the dimension how it links us directly to our ancestors, its a powerful humanity definining emotional experience. There's always the possibilty I could be talking twaddle but thats how I see it! 🤔😊 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ScouseSpaceCadet Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 6 minutes ago, Alfian said: Maybe the earliest form of "Clearoutside"?😁 Quite possibly and probably more accurate! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rusted Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 Or, alternatively, a message from The Cave Management: "Clear off outside!" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JeremyS Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 6 hours ago, mikeDnight said: Of course many of those who went before had clearer and darker skies, but no telescopes. What? No Takahashis? 🙂 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeDnight Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 27 minutes ago, JeremyS said: What? No Takahashis? 🙂 Hard to imagine isnt it! 😲 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JeremyS Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 24 minutes ago, mikeDnight said: Hard to imagine isnt it! 😲 The ancients had plenty of fluorite around, though. Perhaps the precursor of a Tak 100 BC: 🙂 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alfian Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 49 minutes ago, JeremyS said: What? No Takahashis? 🙂 Do you think that possibly the Tals might have gone back to the iron age? They have that rugged rustic feel to them. No flourite though! 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeDnight Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 1 hour ago, JeremyS said: The ancients had plenty of fluorite around, though. Perhaps the precursor of a Tak 100 BC: 🙂 You should put that back into its cell, otherwise you could void your warranty. 😭 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Posted October 12, 2020 Share Posted October 12, 2020 (edited) Interesting thread I often do just look up and wonder at it all. That's very much part of the enjoyment for me. I also wonder what would have been the impact on scientific thinking if, for example, one of today's amateur scopes, eg: a Skywatcher ED100, was somehow sent back through time so that it was available to Galileo ? How would that have changed thinking at that time and subsequent thinking and the pace of understanding ? I really don't know the answer but it's fun to speculate sometimes Edited October 12, 2020 by John 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
maw lod qan Posted October 13, 2020 Author Share Posted October 13, 2020 8 hours ago, John said: Interesting thread I often do just look up and wonder at it all. That's very much part of the enjoyment for me. I also wonder what would have been the impact on scientific thinking if, for example, one of today's amateur scopes, eg: a Skywatcher ED100, was somehow sent back through time so that it was available to Galileo ? How would that have changed thinking at that time and subsequent thinking and the pace of understanding ? I really don't know the answer but it's fun to speculate sometimes Are you kidding? The powers to be would have locked that away into the Area 51 of that day! Man and his beliefs can be a difficult thing to change, even when the spots on the Sun were as plain as a pimple on your nose!😏 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Padraic M Posted October 13, 2020 Share Posted October 13, 2020 9 hours ago, John said: I also wonder what would have been the impact on scientific thinking if, for example, one of today's amateur scopes, eg: a Skywatcher ED100, was somehow sent back through time so that it was available to Galileo ? I think he would have been in his element. However if we sent back the full stack of even a basic astro set-up including a tracking mount and a red-dot finder (and some batteries!) it might have completely stopped him in his tracks - too much to try to understand that was well beyond the standards of the time. Even he might have started to believe in magic or the Devine! I passed a few hours in the Galileo Museum in Florence and was stunned at the rigour of his method. So many precision instruments built to prove the fundamentals of distance, angles, acceleration, etc. Everything taken from first principles and based on proven fact. He got excommunicated for his troubles. Some things haven't changed eh? I always think of him when I see Jupiter and Saturn through a 'scope. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ScouseSpaceCadet Posted October 13, 2020 Share Posted October 13, 2020 21 hours ago, John said: Interesting thread I often do just look up and wonder at it all. That's very much part of the enjoyment for me. I also wonder what would have been the impact on scientific thinking if, for example, one of today's amateur scopes, eg: a Skywatcher ED100, was somehow sent back through time so that it was available to Galileo ? How would that have changed thinking at that time and subsequent thinking and the pace of understanding ? I really don't know the answer but it's fun to speculate sometimes Those 100mm aperture near perfect optics would have more uses than astronomy. If they worked out how to copy it, we would probably all belong to the 350 year Impero Italiano and be speaking Italian! 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ships and Stars Posted October 13, 2020 Share Posted October 13, 2020 The ancient night skies with zero light pollution, a vast milky way from horizon to horizon, shooting stars and the (very) occasional supernova like M1 Crab Nebula of c.1054AD must have inspired a lot of folklore (constellations in particular), superstition and awe, though on the other hand, they would have seen it on every clear night of their lives, good eyesight willing! The stone circles in my neck of the woods (typically recumbent stone circles in NE Scotland) are often regarded as celestial calendars or 'solstice calendars', though that in itself is a topic of great controversy. I'm inclined to believe they were at least partially constructed for that purpose. Certainly burial mounds like the passage tomb at Newgrange in Ireland were - the winter solstice sunrise is directed through a port above the entrance and lights up the central chamber. Not quite 'ancient' and off on a bit of a tangent here, but thinking of dark skies vs modern light pollution made me recall this map I saw a while back from the 'Terrible Maps' website... I know I know..,sorry 🤣 1 1 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ollypenrice Posted October 14, 2020 Share Posted October 14, 2020 What I like about a clear, dark night is that you realize you have no need for a spaceship. You're on one already. Olly 7 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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