Text imprint Mexico City, FCE SEP CONACyT, 2007
Published by the Fondo de Cultura Económica under the auspices
of the Secretary of Public Education and the National
Council of Science and Technology.INTRODUCTION IN SEPTEMBER of 2003 they invited me to participate in an editorial enterprise that the newspaper Milenio was going to initiate. It consisted of a cultural supplement that would appear every Saturday and would carry the Roman title of Labyrinth. I accepted the proposition, not without a certain trepidation, for the fact of committing myself to writing an article every two weeks was something new for me and I was not very sure I could fulfill it, given that I have an enormous respect for the written word and it costs me a great deal of work to draft anything; and also, I was not very clear as to what my collaborations would treat. This last I resolved with relative ease. The three themes that have impassioned me throughout the length of my life are literature, history and science. I then decided that my submissions would treat of one of them every two weeks; two weeks that then were converted to a week, for, despite my original trepidations, after three months of having begun my collaboration in the supplement, I promised to deliver my articles every seven days. I gave the name, "From the Ravine" to the column where it appeared in that I live in Jiutepec, very near to the Amanalco ravine, which Malcolm Lowry immortalized in his ineffable novel, Under the Volcano. Like an industrious ant, after more than three years I have accumulated close to 200 articles on the most varied themes, of which about half are dedicated to science and are those that I present in this book. As you could imagine, some articles I wrote with the impulse of a recent occurrence; others, attending to some ephemera, and others more simply because I felt like covering a certain topic. I present them here not in the order in which they were written, but grouping them in six great themes: Physics, Astronomy, Chemistry, Biology and evolution, Ecology and the Development of science. Sometimes I wrote an essay on the same matter in various submissions. Here I present it with its parts integrated, except in some cases when I considered it more prudent to bring them to light such as they were published in the column. It is not mine to judge whether the material that comprises this book is worthwhile to be read, and whether its content even assists a little in the comprehension of the fascinating world of science and, above all, in motivation for studying it, which were the propositions that guided my pen. It is you to whom it is called to judge that, kind reader. PHYSICS 1. Ah, time! UNTIL the final stages of the 19th century physicists defined time as an independent variable. That is, something in which things occurred without anything happening to itself. That unhappy first-born of classical physics roamed terrifyingly alone, like an aged river, from an uncertain origin towards an impossible end, carrying its independence on its back, perhaps lamenting its vacuity and surely distressed before the somber perspective of its infinitude. Because, in effect, classical time was infinite. No recourse remained for it since, had it not been so, if it had had a beginning and an end, however prolonged the duration one might measure between them, time would not be independent, would change (would have a before and an after, there being a young time and an old time), and how could it change without the existence of something independent that would be there precisely for this, so that things change? The responsibility of not changing so that things may change, the need to be infinite so that everything might have an ending, the somber requirement to be witness of all that occurs and at the same time not to participate in anything, to--finally--find oneself obliged not to exist so that everything else might exist, only can be seated upon the wide shoulders of God. I believe that this is why the Mayan wise men venerated time as the only true god. Nietzsche, one of the philosophers who best understood the science of his age, discovered an impeccable syllogism in the infinitude of time: if time is infinite, and things occur in time, then all things will re-occur infinitely. That which was, is and will exist until the end of time; but since time has no end, that which was, exists and will continue to do so until infinity; that which was, then, will eternally return. Thomas Mann, as were many other writers, was obsessed with time; such that, one could say that time is the protagonist of his colossal Magic Mountain. Nevertheless, the time that struck Mann with its most pointed questions is not the old and immutable Chronos of the classical physicists; in any event, it is an illegitimate son of his, or perhaps not even that: it may be simply a parvenu who borrowed the name from him, although with a very different surname: the time that intrigued Mann, that which makes his novel be like an infernal carnival machine, with eternal intervals, sleeplike, as are his very characters, who eat and rest, rest and eat, in a play of mirrors and an impossibly slow rhythm, and other intervals, so vertiginous, so brief and intense that they can better be called instants, in which, after reading who knows how many pages in which one only speaks of snow and of more snow, not even a couple of hours have passed. It was said that the time which interested Mann, as also occurred with Bergson, is psychological time. This last, as opposed to its elder parent, which rules the physical world, is content to validate the changes that occur in the human mind, and like the creatures it governs, is capricious, unpredictable and fickle. That strange and cruel quality of psychological time has already been fully discussed: it flows most vertiginously the more we desire it to slow, and most phlegmatically when we most urge it to advance. I do not wish to end this submission leaving our intimate classical time so sadly desolated. In reality, at the beginning of the last century the genius of Albert Einstein brought very welcome news concerning the old Chronos: he discovered that it was neither independent, nor was so isolated and--best of all--that it was not infinite (too bad for the eternal return). 15 September 2003 2. Elusive reality AMONG many other things, the 20th century brought a revolution to physics. And the essence of classical time was among the most affected by this revolution; one of the principal consequences of the special theory of relativity, which Albert Einstein proposed in 1905, is that time was not, as was thought up to then, an independent variable. And if it was not, it would have to in turn depend on something, and that something is, neither more nor less, the speed of light in space. That constant, difficult to imagine due to its enormous magnitude (in one second light can go around the earth more than seven times) subordinated time; the theory of Einstein tells us that time transpires more slowly the more rapidly an object moves. Thus, if an object should attain (something that is impossible in practice, yet not impossible to imagine) that limiting velocity, time simply would cease to pass in it. The general theory of relativity, which the same Einstein proposed in 1915-1916, made the nature of time even more strange: not only did it cease being an independent variable, but also it became a coordinate feature to locate the movement of a body in space. Because, for this theory, space already was not that tridimensional cube of infinite dimensions that Newton conceived, but instead a spatial-temporal continuum of four dimensions, whose properties are subject, like everything else, to the speed of light, the only absolute in that universe of relativity discovered by Einstein. It is not difficult to imagine the wide possibilities that the theory of relativity bestowed on the writers of science fiction. Travels through time (which before the theory of relativity had already been conceived by the H. G. Wells in his Time Machine) filled an infinity of pages with words and an infinity of feverish minds with fantasies. But these new and enigmatic qualities of relativist time interested not only the writers of science fiction. Authors who were very far from practicing this genre also were seduced by the new behavior of space and time that the German physicist discovered in nature. Among them Lawrence Durrell comes to my mind, who, in a clarifying note in Balthazar, the second part of his Alexandria Quartet, says: "Since modern literature does not offer us unities, I have turned toward science to produce a novel like a ship with four bridges whose form is based upon the principle of relativity." Thus, the first three parts of the novel occur in the same space (Alexandria) and time (roughly more or less the interval that spans the beginning of the Spanish Civil War to the eve of the Second World War), and the last part covers several years afterwards, those which will come to be the temporal coordinator of relativity. I do not know up to what point one can say whether Durrell's novel corresponds to the Einsteinian spatial-temporal continuum or not, nor do I think it matters very much. What is indubitable is that the English author managed (and in that enviable manner in which intelligence becomes poetry) to decode the absolute relativity of reality: a single incident, a duck hunt on Lake Mariout, for example, is seen in a most different way by each one of the characters who participate in it; the same event is simultaneously different for each observer. And which is the true occurrence, or where is the truth in it? That only God or the omniscient narrator know. For Pursewarden, the tragic protagonist of the novel, it cost him his life to know it. Perhaps in this intrinsic incapacity to apprehend the truth lies the human predicament. Perhaps therefore we are condemned to repeat our errors time and again, because, in the final account, we are the first victims of the belief that there is an objective reality, susceptible of transformation to our liking according to our acts. Finally, as Garcia Márquez once said, we are subjective because we are subjects. The only finality is the constancy of the velocity of light in space, although I do not think that that consoles us very much. 22 September 2003 3. The fleeting instant "THE PRESENT is motionless," Octavio Paz repeats with vehemence in his poem, Wind from All Compass Points. In this verse I find a fine perception, the perception belonging to the poet: the support for the perpetuation of the present is in the devastating reality of the instant. Because from that continuous, immutable time, like a tireless river that flows from nothing to the infinite, the only thing that modern physics has left unscathed is the instant. Gaston Bachelard explains it much better than myself in a memorable essay he published in 1932 entitled The intuition of the instant. In it, Bachelard gives a fiery defense of the thesis that a countryman, his namesake and colleague, Gaston Roupnel, brought against the, at that time, widely accepted theory of duration of Henri Bergson, which was published in a book called Siloé: "Time has only one reality, that of the instant," says Roupnel, and Bachelard concludes, "Time is a reality compressed into an instant and suspended between two voids." On the one hand, to confirm the unnameable reality of the fleeting instant, Bachelard bases himself in the physics of his time, in particular upon quantum mechanics, which in those days was radically changing our conception of the macro- and micro-universe. Time, ever since long ago, it is worth repeating, had remained tethered arbitrarily to the speed of light, with the result that the study of quanta was seen to be constrained to take place within a minuscule packet of energy. The duration that we measure with a clock is an illusion; just as the continuous light that we see flowing from the sun or a light bulb is an illusion. In reality what we see is an almost infinite string of minuscule quanta of light or photons, in the same manner that the duration we perceive with a clock is in reality an almost infinite string of minuscule quanta of time or instants. On the other hand, precisely there, "on the edge of that instant" (another happy verse that emerged from the pen of the great Mexican bard), in that flickering (to continue with Paz: "A blink is enough/ All plunges into a fathomless eye/ A blink is enough/ All re-appears in that same eye") Bachelard finds a limitless kernel from which to extract ethical, aesthetic and even moral consequences. If all that exists is the instant, the present instant, the present, then the past instant, the past, already does not exist, is only a memory; since the future instant does not exist either, the future is only longing. And, this is the most notable, in each present instant our life re-commences; in each present instant if we have the courage (a word most appreciated by the French thinker) to confront it face to face, we can either continue the habit that created our past instants and make ourselves a simple bridge so that the customs which we have clung to are extended to the future instants, or else we can challenge that old habit and propose to enter into some novel future instants, which will be constructed around our most profound desires. In any present instant we can, then, cease being what we do not wish to be and begin being that which we want to be. Our lives are not irremediably tied to our past; we are not victims of it, as Freud thought; it is more that we are victims of terror at facing the vertigo of the present and daring to convert our dreams into future instants. It is never too late, the philosopher tells us, to take this crucial step; it is never too late, we add, while one has not arrived at that unique instant that is not followed by another in our existence. Perhaps, as Heidegger thought of it, if we were more conscious that that fatal instant could be the next, we could accomplish with less fear the maxim of the French philosopher: "The being who approaches life, drunk with novelty, is also disposed to treat the present as a promise of the future. The greatest of the powers is ingenuousness..." 29 September 2003 4. Contradictory complements THE ROMANTIC spirit and the scientific spirit seem antagonistic. While the first questions and rejects the world that the economy of the free market has laboriously constructed, the second is the most prized and favored adoptive son of capitalism. After having passed many centuries sheltered in the minds and in the laboratories of eccentric persons, in the best of cases, when not alienated and sinister, or worse yet, the impious, agnostic and blasphemous who have dared to place the Sacred Scriptures in doubt, science was received with enthusiasm by the world that was forming at the end of the 18th century and the beginnings of the 19th, when the triumphant masters of capital discovered the enormous potential of scientific knowledge and, in particular, of its eternal counterpart, technology, to generate riches. In that same era, when the study of the ideal efficiency of a thermal machine, or of the capricious impulses emitted by the contact of certain metals with brine that are capable of straightening the legs of a frog, become themes worthy of treatment in the most famed European universities, the first Romantics recoil from this new bourgeois order, pitiless, utilitarian and insensible, which begins to rise over the horizon. And their art takes refuge in the mythical past, or on a level of places where fantasy and imagination have always reigned, and they conduct their lives in congruence with their rebellion; they are indomitable, bohemians, scandalous, tragic and anarchic; the exact opposite of that dictated by bourgeois morality, the epitome of hypocrisy and restraint. Many of them, following the example of the brilliant Lord Byron, clearly allowed their lives to consume them like a lightning flash of magnesium while they were still very young, whether it was by neglecting their health and forcing it into all the excesses (tuberculosis, which thrives upon weak and malnourished bodies, became the paradigmatic illness of the Romantics), or uprooting it by their own hands. It is precisely with the author of one of those magnificent suicides, although in this case we deal with the immolation of his literary character, the young Werther, of whom I wanted to speak. And it is that Goethe, one of the undeniable founders of the Romantic movement, manifested during the length of his long life, especially in old age, a live interest in science. At the time, it was not the pragmatic aspect of scientific know-how that interested the poet of Frankfurt. In his day science still was not completely hijacked by insatiable capital, and technology still was not a fundamental variable in the pricing of market value, each still could be seen as an almost magical form for comprehending and transforming nature (a vision that, despite everything, is found still in the spirit of the true scientists). For Goethe, nature and its manifestations represented an enigma worthy of captivating the most Romantic spirit. To the end and throughout, we find in it beauty, life, light and color, a triad which absorbed the mind of the poet throughout the length of his existence. To discuss beauty, he counted on poetry; to discuss existence, he relied on his own life and upon the novels; to discuss light and color, he turned to science. Among his vast literary work embodied in poetry, the novel and the humanistic essay, there appears, in 1810, when the poet was about 60, the Theory of Colours, a book which couples science with poetry, thus demonstrating that no product of human construction is the result solely or reason or the imagination, that the Romantic spirit and the scientific spirit, far from being antagonistic, are complementary, as are certain colors. 8 October 2003 5. The scientific artist "In 1810 Goethe published first a small notebook called Contributions to optics, in which he expounded his objective experiments in the matter, and soon another little notebook equally lettered, referring to the subjective experiments, both accompanied by illustrative panels," we are informed by Rafael Cansino Assens, careful biographer of the poet of Weimar. These notebooks, enriched with new observations, were transformed into the Outline of a theory of colour, Goethe's most ambitious scientific publication. Why was a spirit who had tired of demonstrating his poetic vocation so interested in the phenomena of the physical world? What led Goethe to enclose himself for long hours in a darkened shed to study with some rustic instruments, many of them conceived by he himself, the ray of light that penetrated a small orifice made in the beams which surmounted the windows? What was it that obliged the creator of Faust to repeat the experiments he read described in whatever manual or treatise on optics that fell into his hands? Why did the Romantic poet have the confidence to criticize and even to put in doubt the veracity of the thesis of the great Newton, unchallenged authority on the physics of his time, which won him the scorn of his contemporaries? Was Goethe perhaps a frustrated scientist? The last question may be the simplest to answer. Goethe was not a frustrated scientist, nor ever pretended to be a scientist. He was above all a poet, and a poet in the broad sense of the term: he was an artist, a creator, one of those marvelous creatures who dare to emulate God. And it is his poetic spirit that brought him to approach the mysteries of the creation, as much those of human life as of nature in which it lives. At some point in his youth Goethe thought of becoming a painter, yet soon understood that the pen and not the brush was the vehicle which nature offered him for expression; nevertheless, his interest in painting never disappeared, nor in the colors that make it possible. His obsession with light, originally a poetic metaphor, became an obsession with physical light and it most beautiful attribute, color. And so, his interest in this natural phenomenon was more aesthetic than scientific, or put differently, his interest in aesthetics caused him to rummage around in the physical world. In the true scientific spirit, Bachelard would say, the artist always observes. The scientist and the artist are much nearer than it seems: they connect the imagination, curiosity and doubt; finally and throughout, the activities that both realize are products of the same human brain. And that spirit is what carried Goethe to investigate the nature of light and color, and to obtain surprising results. Strictly, many of the criticisms he made of Newton are justified. The German poet demonstrated that the learned Englishman had made some slips, at times reporting his results, not according to the data from the experiment, but instead as they should have been found to conform to the global theory. A sin that many scientists commit, but which no one had discovered in Newton until a universally acclaimed aged poet took the trouble to repeat, one by one, the experiments that Newton reported in his Optics. However, in his critique of the basic theory of the Englishman, Goethe was mistaken. Colors are, in effect, the result of the different refractions there are in a ray of white light, as Newton affirmed, and not the result of collisions between light and shadow, as the poet of Weimar thought. Strictly speaking, neither of the two was correct. Light turned out to be something much more complex and marvelous than that which both believed. 15 October 2003 6. And God saw that the light was good THE BIBLE recounts that the first day of that exhausting week when God created everything existent, after having made the sky and the earth, he then created light, with the goal of lifting his first creations from the obscurity in which they were wrapped, "and God saw that the light was good, and separated the light from the darkness." Modern physics recounts another story to us, perhaps more fascinating: around 13,000 million years ago the universe was comprised of a gigantic black hole, a sphere whose radius would not be much greater than the distance it is from Mars to the sun. Light still did not exist, for the gravity of a black hole is so tremendous that it does not allow anything to escape from within itself, not even the light, something so quick that, if it could be in repose, would not have mass. Eventually, perhaps overwhelmed by the incommensurable amount of energy that accumulated in its innards, the great hole exploded...and the light was created; and the light then began its eternal pilgrimage extending itself at its pressured pace the limits of the universe. Even today in daylight it is possible, the astronomers inform us, to detect the echo of that formidable explosion; it is possible to detect, with radiotelescopes whose sensitivity it is impossible to imagine, the tracks that that primeval light has left in the corners of the universe. Our intuition tells us that light is a manifestation of matter. Thus, the great ball of hydrogen which is the sun emits torrents of light in consequence of the nuclear reactions that occur in its interior, in the same way that the chemical reactions that occur in the head of a match emit light, or the passage of electrical current through a fine tungsten wire. But in this instance, as in many others, the reality proceeds to belie our intuition: strictly speaking, it would be fairer to affirm that matter is a manifestation of energy and, ultimately, of light. When the Big Bang occurred, at first there was only light; and it was from that energy, through its intricate collisions with itself, from which the first quarks emerged, those minimal particles that shape the atoms. Thus, the atoms that comprise what we call matter, would come to be something like black holes which accommodate a quantity of energy absolutely disproportionate to their mass. At the beginning of the last century, Einstein demonstrated theoretically that a few grams of matter are sufficient (if one could liberate the energy they contain, or better yet, containing them) to supply electrical current to a small city over several days. The unhappy inhabitants of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had the misfortune of proving Einstein's theory: a few grams of uranium, in the first case, and of plutonium, in the second, were more than sufficient to bring Dante's inferno to those cities, with all its paraphernalia. I weigh 185 pounds. Sometimes I shudder to think of the huge quantity of energy that resides in my body. There would have to be an explosion of some 10,000 hydrogen bombs to give me an idea of what in reality is within me... Certainly Goethe, who loved it so much, who even called to it on his deathbed, as if dealing with a lost love, would have liked to know that we are creatures consisting of light trapped in our atoms, and that light, as the god of the Bible discovered at the beginning of his colossal work, is a good thing. It is too bad that we emit so little. 23 October 2003 7. World of color THE STUDY where I work is located on a second floor. In front of my writing table there is a great window through which I can observe, on the ground level, a eucalyptus, a tamarind, a guava tree, the top of some papyrus, the leaves of a palm tree and the foliage of a bougainvillaea climbing on a lattice. Further back, in the distance, I see the mountains of the Neovolcanic Range, with the three soft peaks of the Marias at the height with the color of slate. Above, at the very top of the sierra, there is a cumulus cloud, grey in its lowest part and bright white above. Atop them, the soft blue sky, diaphanous, almost transparent, as if announcing the infinite existing beyond it. The predominant color in this handsome picture is the green of the plants, perhaps punctuated with the red--between purple and crimson--characteristic of the bougainvillaeas. Although I know that the colors that arrive at my retina are the result of the white light of the sun which falls upon the objects and which is reflected toward my eyes after having left in them a portion of its spectrum (the chlorophyll of the plants, for example, thanks to the iron it contains, absorbs all the colors there are in visible light, except for green), I do not cease marvelling and being surprised by the amazing capacity that our eyes have for discerning colors: I can distinguish without any difficulty between the different shades of green of the foliage of each of the six plants. And I can do so despite the difference between the shade of one or the other being less than one hundred-millionth of a millimeter in the wave length of each green color that arrives at my retinas. There is no room to doubt that we are animals of vision. If we had, for example, in the case of the sense of hearing a similar capacity to that we have for discerning shades of color, we could easily hear the steps of an ant or the heartbeat of a lover who was 100 meters away. If our sense of smell had the sensitivity of vision, the dogs for detecting drugs or weapons in airports would not be necessary; any guard could do it without a problem. In the case of touch, we could read with our hands, for the thickness of the stain of ink upon the paper could be easily detected with the tips of the fingers. And, finally, in relation to the sense of weight (that sixth sense which we possess and to which so little attention is paid), there would be no need for scales in the food stores: it would suffice for us to handle the merchandise to know exactly what is its mass. In truth, science has not yet explained in detail what mechanisms occur in our sense of sight which permit us that astonishing ability to distinguish colors (we have already once said that the scientists, in contrast to the politicians, are not repelled from admitting their ignorance). Be that as it may, the fact is that we are, I insist, basically animals of vision, and our vision of the world, and the language by which we express it, is filled with colors. I ask: if instead of being animals of vision we were those of olfaction, what adjective would we give to red literature, or to black; what would we call the yellow pages of the directory; what title (and what content) would Rubén Dario have given to his immortal poem Blue; what would blank verse be called; what name would Stendhal have sent to the printer of his Red and the black; would we discriminate among persons by their aroma; in place of flags, would nations have censers; what would be the smell of evil and what of good; what that of the lute and which for happiness? What odor would hope have? 30 October 2003 8. A true Romantic WE HAVE mentioned Goethe as a paradigm of the poetic spirit interested in scientific thought. We now view an opposite case; that is, the case of a devotedly scientific spirit who lived a Romantic life, in the most tragic sense of this term. We refer to Ludwig Boltzman, an Austrian physicist who was born in Vienna in 1844. From extreme youth he distinguished himself as an individual who possessed that type of alert, inquisitive and penetrating intelligence which nature, always so miserly, bestows on very few. By 1866, when he was only 22 years old, he had already obtained the rank of doctor in physical sciences from the university of his native city. From then on he dedicated his life to research and teaching, offering classes in Vienna, Munich and Leipzig. He occupied his free time in accumulating amorous disappointments. The almost devilish ability he showed throughout the length of his existence to untangle the mysteries of the physical world was compensated by a definite incapacity to comprehend the not less mysterious feminine nature. Interested, like almost all the physicists of his time, in the energy processes related to thermal machinery, he was the first to propose the mathematical foundation for a recently discovered thermodynamic property and it had overturned the theoretic apparatus of classical mechanics: entropy. For Boltzman, entropy, that tendency towards disorder that the molecules which comprise a system manifest, which is associated with the generation of a sort of degraded energy that cannot now be useful for performing work and which condemned the universe to thermal extinction, only could be explained in statistical terms. Acute reasoning, solidly based, led him to conclude that the entropy of a system is in direct relation to the logarithm of the population of molecules that comprise the said system. Put otherwise, the entropy is the sum of the probabilities of the various types of movement, apparently chaotic, that the molecules of a system display. When Boltzman proposed his theory, in the scientific world the idea was universally accepted that all the laws of physics could be explained in absolute terms; it was unthinkable, and even heretical, to suppose that nature might manifest itself in an episodical manner, that the results of its actions had to be subject to the rule of probabilities. Whoever would dare to postulate that possibility was condemned to be considered a madman, in the best of cases, and a fool, in the worst. Boltzman dared to postulate that possibility and they did treat him as a madman and a fool. The scorn which that man suffered perhaps might only be comparable to that suffered by Galileo and Giordano Bruno three centuries previously; but, in the final account, these latter were vilified and humiliated by the chiefs of the Catholic church, an institution that could not be more distant from science. However with Boltzman it was his own colleagues who took upon themselves to convert his life, in itself nothing pleasurable, into a calvary; something that doubtless would have made the suffering of this man even greater. Not many years passed such that, after the discoveries of Plank in 1900 and of Einstein in 1905, probability would have a definitive reception in the theoretical body of modern physics. Of course, Boltzman was the first vindicated when the air of uncertainty was imposed on the thought of the men of science; the scorn was transformed into homage. But it was late: sick and exhausted, Boltzman shot a bullet on the 5th of September of 1906. Upon his tombstone, in the manner of an epitaph, is engraved the equation of entropy for which he literally gave his life. A true Romantic. 7 November 2003 9. We are nothing The universe is nothing more than totality not being what I know it is. PAUL CLAUDEL WHEN it was our eyes that established the magnitude of distances and the nature of things, the universe was relatively small and furthermore was finite. Even though the observer of the firmament during a clear, moonless night has the sensation that there are an immeasurable number of stars, in reality there are rather few: something more than 6,000. And they had been counted since dozens of centuries ago. Thus then, the sun, the moon, the earth, six planets, various comets, and around 6,000 stars comprised the universe. There was sufficient space out beyond the sky to accommodate the kingdom of the heavens and in the entrails of the earth to have room for hell. The dimensions of the totality were so reduced that the grandeur of God could be sufficiently measured by the ocean, for, as the theologians informed us, the magnitude of the Creator was so astonishing that in a fold of his eyelid there could comfortably fit the entire oceanic sea. Compared to the dimensions of the universe which today are known, that medieval god would be tinier than a bacteria. With the invention of the telescope the universe began to grow and man to shrink. When the firmament is observed through a telescope with a refraction as rudimentary as that which Galileo used, the number of stars that are seen is, in effect, immeasurable and new celestial bodies also appear, whose existence had not been suspected yet which had always been there, like some of the moons of Jupiter. In the times of Voltaire, the universe was already a respectable conglomerate of millions of celestial bodies, our sun being only one more of them, and not, certainly, one of the greatest size. Nietzsche affirms that it was in that epoch when God died, perhaps overwhelmed by the dimensions of that which he supposedly had created and without doubt dejected by the formidable power of Reason, which, in the final analysis, occupied his place and rules from then on in an even more despotic way than its predecessor. The age of Reason is the age of capital, of machines and technology. And the latter is responsible for the improvements that were gradually being made in telescopes. The observations that were made in the formidable reflecting telescopes fabricated during the first decades of the last century achieved spectacular results: it was discovered that our known universe, the Milky Way, was only one amount hundreds of billions of conglomerations of stars called galaxies. Thus, the universe turned out to be hundreds of billions times larger and ourselves, in consequence, an equivalent amount smaller. Yet the matter does not seem to stop here: the recent observations of the Hubble telescope have caused the astronomers to suspect that the dimensions of the universe should be revised upwards. Some even think that probably the whole known universe is not more than a conglomeration of hundreds of billions of galaxies that might be seen as a luminous point (like a quasar) from a neighboring universe. Soon we shall know is this supposition is correct. And if it were, if the universe were hundreds of billions of times larger, we would remain chillingly close to nothing; and certainly Reason, our tyrannical goddess, then should cede her place to something more powerful that could cope with so much grandeur. Perhaps it could be Unreason. Maybe its reign has already begun and we still have not noticed. 1 December 2005 10. In the field of the physical field SCIENCE, especially physics, has taken many words of the common language to denote the phenomena that it studies. Thus, terms like force, work, potential, resistance, capacity, and even mass acquire, in scientific discourse, a different meaning from that which we are accustomed to attribute to them. It is true that the opposite also occurs: some words which the men of science have proposed to denote events or objects observed in their field of knowledge have translated themselves into common speech with a meaning not always corresponding to the original. Words such as energy, entropy, valence, gene, clone, electricity, or fractal continually appear in our discussions and writings. Out of the set of these ambivalent words, to call them something, there is one that always has commanded my attention, as much for the meaning, or meanings it has in everyday speech as for that in the lexicon of physics: field. The Dictionary of the Spanish language informs us that the word comes from "Lat. campus, a flat plain, field of battle." Field, then, we call an open space, extended and delimited, as might be an area for playing soccer; but we also call field that which is beyond the limits of an urban area, the open space, populated with trees, mountains, fierce animals and sometimes peasants, the span between one city and another. Alternatively, the field can be an imaginary space which has room for diverse objects, concepts or themes that have something in common: we speak of the field of science, the field of literature, the automotive field, the field of communications, etc. Here, the initial idea of open space becomes something wide and spacious yet also closed, closed upon itself; therefore, under this usage, the word field is synonymous with sphere. In physics, the word field, without losing its association with a space and a sphere, acquires a more enigmatic and suggestive meaning given the contradictory nature that is implicit in the concept. To explain: the same Dictionary of the Spanish language defines the term field as is employed in physics as a "magnitude distributed in space, through which actions among particles are exercised at a distance, such as the electrical field or the gravitational field." Thus then, the physical field is the space wherein action at a distance between the material particles is manifested, yet is, at the same time, that manifestation. When we observe an object, a tree, for example, what arrives at our retinas is the result of the interaction between the electromagnetic field of the light that falls upon the object and the electromagnetic field that the object itself emits. The light that the object does not absorb during that interaction is that which, reflected, reaches our eyes. What we see is the space that that body occupies which at the same time is filled with the energy it emits; that which we see, ultimately, is the field of that object. The same again occurs with touch: when we caress a beloved being, in reality we never make contact with the particles that comprise her body; they are so incredibly small and are separated by such incredibly great spaces, that it is practically impossible to be able to touch them with our own particles, which are equally small and are equally separated. Such that, if the particles that give body to our beloved, and to ourselves, did not fill the space they enclose with a field of force, our hand would cleanly pass through the beloved's body as if it were a ghost. If the particles that exist in the sun did not create a field of gravitational attraction, Earth would never have remained trapped beneath its beneficent light and heat, which also are fields. The absence of the physical field is, it may be, the best definition of the slippery philosophic term of nothingness. 4 April 2004 11. The peacefulness of anonymity OVER THE LENGTH of a life it is almost a rule that we remember one of the elapsed years as very special or unique. For one reason or another, be it tragic or joyful, there are years that are not forgotten. Without a doubt, for Albert Einstein that of 1905 was one of those. In 1901, at only 22 years of age, and recently graduated from the Swiss Polytechnic Academy, he established himself in the city of Bern. There he found employment that for the run of humanity would signify a well-remunerated activity which requires at least eight hours a day to accomplish. It was in the post of examiner for the Patent Office of that city. Upon the desk of the young physicist there regularly accumulated very singular documents: technical descriptions of strange apparatuses accompanied by a set of plans, schemes and protocols that illustrated the descriptions. The work of examiner consisted in studying those documents, decoding the intricate plans and schemes to opine, in the end, whether the proposed invention was effectively useful and whether, in its design and functioning, it was not a plagiarism of another already patented invention. We said above that for ordinary mortals such work would require one's full time, but not for Einstein. His special intelligence allowed him to decode the mechanism of any invention, utilizing only a fourth part of the time that any other person would require. Thus, in each workday during those mild years between 1901 and 1905, Einstein dedicated six hours to meditate and reflect in turn upon his favorite study term: physics. With the copy of some plan spread across his desk, which he appeared to observe intently so that his colleagues and his boss believed he was absorbed in understanding an invention, his mind, in reality, was churning in the arcane mysteries of electrodynamics, quantum mechanics and Brownian movement. He did not need to take notes nor put the complicated equations that skimmed through his neurons onto paper; he had the ability to manipulate them mentally. Upon arriving home he took advantage of the hours after dinner and before retiring to draft that which he had contemplated during the day. The fruit of that calm labor, which he realized far from the academic hallways, where he was perfectly unknown, he published in five brilliant scientific articles in that memorable 1905. Three of them (that referring to the mathematical explanation of the movement of particles in suspension; that in which the discoveries of the recent quantum theory are applied for the first time to take account of the photoelectric effect, that is, the phenomenon through which luminous energy is converted into electric energy; and lastly, that which seated the groundwork for special relativity) represented a revolution in the world of physics comparable to that unleashed by the great Newton 200 years previously. Beginning with those publications, Albert Einstein forever abandoned the peaceful anonymity in which he had lived up to then and became, very quickly, the archetype of the man of science in the 20th century. His fame became universal and his peculiar personality legendary. His fertile mind did not stop working until the last day of his life, and the contributions that he made to the science he loved so much are many, yet, as he himself recounted. the marvelous peacefulness in which he live the first years of the century, when he was completely unknown, immersed in cryptic plan and schemes which he feigned observing attentively while his mind traversed the limits of the universe, that calm he now would never again discover. 19 October 2005 12. Simplicity The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is at all comprehensible. Nature hides her secrets because of her essential loftiness, but not by means of ruse. ALBERT EINSTEIN IT MAY seem paradoxical, but the paradigm that guided Einstein throughout his entire scientific work was simplicity. He was firmly convinced that the universe encloses some general laws in its breast, diaphanous, simple and beautiful, which make sense of everything that happens, that has occurred and that will occur in it. The work of the scientist consists in revealing them. And that they have been doing for at least 2,000 years. It so happens that the master plan which the "Old Man"--to use a term that Einstein enjoyed--guards so jealously is not easy to divulge; as Heraclitus has well put it, "Nature likes to hide." What the men of science have done is to advance by removing one by one the veils that wrap those universal laws. Thus, when at the end of the 17th century the great Newton proposes his theory of gravitation, it seemed that, at least concerning the movements he details, the discovery of the key to that master order had at last been achieved. More than two centuries later, Einstein, appealing to simplicity, demonstrated that Newton's theory is no more than another veil behind which the true plan hides. The German never appreciated the existence of space with absolute referents propounded by the Englishman as the basis for his theory of uniform rectilinear movement. There was no way to experimentally demonstrate the existence of such space and, what was the most important for Einstein, the master plan ought to be simpler, that is, should apply to whatever system of reference, a system for which to say "the earth revolves once a day" should be equivalent to saying, "the heavens daily revolve around the earth." The special theory of relativity resolved the problem: it does not require that the existence of a space of absolute referents be postulated; it accounts for rectilinear movement in any system and the laws of physics remain invariable. And not only space lost its absolute character, but also time itself: Einstein demonstrated that time, far from being a continuous and independent transformation in which movement occurs, is a physical variable associated with this, which can shorten or prolong itself according to the reference system from which it is measured. The only thing postulated as an absolute in the special theory of relativity is the speed of light in a vacuum, a phenomenon that has been experimentally proved innumerable times. Einstein lingered more in publishing his theory than in focusing his activity upon the comprehension of a more complex phenomenon: the curvilinear and accelerated movement of the celestial bodies. Here apparently there was nothing objectionable in Newton's theory. The planets and the stars move with chronometric precision in accordance with that theory. Perhaps the movement of Mercury from time to time deviated from the standard of Newton's laws, but in such small magnitudes that it could well be treated as measurement errors. It was not this phenomenon that provoked Einstein's interest; of late it was a supposition of Newton's theory that contradicted the famous simplicity which the famous German required of the theories of physics. In his laws of movement, Newton asserts the existence of inertial mass, that is, the magnitude with which any body opposes a change in its state of movement or repose. The greater the mass, the greater the force that must be used to move it. Elsewhere, in his theory of universal gravitation, Newton proposes the existence of gravitational mass of bodies; this is, that magnitude by which one body attracts another. In principle, these two magnitudes are different, but in fact have the same value. Why this may be so has no explanation in the Newtonian theory; it would be, in the final analysis, a happy coincidence. Yet Einstein, as opposed to Malcolm Lowry, disliked coincidences. For him it was evident that there should be a simple and logical explanation that would account for the equivalence between the two magnitudes. He dedicated ten years of his life to the search for such an explanation. And in effect, the general theory of relativity which Einstein proposed in 1915 to take into account the contradiction between inertial and gravitational mass is, in logical terms, much simpler, but indubitably more complex in its mathematical formulation and almost impossible to demonstrate experimentally. The theory, building on what he had discovered in special relativity, postulates that there is no difference whatsoever between inertial and gravitational mass simply because they are the same thing: in the same way that Maxwell demonstrated that electrical and magnetic phenomena can be explained in terms of the field of forces they generate, the mass of any object generates a gravitational field that has the ability to curve the space that surrounds it. The planets revolve around the sun because they are trapped in its gravitational field, and not only in a spatial continuum but also in a temporal one: the gravitational field is manifested not in three dimensions as in Newtonian space, but in a fourth, the three already familiar spatial ones and a fourth spatial-temporal dimension which causes an event to be unique in any system of reference. Because there is mass in it, the space of the universe must be curved; and if it is, it should have a limit. For the first time in the history of physics, a theory establishes the possibility of measuring the universe. Of course, and as occurred with the special theory, when the velocities that are in play are small compared to that of light, Newton's theory of gravitation is converted into a special case of the theory of relativity. Thus, everything that Newton advanced is conserved, at the same time that phenomena which depart from his theory, as in the case of Mercury's movement, now are explained by Einstein's new theory: at some point in its orbit, Mercury approaches so close to the sun that the effect of the star's gravitational field upon its trajectory can be observed and measured. But the theory had another consequence which also could be measurable: the gravitational field, if it is very intense, is capable of bending the trajectory of light itself. In 1919 there was to occur a total eclipse of the sun that was not expected to confirm or refute the theory of the German physicist. Directed by the English astronomer James Jeans, a team of scientists went to a place in Africa where the eclipse could be observed in its maximum splendor. They photographed the light of the stars nearby to the sun and determined their trajectory. They confirmed, without a doubt, that the rays of light provenant of those stars had deviated from their trajectories due to the gravitational field of the sun to just the degree that had been predicted by Einstein's theory. When Jeans' experiment was made public, an unprecedented phenomenon of social communication occurred: the print media of those times (1919), perhaps fed up after four years of transmitting information about the Great War, discovered in the theory of relativity and in Einstein himself a rich vein for attracting readers. It became fashionable to speak of physics and of the scientists. The "Swiss Jew," as the English called him, had revolutionized our conception of the universe, the journalists affirmed, with unforseen consequences. Thanks to an English astronomer, who verified the theory of the wise Swiss Jew, they insisted, the world would not be the same. Now we know that even the universe has a limit. Announcements like this appeared in surfeit in the European press, accompanied by erudite editorials, in which (with all seriousness and despite that very few people in all the world rightly understood the new theory) they discussed the potential of the theory of relativity in the field of social science, philosophy, religion, and even mysticism. Einstein, then, is the first scientist in history to attain the fame and the popularity of a movie star or of a boxer, something which, on the other hand, never pleased him: "Like the man in the fairy tale who turned everything he touched into gold - so with me everything turns into a fuss in the newspapers," he said with a certain sadness to his friend, the physicist Max Born, in a letter from 1920. With this achievement behind him, the "Swiss Jew" or the "brilliant German scientist," as his countrymen called him (in post-war Germany Einstein became something of a symbol: "Even if the English defeated us with arms," one could read in a newspaper of the day, "we have defeated them with intelligence: a son of Germany has corrected and superseded the Englishman Isaac Newton." That would not last long, and already at the beginning of the 1930's viewing the advance of the National Socialists, Einstein commented to a friend: "Soon I shall become a Swiss Jew here") did not interrupt his work at the University of Berlin where, certainly, he never felt comfortable, now focused on a struggle that would last the rest of his life and in which he could not prevail: to demonstrate that the recently founded quantum theory was intrinsically erroneous, for it contained at its core a principle that Einstein's idea of simplicity could not accept: that of uncertainty. 26 October 2005 13. Determinism and uncertainty God may be subtle, but he isn't mean. ALBERT EINSTEIN IN 1927 THERE re-united in Brussels, as they had done every three years, the most distinguished physicists in the world to plan and discuss the most recent advances in their science (the so-called Solvay Conference). There, the Danish Niels Bohr expounded before the participants the fundamental principles of quantum mechanics, a new science that precisely described the phenomena that occur in the world of the atoms. The theory rested upon a fundamental principle that recently had been proposed by the young German physicist Werner Heisenberg, and which could be summarized as follows: it is impossible to determine with absolute precision and in a simultaneous manner the position and the quantity of movement (product of the mass and the velocity) of a photon or of any subatomic particle. That is, the greater the certainty one has of the position of a particle, the greater will be the uncertainty with which its amount of movement is measured, or the reverse. The degree of uncertainty is proportional to a fundamental physical constant which Max Planck had proposed 25 years previously and whose value was experimentally established in an uncontroversial way. One immediate consequence of this theory was that, as had happened before with thermodynamics thanks to the work of Boltzman, again a statistical method was employed to describe certain natural phenomena. The old determinism on which classical mechanics was based, and including the theory of relativity, could not account for the subatomic world; the certainty of finding or describing a physical property needed to be replaced by the probability of doing so: it is possible to establish the maximum probability of finding an electron in a given place at a given velocity, for example, yet it is not possible to establish those coordinates with absolute certainty. Nature now presented itself as not only hidden, but also busy. Confronted with the impeccable arguments, as much theoretical as experimental, with which Bohr supported his presentation, all the participants at the conference accepted the new theory and prepared to struggle with probability in their future investigations. All except one, who, curiously, was the most famous and respected: Albert Einstein. Einstein did not accept that nature might behave in that way. His celebrated phrase, "God does not play dice," was a concise, but precise, way of expressing the conception that the German physicist had of the world of physics. He accepted quantum mechanics as an approximation, as another veil behind which the Master Plan we cited previously hides, yet in no way did he consider it a theory that would account for what truly happened in the deepest of microcosms. Behind it there should have been a simple, elegant and precise theory that would describe those phenomena without the need for appealing to probability or uncertainty. In other words, Einstein never accepted that chance should be an innate characteristic of the physical world we inhabit. There should be a determinate order in it, everything being a question of discovering it; behind the veils of uncertainty, the certitude that it is possible to fully determine what occurs would reappear triumphantly. He dedicated the rest of his life to a search for that certainty and was unsuccessful; however he never recognized that his lack of success implied that the universe is probabilistic. Nevertheless, and even though it would weigh on Einstein, everything seems to indicate that God, in effect, plays with dice. 2 November 2005 14. Wave or corpuscle IT IS KNOWN that this year, 2005, has been dedicated around the world to physics, with the impetus of the publication, in 1905, of three articles by Albert Einstein which revolutionized that science. Indubitably the most well- known of the three is that which expounds the fundamental principles of the special theory of relativity. It seems right to me that it should be so, given that that theory, in radically changing the conceptions concerning time and space that were held up to then, postulates the enormous quantity of energy that accumulates in the mass of a body in repose; energy that explains the light and the heat that we receive from the sun and which was experienced in the very flesh of the unhappy residents of Hiroshima and Nagasaki 60 years ago. However, even though they are not as spectacular as that dedicated to special relativity, the other two articles, the one focused on the mathematical description of Brownian movement and the other an explanation of the photoelectric effect, turned out equally valuable in the construction of two crucial fields of modern physics: mechanics and quantum mechanics. I shall refer now to the photoelectric effect. The nature of light is a theme that intrigued men of science since very remote times, although its formal study (that is, in the terms we understand today as scientific) commenced at the end of the 16th century with a singular experiment performed by the indefatigable Galileo and whose intent was to measure the speed with which light travels: one night he placed an assistant atop a mountain in the region of Tuscany armed with a lantern. Galileo, equipped also with a lantern and a timepiece, located himself on the crest of another mountain, some miles distant from the first. The idea was that when he would allow light to be emitted from his lantern he would begin to record the time on his clock; at the moment when the assistant would see the light emitted from Galileo's lantern, he would uncover his own lantern such that, when the wise man would receive the light transmitted by his assistant, it would measure the time taken by the luminous ray in travel and return. It was enough to divide half of this time by the measured distance between the two mountains to calculate the speed of light. In the end, the experiment failed: light moves with very much more velocity than was suspected by Galileo; such that, his assistant should have been located on the moon so that Galileo might have a couple of seconds to measure on his clock. Almost a century later, in 1675, the Dane Olaus Roemer managed to calculate this cipher, using the eclipse of a satellite of Jupiter as his "distant witness." From then on light was considered a physical phenomenon that could be measured and observed. Also beginning then there ensued a polemic that lasted more than 100 years about the physical nature of light: there were many who thought they dealt with a wave movement; others, who were fewer, affirmed that it was transported in corpuscles. Isaac Newton was the most distinguished defender of the corpuscular theory of light; his principal opponent was the Dutch Christian Huygens, a highly reputed scientist of his time, who was firmly convinced that light is propagated through a wavelike motion, similar to that of sound or to the waves in water. But the authority of Newton, above all in the last years of his life, was practically absolute, such that his viewpoint was imposed upon almost all the scientific circles of the 18th century. Goethe himself, as we have already noticed in another section, shared this theory with the great English genius, although in almost everything else referring to optics he held very different conceptions from those of Newton. At the beginning of the 19th century the British scientist Thomas Young (to whom we also owe the meaning that the word energy actually has) performed some experiments with luminous beams which achieved very enigmatic results; so much so, that not even Young himself was capable of explaining them: he observed that if one causes a beam of light to pass through an orifice or collide with an obstacle, the beam is distorted, such that the contour of the shadow it projects is not perfectly sharp, but instead that it has a softer edging composed of luminous stripes and dark stripes (a phenomenon that is known as diffraction of light). A little later, in 1814, the French physicist Jean Fresnel, who curiously was born in the town of Broglie (below it will be seen why that fact is curious) would demonstrate that the phenomenon discovered by Young could not be explained in the terms of the corpuscular theory, for if light were a flow of particles, upon colliding with a body, the particles would rebound or else the particles that do not collide with it would be free, such that the shadow that is projected should be perfectly sharp. On the other hand, if the light is propagated in the form of waves, then it would be distorted upon hitting the object, just as occurs with waves in the water or with sound. Later this same Fresnel demonstrated that two beams of diffracted light, as also occurs with waves of water and with sound, are capable of forming dark lines as of interference upon entering into contact. In terms of the wave theory the phenomenon of interference is simple to explain: when the crest of one wave coincides with the valley of another wave, they annul each other; or else, when crests coincides with crests or valleys with valleys, the waves augment in size, which explains the dark lines next to the brilliant ones that form when two beams of diffracted light coincide. In terms of the corpuscular theory it is impossible to explain this phenomenon. Thus, from then on no respectable scientist placed the wave theory of light in doubt, although not everything was resolved. When it was verified without any room for doubt that light was capable of traveling in a vacuum, the wave theory confronted a serious challenge: it was known that wave motion consists in the transmission of energy through a medium. There can be no water waves without water, nor sound without air or some other medium to transmit it; how then could light transmit itself without relying upon a physical medium to transport it? The proofs in favor of the wave theory of light came to be so overwhelming that there was no other remedy than to posit the existence of a hypothetical medium which would transport it; a medium so subtle and so rapid that it even filled a vacuum. They called such a medium the ether, and, despite that it was practically impossible to detect, no one put its existence under doubt; or almost no one, because Albert Einstein did not like, as we have previously said, that the existence of something be accepted that could not be experimentally checked. In 1905 Albert Einstein, who at that time peacefully labored in the Patent Office of Bern, Switzerland, knew very well of the work that the German physicist Philipp Lenard had done some years before and which brought him to discover the phenomenon that today is known as the "photoelectric effect." Lenard found that on causing the incidence of a monochromatic light beam of high frequency upon the surface of a metal, a certain quantity of electrons detached from it, as a consequence of the luminous energy they absorbed. Logic told Lenard that if the luminous source came nearer to the metal, the electrons would absorb more energy and, to that extent, would be separated from the surface with more rapidity. However, reality showed something else: upon bringing the light source closer to the plate, there emerged more detached electrons from the metal, but with the same velocity. The experimenter was unable to explain this phenomenon; nor could he do so with the experiment he subsequently performed: he held the luminous source in a fixed place and what he now changed was the frequency of the light; he then discovered that, the greater this was, the electrons emerged from the plate with a greater velocity. The wave theory of light, which he considered as a continuum of energy traveling through the ether, could not satisfactorily explain those phenomena. Lenard's work slept the sleep of the just throughout various years, until the youth employed by the Bern Patent Office was able to unveil the mystery. And if light, Einstein asked, behaves in a manner similar to the energy of radiant heat, as the German physicist Max Planck demonstrated five years previously, does it not transmit in continuous form but in small "packets" or quanta? Considering light thusly, that is, as a flow of corpuscles that carry a certain quantity of energy which is, in turn, proportional to the frequency, the enigma of the photoelectric effect was immediately resolved: upon those corpuscles of light--or photons, as they would later be called--colliding against the surface of the metal, the velocity at which they are detached from it will depend on the energy of the photons, that is, upon their frequency, while the quantity of electrons that emerge from the plate will depend on the quantity of corpuscles that collide with it, the latter increasing or diminishing depending on the nearness or distance of the source of light to the metal. To confirm his brilliant hypothesis, Einstein demonstrated that the energy associated with each photon is proportional to the frequency using the same constant that Planck had discovered for quanta. From then on the ether was transferred to the books of history and curiosities of science: no one could simply demonstrate its existence because it did not exist. Again the German genius had managed to make physics more simple. Although the price that he had to pay was high: the explanation of the photoelectric effect represented one of the portals of the quantum theory; a theory that, as we have mentioned, Einstein never liked, for it carries uncertainty in its core. In the decade of the 1830's, also now thanks to Einstein--who rescued from oblivion the acceptance of the doctoral thesis of a complete unknown--the Prince Luis de Broglie (the birthplace of Fresnel, with whom this story began) wrote that light manifests properties of particles or of waves according to the phenomenon to which it is subject, while with matter something more occurs: the material particles (such as the electron) in certain situations and ranges, can behave like a wave. But that is a different story. 9 April 2005 15. A quantum leap FOR THE THIRD or fourth time I have read the word quantum in the one of those speeches full of imprecision and chimerical promises which so appeal to our president Fox. Without going further, this past Friday, in a meeting with the country's district attorneys, which dealt, supposedly, with the prickly matter of security, the neo-philosopher of San Cristóbal said, amidst other nonsense, "The quantum growth of security in Mexico is about to take off..." so as to conclude, later, referring to the indicators of security: "However good it is, it is not enough. We must make a quantum leap and we must do it quickly!" Like many others, the word quantum, as well as quanta, derived from the Latin quantum, entered into the lexicon of our speech through science: towards the end of the 19th century the German physicist Max Planck surprised the scientific community of his age by propounding a bold explanation for the until then incomprehensible phenomenon of radiation from a darkened body. Planck postulated that the only way to explain the spectrum of emission that is observed from a superheated body was to suppose that the energy which said body absorbs and emits comes to it and is emitted in a discrete and discontinuous form. He called this type of capsule in which energy is transmitted a "quantum," from Latin for "packet" (translated as "quantum" or "quanta"). Likewise, he proposed that the energy which each quantum possessed was an exact multiple of a universal constant that he named h, and which today is known as Planck's constant. This proposition caused an enormous commotion in theoretical physics. Until then no one had doubted the notion that energy is transmitted in a continuous manner, like a wave in the sea, a like a sound through the air, and upon this fundamental notion physics was structured, which today we call classical. In fact, Planck himself did not view his discovery with much enthusiasm; he was convinced that its hypothesis was simply an approximation to reality and that, sooner rather than later, a new theory based on the continuity of energy would explain the phenomenon of the black body. But it was not so. During the first decades of the 20th century, Planck's constant occupied an important place in the mathematical formulation of physics and quantum mechanics became the inevitable choice for understanding the microworld of the atom. What happens is that the value of that constant is so incredibly small (6.62% of 10**-27 ergs per second) that one can explain the apparent contradiction between the continuity and discontinuity of energy: for the dimensions to which we are accustomed, these packets of energy are so minimal that even with the most sophisticated instruments we see their energy as a continuous flux. Something else happens when we approach the atomic and subatomic world; there the dimensions are sufficiently small so that the discontinuity of energy not only will be evident, but it will be the only way to explain the observed phenomena. Thus then, classical physics continued to rule in the world of our own dimensions (it is not necessary to accede to quantum mechanics to describe, for example, the motion of a ship or a plane) while quantum mechanics seated its reality in the world of the infinitely small. So does Fox really know to what he refers when he speaks of the quantum leap that we must make against insecurity? In fact, this has been the problem: the government of change has made innumerable quantum leaps toward the well-being of the populace. That is, dixit Planck, it has not advanced an iota. (NOTE: In the Oxford dictionary there appears as one of the meanings of quantum leap, "a sudden large increase or advance," which confirms that our first dignitary, when he thinks, does so in English.) 30 April 2005 16. Enrico Fermi (1901-1954) IN THE University of Chicago there is a commemorative plaque that says: "In this place, on the 2nd of December of 1942, man produced the first self- sustaining chain reaction and, with that, initiated the controlled use of nuclear energy." The plaque refers to the date in which, for the first time in history, an atomic pile or nuclear reaction was put into operation. The director, and one could say also the soul of the project was the Italian Enrico Fermi, perhaps the greatest Italian scientist since Galileo. Born in Rome the 28th of September in 1901, from a very young age he gave indications of having an exceptional intelligence and a clear vocation for the physico-mathematical sciences. At the age of 21 he obtained his doctorate at the University of Pisa and continued his studies of theoretical physics in Germany under the tutelage of Max Born. By 1930, at only age 29, he already was a prestigious physicist renowned in the highest circles of the creators of this science. In that very year he departed from theoretical physics (in which he had made very important contributions, especially to the study of gases) to dedicate himself to experimentation. That is where his genius shone most brightly. The discovery of the neutron in 1932 on the part of the English scientist James Chadwick literally presented Fermi with a most powerful weapon for studying the intimate nature of matter. The neutron, by not having an electrical charge and thereby not being repelled by the atomic nuclei that always carried a positive charge, turned out to be a penetrating projectile which was capable of striking the heart of the atom and, thereby, provoking its disintegration. More than 40 elements were subject to bombardment by neutrons in the laboratory of Enrico Fermi at the University of Rome, and from that he obtained spectacular results: he managed to synthesize various elements beginning with others (the ancient dream of the alchemists) and even to create the first synthetic element that would occupy place 93 in the periodic table, next to uranium (from which it was born) and which is the heaviest element that exists in nature. The pioneering work of Fermi has allowed the experimental physicists to create more than 15 new elements (indeed the number 100 carries the name, fermium, in honor of the Italian physicist) that only exist because man exists. The terrible fascism that darkened Europe during the fourth decade of the 20th century caught him in full creative work. Fermi, who absolutely did not sympathize with the despotic regime of Mussolini (that, additionally, seriously threatened Laura, his wife, for she was of Jewish origin), tried to abandon Italy beginning in 1936. The authorities of that country did everything possible to impede this exodus, and perhaps he might have stayed there except for a fortuitous intervention (supported however by his enormous talent): in 1938 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics. Fermi took advantage of the trip to Sweden for the purpose of receiving the prize to voyage from there to the United States accompanied by his family. In this country he immediately resumed his labors; now directed towards obtaining a chain reaction in the nucleus of the plutonium atom. As we saw, in 1942 he was able to place into motion an apparatus that generated controlled thermal energy derived from the disintegration of the atomic nucleus. Those works were a key piece in the complex gears of the Manhattan project, which culminated in the sinister explosion of the atomic bomb over Hiroshima. Fermi, who always was opposed to the military use of nuclear energy, used his final years to fight against the proliferation of atomic weapons. Defeated by cancer, like many other scientists who devoted themselves to the study of radioactivity, he died November 28th, 1954. He was only 53 years old. 23 November 2004 17. "Like a Christmas tree" THE MORNING of the 6th of August of 1945, after a sudden flash of light, so intense that it seemed a piece of the sun, a giant cloud of smoke and dust arose over the Japanese city of Hiroshima. The column that, against everything that might be supposed, did not take the shape of a mushroom, rose up, twisted and black, several miles to acquire in the end a capricious figure that resembled a Christmas tree, as would later be recounted by one of the crew members of the airplane that transported the singular gift that the United States government presented to the empire of the rising sun. With that, the vast universal history of infamy opened a new chapter; one of the most atrocious, to be sure: 75,000 persons lost their lives as a direct consequence of the explosion. Hundreds of thousands more would later die from the consequences of the radioactivity freed by the uranium bomb. Three days later, the 9th of August of 1945, other thousands of unfortunate inhabitants of Nagasaki, a small commercial port to the southeast of Hiroshima, came to know the enormous destructive force that plutonium too is capable of liberating, the material of which the second bomb that fell on the islands of Japan is made. The tragedy that these two martyred cities suffered already 60 years ago was the culmination of a sinister process that had its roots 15 years previously, in the laboratories of experimental physics and in the classrooms of theoretical physics of Germany, Italy, France, England, and the United States, and in the confluence of politics and economics. Few times in the history of humanity has the mix of science, politics and the economy been so, literally, explosive. From the viewpoint of the first, everything began the 17th of February of 1932 when the Englishman James Chadwick, disciple of the legendary Ernest Rutherford, discoverer of the atomic nucleus, sent a letter to the magazine Nature in which he announced the discovery of the neutron. Until then the students of the atom could only utilize alpha particles and protons as projectiles to bombard the atomic nuclei and thereby provoke nuclear reactions that resulted in the transmutation of the elements, that old dream of the alchemists. In fact, it was Rutherford himself who succeeded, in 1919, for the first time in history, in transforming one element into another: upon bombarding an atom of nitrogen with alpha particles, he obtained from it an atom of oxygen and one of hydrogen. But the alpha particles and the protons have the disadvantage of possessing a positive electrical charge, the same charge that the nuclei of the atoms have. The strong electrical repulsion that particles with the same charge manifest makes it very difficult for there to be a collision. Many alpha particles are required, at very high velocity, to obtain a few collisions. On the other hand, the particle discovered by Chadwick has the enormous advantage of being electrically neutral, which is what notably enhanced the possibility that the atomic nuclei would collide. Armed with this new projectile, German, Italian, French, English, and American investigators happily joined the task of bombarding myriad substances and elements with neutrons. This frenetic activity soon yielded fruit: in 1934 a team of Italian scientists, headed by Enrico Fermi, announced the ephemeral existence of the transuranic elements; at the beginning of 1939 the Germans Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann introduced the scientific world to nuclear fission. Six years before, in 1933, when a year had still not elapsed since Chadwick's discovery, Adolf Hitler was named chancellor of Germany, and the second front was opened which led to the holocaust of Hiroshima and Nagasaki... In 1987 the chemist Horacio García Fernández published, under the imprints of the National Polytechnic Institute and Alhambra Mexicana, the book entitled The bomb and its men. In it he provides a brief, yet well documented, account of the complex process that led to the fabrication of the atomic bomb, placing special emphasis upon the handful of men of science who participated in the scientific and technological aspect of that process. Among them he highlights, in my understanding, the Hungarian Leo Szilard, a true modern Prometheus who, like the Greek giant, brought fire to mankind and, like him, paid a high cost for his audacity; although in his case it was not an eagle that was assigned to torment him, but instead the gang of politicians, military and businessmen who made the worst of his predictions come true. While still a youth he abandoned Hungary disgusted by the dictatorship of Béla Kun. But he chose a bad country in which to start his life again: "He emigrated to Berlin, where he matriculated in the university and began to study theoretical physics under the tutelage of masters such as Einstein, Von Laue and Max Planck." In 1932, with Adolf Hitler as the resplendent chancellor of Germany, Szilard, who was of Jewish descent, already understood that in that country there would be no place for him. He then emigrated to England and ultimately found shelter in the United States. Gifted with a fine intuition, as well as having a solid scientific foundation, he may have been the first to take note of the enormous potential that surrounded the discovery of the neutron. Long before Hahn and Strassman announced the phenomenon of nuclear fission to the world, Szilard had already pondered it, and had concluded that the energy which could be liberated from such a process would be of incalculable magnitude. When, in 1939, nuclear fission was a reality, Szilard, now located in the United States, tried to convince his colleagues, as much in that country as in Europe, that they make a sort of pact of silence: the phenomena that they were observing in the atomic nucleus should remain a secret; something like what the Pythagoreans did 2,500 years previously, fearful that their arcane wisdom would fall into evil minds. But no paid attention to him; the competition for the Nobel Prize was too attractive for withholding secrets. Seeing that it was impossible to deter the pathway that he knew would lead to a terrifying bomb, he changed his strategy. He then dedicated all his efforts to ensure that that sinister artifact would be implemented in the United States before in Germany. He knew perfectly well that capability of the physicists who had remained in that country; he also knew that the German invasion of Norway guaranteed Hitler access to the heavy water that abounds in that Nordic nation and which is indispensable for obtaining enriched uranium, and had no doubt that the Nazi tyranny would do everything that might be necessary to fabricate an atomic bomb. Leo Szilard, together with his countryman Edward Teller, who some years later became the sadly celebrated father of the North American H-bomb, began a campaign of persuasion among the U.S. political and military classes concerning the feasibility of creating a bellicose device that could incline the balance of the war in their favor with one sole apparition. Furthermore, he wished to convince them that, if they did not make one first, the Germans indubitably would finally manufacture the bomb. It was not a simple task: the proverbial ignorance by the politicians of everything that is not falsified statistics or late-night lessons from Machiavelli turned out to be a most difficult barrier to surmount. The great academic prestige that Szilard and Teller enjoyed among their colleagues meant nothing to the men of the Pentagon and the White House. They had, then, to seek an unimpeachable authority to convince them. Who other if not Einstein? It is told that Leo Szilard and Edward Teller convinced Albert Einstein to write a missive to President Roosevelt with the goal of explaining the advances to him that had been achieved in the investigation of the atomic nucleus and the possibility, deriving from them, of creating an explosive device of immense potency. Einstein, although not too sure that it would be possible to make such a bomb, acceded and placed his signature on a letter dated the 2nd of August of 1939 yet drafted almost in its totality by his colleagues. Perhaps only the following fragment may have been written by Einstein himself, and it illustrates very well the underestimation by the learned man of the energy that could be unleashed by the atom: A single bomb of this type, carried by boat and exploded in a port, might very well destroy the whole port together with some of the surrounding territory. Nevertheless, such bombs might very well prove to be too heavy for transportation by air. Today we know that the bomb could indeed be transported by plane and that it was capable of destroying not only a port, but an entire city. In the letter he also informed the president how scarce uranium was (the prime fundamental material for a chain reaction) in the United States, while it abounded in Czechoslovakia (by then under the control of Germany) and in the Belgian Congo. He had, then, to take measures to guarantee access to the mineral in its African source and thus to take the lead over the Germans in the atomic race. The letter arrived on Roosevelt's desk two months later and, contrary to what might be thought, did not have much impact upon the spirits of the president: he authorized a grant of 6,000 dollars for nuclear investigation and filed away the proposition for more than two years. Towards the end of 1941, when the United States was on the verge of involving itself in the world conflict, the project of creating an atomic weapon gained vitality. Einstein now had nothing to do with that; it was more a complex interlocking between military, scientific and industrial interests that resulted in the authorization, on the part of President Roosevelt, of the ultra-secret Manhattan Project, whose aim was to fabricate an atomic bomb before Germany, for which an estimated billion dollars were invested. In reality the project cost 3.5 billion dollars and involved thousands of persons and the most powerful companies in the United States. At last, on July 16th of 1945, when the Nazis had already surrendered two months ago, the first atomic bomb was exploded in a southern desert in America. Szilard, frightened before the might of the weapon that he had created, and convinced of its uselessness now that proud Germany was defeated, made an even greater effort than he had done before to persuade the powerful of the possibility of making the bomb, but now to dissuade them of using it, yet Japan continued at war with the United States and it was no secret that Harry Truman (the new U.S. president following the demise of Roosevelt) pondered the possibility of using the weapon against the Japanese empire. In this case the efforts of Leo Szilard were useless: the fate of Japan was cast. It was not, as has been argued interminably, the need to save lives of North American soldiers, nor the urge to intimidate a victorious Soviet Union that drove Truman to take that terrible decision. In fact the fundamental reason why the bombs illuminated the skies of Japan during the awful summer of 1945 was the investment of 3,500 million dollars that had been made and which, the market dictates, needed to be justified. 6 August 2005 18. Archimedes of Syracuse (c. 287-212 BC) IT IS SAID that science is a human activity which is nourished by curiosity, ingenuity and intelligence. The great Archimedes, perhaps the premier physicist in the modern sense of the word, completely represented these attributes. His intelligence led him during his youth to abandon the island that saw his birth to study science in Alexandria, the mythical cradle of wisdom in those times. With a solid repertoire of knowledge to his account he returned to Syracuse to share it with his compatriots. It is said that his fame as a wise and devilishly ingenious man began when he could solve a problem posed by his parent, King Heron of Syracuse: the sovereign had directed a goldsmith to make a crown for him with of certain quantity of solid gold which he gave him for that purpose. The king wanted to know whether the artisan had deceived him, that is, whether or not he had added copper or silver to the gold he had received to create the diadem. But the adornment was so lovely that Heron did not want to destroy it to resolve the enigma. How could one know if the crown was pure gold or a mixture without putting a sample of it into the crucible? A truly complicated problem. Archimedes spent several days turning over the matter without finding a response. To the delight of the historians, and of the novelists, the solution to the riddle lit up his mind just when he found himself submerged in a bathtub, perhaps washing or maybe relaxing his body. He observed that, as he entered the water, a certain quantity of it overflowed the bathtub and concluded that that amount corresponded to the volume of his own body. He then understood that it was enough to submerge the crown in a receptacle full of water, measure the quantity that is displaced and compare it to the amount displaced when a gold bar which weighs the same as the crown is submerged: if both replace the same amount of water, then they both are of gold; in the contrary case, the sly goldsmith should tremble for his life. Happy with his discovery, the scientist began to run naked through the palace shouting: Eureka, eureka! (I found it!) like one possessed. Thus, the genius of Archimedes, in addition to unveiling one of the fundamental principles of hydrostatics, introduced the most precise and correct word to express any discovery. Yet that was only the beginning. The works of this Greek in the fields of theoretical and practical physics and in mathematics are as extensive as they are varied. To him we owe a methodology sufficiently precise to calculate the value of pi, for example, as also the use of the endless screw, the explanation of the principle of the lever, and the use of concave and convex mirrors. Even though he did not highly estimate his abilities in practical physics, or technology, as we call it today, the ingenious artifacts that he designed during the last months of his life for a long time held off the overwhelming Roman legions who sacked Syracuse. The populace of the ancient Greek city viewed with great pride the portentous talent of one of their sons who held the brute force of the nascent empire in check. Another legend, even more moving than the eureka one, recounts that he met his end while completely absorbed in his scientific meditations. A Roman legionnaire who patrolled the recently conquered Sicilian city came across an elderly man who drew strange marks in the sand with a stick. The soldier ordered him to get moving and leave the premises. The old man responded not to bother him. The military man, with that abominable arrogance inherited by the imperial soldiers of today, cut short the life of the genius with slice of the sword. They say that history repeats itself: how many wise men are losing their lives in the streets of Baghdad? 18 January 2005 19. A Christmas gift BY THE end of August, Hannah Ayscough now had no doubt that she was pregnant. Three months without a period, added to the nausea and dizziness that swept over her during the last weeks and the pain that she sometimes felt in her breasts, which certainly were becoming harder and more swollen all the time, could mean nothing else. She decided to tell her husband. And she would do it that same night, when he would return home after being a month in London. She did so during dinner. It cost her effort, was as if she had to reveal something sinful or improper. She began talking about the weather while they ate their soup and, when they arrived at dessert, after having told him everything that had happened in the house and in the town during the days she had not seen him, she still had not dared to give him the only truly important news. "Why is it so difficult for me to tell him," she thought. In truth, she knew the answer: her husband was the most methodical and orderly person she had ever known. And it was not currently in his plans to have children. He had said it very clearly the first night that they slept together: We should be very attentive of your lunar cycles, Hannah. For you to become pregnant now would be inopportune. It is first necessary to complete the arrangements for the house in Woolstorphe, and that is going to take at least a year; furthermore, my position in the market is still not sufficiently solid. To raise a child is a very serious matter, my dear. Thus, scrupulously attending to the dictates of nature, which he considered infallible, he only joined his wife's body the three days before and the three days after her period. Perhaps this passed through Hannah's mind, or at least the phrase she chose to begin her confession so indicates: "Dear friend, nature has failed us..." The expression that was written on the face of her husband upon hearing the unexpected news disconcerted Hannah: he did not show anger, nor opposition, nor annoyance, nor even surprise, but rather there came to his eyes, though he tried to conceal it with an affable and magnanimous smile, a profound sadness. "Say nothing, if God has willed it thus, we shall comply with his designs. I shall speed up the arrangements for the house as much as possible." Two months later, during a night in October of that fateful year 1642, Hannah understood the gesture of sadness that had shadowed the face of her companion when he learned that they would have a child. Seeing that same face now serene, pale, with the unmistakable aureole of mortality etched in his pupils, the woman discovered that her husband had for a long time been conscious that he was dying. The impact of that unexpected demise almost costs Hannah the fruit that she carried inside her: a copious bleeding announced the imminent miscarriage. But that did not occur. After the crisis, the foetus continued on in the maternal womb. The family doctor, considerably pessimistic about the possibility the woman had to save her offspring, prescribed that she remain in bed until the delivery arrived. It was an icy and extremely sad autumn. Hannah, with her sight almost always fixed on the great oak which shaded the garden of the home, begged God for the life of her child, and asked him too to make the time pass more quickly. The supreme being paid her little heed, at least regarding the second wish, because never in the existence of that poor woman had the days flowed more sluggishly. Winter arrived placing a mantel of cold and snow upon the already frigid autumn. Such a brutal winter had not been recorded since the days of the Republic. It was the Christmas holidays when Hannah noted in the diary that she had begun when she was assigned to her bed: "December 23rd. Today completes, according to my calculations, seven months. Good Lord! Still two to go. Can I withstand them?" On Christmas day, Hannah remained alone in the house. Her mother and her uncle went to visit the Hardins to give them their greetings and some gifts. With her vision set on the oak tree, which now was like a giant snowman, the woman felt a sharp pain in her belly. It only began to dissipate, when she felt one even more intense. There was not a third; what there was instead was a tiny creature who struggled weakly in a puddle of blood. The cry the woman uttered reached the ears of Anne, the servant, who in an instant was at the side of her mistress, helped her to cut the boy's umbilical cord, wiping him with a moist sponge and wrapping him in some clean sheets. Hannah contemplated the infant: small and squalid like a rat out of water and, worst of all, hardly moving and breathing with apparent difficulty. She did not want to see him so as not to bond with him, for it was evident that he would not be long in dying. She asked Anne to place him in a basket and take him to the house next door. Then she requested her to go to church to find a pastor so as to give extreme unction to her son. "What a sorrowful gift you have given me, Father! Could you not wait two months so that he would be capable of surviving? Why did you want to take the right to live from him? Have I been so wicked that I merit this punishment? Or perhaps it is that You..." and interrupted her reflection, for she knew that she was one step from blasphemy. The minister delayed two hours in arriving. "The deceased is in the house beside here, father," Hannah said as soon as she saw him. The man returned with a small bundle in his arms. "No one is dead, Hannah, the creature is alive. What we must do is baptize him immediately, for in truth I do not believe he will last long among us. What would you like to name him?" Fearful of the hope that was awakening in her chest, Hannah hesitated. No, she was not going to name him Jonathan, as had been decided with her husband. That hope, which grew moment by moment, and which told her that the boy no only would be saved, but that he was going to be a great man, perhaps an immortal man if he could now manage to survive; it was that hope that inspired her to name him after the son of Sarah who also was born by a miracle. "He will be named Isaac, father," she said at last. And the gift was called Isaac that the Lord gave to Mrs. Newton the Christmas of 1642. 24 December 2004 20. Solitude and the scientist THE ENGLISH physicist and chemist Henry Cavendish is the most distinct example of a man solitary and devoted to this work, or even better, his passion. The grandson of the duke of Devonshire on his father's side and of the duke of Kent on his mother's, Cavendish was born in Nice the 10th of October in 1731. He arrived in the world quite far from his ancestral lands due to the fact that his mother was ill and the doctors had prescribed the more benign Mediterranean climate for her. Even so, the woman died and left her second offspring at two years of age an orphan. Back in England, the aristocratic youth studied first at a school in Hackney and later at Peterhouse College, in Cambridge, where he finished his studies in 1753 without having obtained his title. Here is where the singular personality of this individual begins to be revealed: despite his brilliant intelligence and his undeniable dedication to study, he could not obtain the degree offered by his institution simply and clearly because he was incapable of confronting his advisers in the oral examination with which he needed to defend his thesis. Perhaps because of his hesitant way of speaking, and surely due to his taciturn and reserved temperament, Cavendish demonstrated a timidity that bordered on muteness. He spoke with very few people and as infrequently as possible. Even his brother he only saw for a few minutes each year. The only thing that connected him to the world was science. For love of it, he was able to spend some years in Paris studying and, upon returning to London, to participate every Tuesday in the meetings organized by the Royal Society of Sciences. The rest of the time he passed locked in his library and study. At 40 years of age he inherited an ample fortune which transformed him into one of the richest men in England. In that era, perhaps convinced that there was little left for him to learn abroad, he shut himself in his library and study (which was five miles from the Cavendish home) and practically did not emerge from there until 40 years later, when his mortal remains were taken to Cathedral of All Saints, in Derby, on February 24th of 1810. He never married and it is unknown whether he may have had an amorous relation with a member of one sex or another. He was so unsociable that every morning he left the instructions for the help of what he wanted for dinner that day on the dining room table and had a prohibition for his maids, under threat of firing, to appear before his sight while he ate. Even so, one could not affirm that Cavendish had been a misanthrope. At least what he did when he inherited his fortune was not misanthropic: he constructed a physics laboratory and a library for those who shared his vocation and talent but not his resources, and financed their work. The Cavendish Laboratory for physics still exists in England, which has seen various Nobel laureates pass through its premises. Dedicated to his science like no else I have heard of, the volume of Cavendish's work is astonishing, as much for the breadth of its fields of physics as for the chemistry it borders upon. But the good Englishman was also antisocial regarding glory: he deigned to publish very few of his studies and when he did so it was because he was convinced that he had not included the smallest error in his data. More than 50 years had to pass after his demise for the scientific community to uncover the grandeur of this strange personage. In 1798, Henry Cavendish accomplished one of the most ingenious and complicated experiments known to the history of physics, which permitted him to be the first man who could measure, with sufficient precision and certainty, the mass of the Earth and, thereby, that of the sun, the moon, and the planets known in his day. How could one person enclosed in a laboratory of no more than 100 square yards measure the mass of our planet and, even more, that of the gigantic star whose light is responsible for the miracle of life on earth? As we have seen, 100 years previously, a countryman of Cavendish, the great Isaac Newton, posited the theoretical basis that inspired our hermit to perform his brilliant experiment. In 1689 Newton published his Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica, a monumental work that established the principles of modern physics. One of the most important conclusions to which the learned Englishman arrived after revising the movement and character of the laws that direct it, is that bodies are attracted with a force that is proportional to their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance that separates them. He expressed this relation through the equation F=G m1m2/r**2, where F is the gravitational force, m1 and m2 the bodies' masses and G a proportionality constant he named the universal gravitational constant. Newton could not calculate the value of that constant, since the force of gravitation is very weak and to measure it one requires, either a very large mass (such as that of the earth or the moon which, of course, Newton did not know) or an incredibly sensitive instrument capable of measuring the minuscule gravitational force produced by a smaller body. The patient Cavendish was able to design and implement that instrument. He suspended a rod from a fine wire at its center and at each end of that rod placed a small lead ball. Upon applying a slight force to the balls, the rod turned and the wire twisted.He then brought two enormous lead spheres close to the rod and the gravitational force between the different spheres caused the wire to twist. He measured the torsion in the wire and with that, the force applied to it, and also measured the mass of the spheres and the distance separating them. With these data, he could find the constant G from Newton's equation. Upon knowing the value of this constant, the equation could be utilized to calculate the mass of any body. The earth, for example, according to Cavendish's calculations, should have a mass of 6,600 trillion tons and a density five and a half times greater than that of water. With spheres that could be weighed in grams and kilograms, he calculated magnitudes of trillions and quadrillions of tons. A true portent. Even though it is simple to describe, Cavendish's experiment is devilishly complicated to realize and requires such fine precision in the measurements that it is almost inconceivable that our cloistered character accomplished it with an instrument practically made with his own hands. The experiment by Cavendish illustrates like few others the enormous potential of scientific thought. After more than two centuries since he performed it, the mental acuity of the man who designed and executed it still surprises us, just as does the portentous intelligence of he who conceptualized the gravitational force. 10 September 2005 ASTRONOMY 21. Poor Mars! IT COULD BE said that since a few months ago, namely since its orbit approached Earth as it had not done for many years and thus allowed us to contemplate it in all its rosy splendor, the planet Mars has become fashionable. Indeed today there are two robots upon its surface. One, the European Beagle-2, unfortunately has remained mute since it arrived there, last Christmas eve. The other robot, the American Spirit, succeeded in emerging from the shell that protected it and has begun a hesitant traversal over the craggy surface of that planet, at each moment sending splendid digital photographs of everything its sharp eye considers of interest, and likewise with its sharp instruments pinching those rock samples that could hold the mysteries of life in their crystalline structure. Elsewhere, a European probe, the Mars Express, in Martian orbit since the past 25th of December, also has begun to send lovely photographs of the valleys of Mars which it manages to snap from an altitude of 175 miles where it is found orbiting the red planet. Ever since the telescopes of the end of the 19th century discovered some strange formations upon the surface of Mars reminiscent of earthly canals, the idea that that planet might harbor life, or might have had it during remote times, has awakened many persons' imaginations, just as many more are interested to know if we are not alone in the universe. As for the first, the imagination, myriad men of letters have endeavored to populate the red planet. I only refer to two, perhaps the most conspicuous: H. G. Wells and Ray Bradbury. The vision that each of these authors has of the hypothetical inhabitants of Mars could not be more contradictory, although at the same time, at least from my point of view, in their synthesis they capture what it is to be a human being. In his War of the worlds, Wells describes some highly technocratic Martians, aggressive, with an iron military spirit of conquest. A vision very similar to that an Iraqi shepherd might have had when he was the hordes of U.S. soldiers invading his territories. On the other hand, the inhabitants of Mars that Bradbury describes for us in his Martian chronicles are sweet, peaceful beings, with handsome golden eyes which can see, in the world of the spirit, much further beyond than most earthlings, as might belong to a resident of a secluded monastery on the skirts of the Himalayas. And as for the second, the obsessive search for any indicator of life, however slight it might be, that might exist on that planet, it is always paradoxical that so much intelligence and of many resources are spent on that desire, in that effort to find on Mars if only a crystallized sample of a protein or an aminoacid, while here, on the old Earth, where billions of live beings are found, we condemn a live species to extinction every day. It is tempting to think, playing with astrology, that this Martian fashion may be a consequence of that Mars is the god of war of the Greek Olympus, given that the somber times in which we live are, indubitably, ruled by that ferocious deity. To top it off, the warrior George W. Bush, the high priest of Ares the god of war, were he to know that oil exists beneath the Martian surface, would threaten to colonize the red planet beginning in 2030, in what would come to be a fatal inversion of the Orwellian war of the worlds. Poor Mars! 29 January 2004 22. WIMP or MACHO? FOR A long time the astronomers suspected that the objects we can observe in space (stars, cosmic dust and other celestial bodies such as planets, asteroids, comets, etc.) did not represent the totality of the mass of the universe. There must exist, they thought, an important percentage of that mass which is constituted from some form of material that cannot be detected by a telescope (they called it "dark matter"). At the beginning of 1993 a note was published that caused great expectation among astrophysicists and cosmologists because it confirmed their suspicions, although one could say it did so in excess: observable matter represents less than ten percent of the total mass of the universe. They arrived at this conclusion after a long and meticulous study performed using the satellite-observatory of Rosat x-rays to observe the distribution and the temperature of some intergalactic clouds that are found in the small galaxy group known as NG 2300. The information that this satellite received, together with the assumption that the clouds are attracted by gravity to remain in the vicinity of the star group, permitted Rosat's scientific team to calculate the mass of NG 2300. They concluded that the visible matter in the star group only represented four percent of its total mass (with an upper limit greater by 15 percent). Thus, we know now that 90 percent of the universe is comprised of dark matter; said differently: 90 percent of the mass of the universe is invisible even though we have it practically before our noses. At least that is what sustains the group of cosmologists who defend the hypothesis, grounded in the theory of the Big Bang, from which almost all the dark matter is formed, from a sea of hitherto undetected elementary particles with exotic properties and strange names (axons, magnetic monopoles, Weakly Interacting Massive Particles or WIMP) that fill space. All descend from the Big Bang; the visible matter is a minimal part of that which, initially through complex gravitational interactions, and later nuclear, formed the celestial bodies. Science requires that hypotheses be demonstrated through experimental observation. That is done by the defenders of the hypothesis of "cold" dark matter, as the elementary particles that surround us are called: in a tunnel at the High Energy Physics Laboratory at Stanford University, a giant germanium and silicon crystal detector has been installed, which is sensitive to the ionization that is produced when an atomic nucleus collides with a WIMP or some other obscure dark matter particle. It took a long time and much patience for enough collisions to be observed so as to confirm the hypothesis. Another group of cosmologists holds a diametrically opposed hypothesis to explain the abundance of dark matter in the universe. They think that almost all of the undetected mass is found in objects resembling stars or planets which are found in the halo that surrounds the galaxies and which, for various reasons, do not emit sufficient light for them to be identified. Curiously, these objects are called MACHO (for their initials in English: Massive Compact Halo Objects). Another possibility is that the mass is to be found in extinguished stars and, of course, in black holes, objects so formidably massive that they do not allow even light to escape from their gravitational field. As opposed to that which happens in many parts of the world, it has not been at all easy for the scientists to find the MACHO. Taking advantage of potent modern telescopes (those that are found on the surface of our planet, as well as those that orbit around her), during the past decade three teams of scientists began an intensive search for the MACHO, employing a method suggested for the first time by the astrophysicist Bohdan Paczynski, of Princeton University. The technique involves study of the systematic variations in the intensities of light from millions of distant starts over the length of several years. The technique's principle consists in that when a MACHO crosses the line of light emitted from a faraway star, the gravitational field of the dark object would focus the ray of light, like a sort of lens, such that the terrestrial observers would see a momentary increase in the brightness of the star. Since then a good number of MACHO have been detected, yet not enough to account for the enormous percentage of the mass of the universe that is represented by dark matter. The discussion, then, still has not been resolved, although everything tends to suggest that both hypotheses are correct; that is, the universe's dark matter very probably is comprised both of a sea of elementary particles that uniformly swamp it (WIMP) and of very massive and compact objects that do not emit visible light (MACHO). What is fascinating in all this is to ask oneself why the scientists use so many resources and so much grey matter to resolve the enigma of dark matter. At first sight, it does not seem overly important to detect something that persists being undetected and which, in the last instance, has little or no effect upon our life on the planet. What demons interest us in knowing of what dark matter is made, a pragmatist could ask, apparently with reason. That makes me suspect that the pragmatists of scientific know-how are not as progressive and humane as their apologists suggest. In fact, if before initiating any attempt to know or understand anything we asked questions like the previous, it is very probable that, to paraphrase Voltaire, "we would still walk on four feet and live in the treetops." Any cosmologist would tell us that if the nature of the dark matter of the universe were understood, we would be much closer to understanding how and when it was (or was not) created, and how and when it will disappear (if it is to disappear). Perhaps knowing this does not resolve the thousand and one deprivations confronting human life at the dawn of the third millennium. But certainly, in the search for those answers, and above all in the questions we in turn ask of the universe around us, we encounter what is most profound in human nature. Even though the road that we choose may be very long, it is effective in any event: in knowledge of the universe, the result is knowing ourselves, as the oracle of Delphi counseled, and maybe there are only "machos" in the halos of the galaxies because on our planet there will be found nothing but true human beings. 6 June 2004 23. Caduceus: the wand of Hermes IT IS TOLD that Rome often suffered from scarcity during the turbulent times that followed the expulsion of the Tarquinians. Various religious innovations were tried then to propitiate the gods, and in 495 b.C. the Greek god Hermes was introduced in that country, with the Italian name, Mercury. His temple on Aventine Hill was converted into a sort of headquarters for commerce in grain and for the marketeers (mercuriales) who traded it, although soon it again became the object of the cult of merchants in general. Its annual festival fell on the ides of May, the day to which his temple was dedicated, perhaps to coincide with the festivities of Maia, the mother of the god. Her statues were erected in the commercial section and the water of the sacred fountain, near Porta Capena, was used by the merchants in a brilliant ritual they performed on May 15th. In the Roman statues Mercury carried a caduceus, a very rare element in Hellenic representations, yet which would come to be the universal symbol of commerce. Mercury, who like the furious Achilles also had winged feet, gave his name to the smallest of the great planets, with a radius of only 1,500 miles, and is found closest to the sun, at only 37.5 million miles from the surface of our mother star. But this small homonym of the god of the Roman marketeers may be the most eccentric and enigmatic of the interior planets. It is indubitably eccentric, for it has the most elliptical orbit of all its major brothers, with a difference of almost 15 million miles between its perihelion and aphelion. It is not easy to observe this planet, given that, by being between the earth and the sun, it is visible only during the day. However there is no shortage of those who have done so, and thoroughly. Distinguished among them is the Italian Giovanni Schiaparelli, who after viewing the planet for nine years, using for that purpose a refractive 18-inch telescope (an advanced instrument in its day) concluded in 1889 that Mercury's orbit around the sun takes approximately the same time as for it to rotate on its axis (between 88 and 116 days). That is, as occurs with the moon for the earth, Mercury always presents the same face to the sun. To be precise, 37 percent of its surface never stops facing the sun, while an equivalent amount is never reached by its rays. The difference in temperatures between its illuminated side and its dark side is abysmal: more than 430 degrees Centigrade for the one, less than 200 on the other. This causes the surface of the planet, especially that which is found between the luminous and dark zones, to be perpetually vibrating, literally crackling as a consequence of the brutal temperature changes. Therefore, despite being much smaller than the earth, it has a unique set of precipices on its surface that rise several thousand yards and extend hundreds of miles. We know of the existence of those cliffs and of innumerable craters, like those there are on the moon and on Mars, on the rocky surface of Mercury thanks to the images that were sent to our planet from the Mariner 10 probe on the 29th of March, 1974. These days, 30 years later, a new space probe, the Messenger, will be launched towards Mercury. After covering five million miles over seven years, it will enter orbit around the small planet. Perhaps then many of the mysteries will be clarified that surround the planet of the god of the caduceus. 3 August 2004 24. The war of progress THERE IS NO doubt that the human being is a curious (in both senses of the word) and contradictory beast. In the last 100 years, possessed by the demon of progress, we have unleashed a merciless offensive against our mother planet, and against ourselves. The role of this suicidal war could not be more sobering: many more than 100 million homo sapiens have died at the hands of other homo sapiens in some of the countless armed conflagrations that desolated the past century; thousands of animal and vegetable species have disappeared as a consequence of human activity; approximately a fifth part of the planet's fertile lands have been desertified or transformed into sterile urban blotches; the byproducts of our everyday know-how have contaminated sea, land and air (which furthermore we have superheated and even perforated its polar caps) and, the uncontrolled population growth of the human species has converted our world into a collection of asphyxiating neighborhoods. At this pace we soon will win this absurd war and obtain the merited prize for our determined efforts: the extinction of the human race. Yet before we said that we are contradictory: if indeed it is true that the cult of progress we profess has led us to worship mortality and destruction, it is not less certain that, at the same time, we feel a strong sympathy and attraction to life. In no other way can we explain the intense efforts made by men of science to discover forms of life in the most isolated regions, whether it be in the depths of the ocean, in the ice of the poles, in a scalding lake in the crater of a volcano, or even beyond the reach of our own planet. Many of us follow with enormous interest what is occurring with the expeditions to Mars and we share the hope that, on its desolate surface, some form of life will be found, even if it be a simple species of bacteria. With what reverence and care we would treat that hypothetical inhabitant of the red planet if some day it would fall into our hands! And we would do it, the same ones who eliminated thousands of animal and vegetable species from the surface of the earth. Lately, even more fascinating would be to find some form of life in the universe similar to ourselves. Although Isaac Asimov, in a thorough essay, has demonstrated that at least as far as current science knows it is practically impossible that we might make contact with an intelligent extraterrestrial being, a great number of scientists, and with powerful resources at their disposal, are immersed in that task. Logic tells us that life cannot exist on the stars; hence it would be a planet that might host it. On the planets that are near us it is improbable that intelligent life exists. One would have to search for it, then, outside of our solar system. Given the enormous dimensions of the universe and the relatively flimsy instruments available to us for observing it, until only a few years ago many scientists thought it would be impossible to observe a planet that was outside our solar system. Nevertheless, just ten years ago, towards the end of 1994, Alexander Wolszczan of Pennsylvania State University presented data that confirmed the first evidence of at least two planets around the pulsar star which carries the antiseptic name, PSR B1257. Since then more than 100 planets have been found outside of our solar system, with one of them, discovered in 2001 and which orbits star 47 of Ursus Major, having dimensions and physical characteristics very similar to those of Earth. Would there be life on it? Shall we arrive there someday? If we win the war of progress, surely not. 1 October 2005 25. Little green men EXCEPT FOR the legendary María the Jewess (inventor of the Maria's bath) and the more earthly Maria and Irene Curie, no other woman comes quickly to my mind when I consider names of famous scientists. It is not difficult to explain this scarcity in light of the despotic patriarchal system that has ruled in our world since the very origins of history. Luckily, beginning in the second half of the 19th century the participation of women in all the realms of human activity has multiplied exponentially. Not many years will have to pass in order for the new histories of distinguished scientists and artists to be much more equivalent in terms of their participation by gender. Perhaps one of the women who will appear in those histories will be the astronomer from Northern Ireland, Jocelyn Bell Burnell. The honor she gathered with her career is no small thing: together with her mentor, the English Tony Hewish, she discovered, at the end of 1967, the enigmatic pulsars or neutron stars. In an interview that was published in the splendid book by Horace Freedland Judson, The search for solutions. Joselyn gracefully recounts how she came to be an astronomer and, of course, how she achieved that notable discovery. Although from childhood she felt attracted to the study of the heavens, when she realized that a good astronomer must be willing to spend many nights by candlelight, she felt so dispirited (for she was an incurable nocturnal sleeper) that she was on the verge of seeking another activity. But a little later she also learned that a new branch of astronomy was rapidly developing which had its origin in radar and received the name of radioastronomy. The radiotelescopes allowed emissions to be captured from celestial bodies that were beyond the red of the visible spectrum. Thus, to the extremely vast universe that the optical telescopes had unveiled was added an equally vast universe of objects "invisible" to the light of the spectrum. The great advantage of this invention, at least for Jocelyn Bell Burnell, was that the observation of space with the radiotelescope could be performed in the plain light of day. The quasars, those strange objects that are found within the universe and which emit radio waves 100 or 1,000 times more powerful than any other source, were the first great discovery the radiotelescope permitted, back in the middle Sixties, and were observed for the first time by Martin Byle and Tony Hewish, lately the teachers of Jocelyn. Precisely in a project dedicated to the study of quasars was where Joselyn joined the team of English astronomers. Her work consisted in recording the signals deriving from quasars that were received by a great radiotelescope that had recently been constructed in Cambridge. The daytime signals emitted by the quasars flickered in a similar fashion to that of the stars in the night sky due to the solar wind. During the night, on the other hand, with the sun on the other side of the earth, the radio emissions of the quasars are continuous. One autumn morning in 1967, upon arriving at work, Joselyn found signals in the noctural register of the radiotelescope that seemed to derive from a flickering source. That lacked an explanation. Ironically, from then on, Joselyn spent many candlelit nights recording the strange emissions that came from a certain spot in the universe. The signals were so precise in their flickering that at one point she and her teacher came to suspect that they dealt with messages sent by intelligent beings, so therefore they called the source producing them, LGM-1 (Little Green Men). A while later they discovered that the little green men were, in reality, the most dense objects there are in the universe: neutron stars. 17 July 2005 26. Eros and NEAR THE VARIOUS traditions of Greek mythology are not in accord as to the origin of the unpredictable Eros. In some, he is given to us as the son of Chaos and, thereby, brother of Uranus (the Sky) and Gaea (the Earth) who descended from this same Chaos. This origin has its logic: so that Uranus would fall in love with Gaea and procreate with her the giants and titans who at first populated Olympus, the intermediation of the god of Love was necessary. If one of the fatal arrows of the young god had not pierced the heart of Uranus (or of Gaea) it would have little served Chaos to procreate his two offspring: the Sky and the Earth would have passed eternity contemplating it and the progeny from whose children the gods and later humans descended would never have existed. Other traditions speak of Eros as the spoiled child of the fearsome Aphrodite, who used him for the purpose of punishing the mortals who spurned her by casting arrows of love at them and thereby complicating, to the end, their existences. Remember, for example, the proud Hippolyte and the cruel destiny to which the beautiful goddess sentenced him. Since the young man only had desire for the chaste Artemisia and rejected the promiscuous Cypriot, she punished him, ordering her son to cast one of his infallible arrows at...Phaedra, Hippolyte's stepmother. The result: one of the most beautiful tragedies of Euripides and an unforgettable lession: with love one does not play. Even so, I continue to think that the first version is more true to reality. Eros would be as old as the world itself if from its beginning he had been a motor that moved it. It seems that modern science also agrees with that version. In 2001, after 12 months of orbiting asteroid 433, named Eros (which, in fact, has the shape of a potato), the space ship NEAR (for its initials in English: Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous), settled onto the polished surface of the asteroid. It was the first time that an object elaborated by mankind had contact with one of those space bodies. The spectrum of gamma rays that NEAR displayed on board revealed that Eros contains little iron and aluminum compared to the great quantity of magnesium which comprises it. A ratio of that type is only found in the Sun or in some meteorites called chondrites, which are found to be among the oldest existing objects in the solar system. These observations, then, suggest that Eros was formed over four and a half billion years ago and has changed very little since then. Furthermore, NEAR also found that Eros does not manifest a magnetic field, as opposed to the ferrous meteorites. The latter surely were created through the fragmentation of celestial bodies and are more numerous in a belt of asteroids. Thus then, NEAR had the luck of approaching an object much more interesting than ordinary meteorites (asteroids that have landed on the surface of the earth) which we have known quite well for a long time. Eros is almost as old as our sun and indubitably carries many secrets in its venerable structure concerning the origin of the solar system, in the same way that the young god carries in his quiver the mystery of life. 15 October 2005 CHEMISTRY 27. Of words and elements I HAVE OFTEN been asked about what relation there may be between two activities so dissimilar as chemistry and literature. With time I have been polishing an answer that, of course, is much more literary than scientific in the same way that from 29 letters it is possible to construct a virtually infinite number of words from which, in turn, it is possible to construct, describe, transform, re-create, and imagine the world, and from the 92 elements that exist in nature it is possible to construct a plethora of substances containing them. The writer creates a world with words; the chemist, more modest, sometimes creates substances out of elements, otherwise is content with identifying the elements that comprise substances and showing how they are arranged in space; yet some of those substances, be they created, like aspirin, or discovered, like penicillin, can furthermore transform the world. In other words, what connects both activities could be the witchcraft: a good writer performs magic with her words; a good chemist, with what (s)he does with compounds. This analogy, which certainly has been very useful to me when interviewed, ultimately has not managed to convince me. I feel that what fails in it is the parallel I draw between a letter and an element. For, as much as I force myself, a letter seems to me nothing more than an absolutely impersonal sign. In an element, on the other hand, I find much more. A letter only acquires weight when it joins with others, while an element, in and of itself, has a meaning and, we would dare say, even a personality. Like sodium, for example, that unstable metal, always eager to release the solitary electron which occurs in the orbit most distant from the nucleus, I imagine as a red-headed meteor (occupying the 11th place on the Periodic Table, the color its flame emits is an intense orange), hyperactive and unstable, who only can succeed in remaining calm if the mass that weighs on its conscience is expressed. At the other extreme, I imagine radon, that noble gas which is found almost at the end of the Table, like a venerable and almost ethereal artifact completely divorced from earthly desires, radiating (it is radioactive) the infinite wisdom that only absolute repose can provide; I see it like an impassive Buddha in the family of the elements. Between both extremes there are a group of elements which, despite their names (since the lovely "la plata" is the only element with a feminine name) I consider undoubtedly feminine, those that form the sixth and seventh rows in the Table. Oxygen, in the very first place, comes to my mind as a quick-moving (and fast-acting) beauty, always avid to receive electrons, those subtle leftovers which the decomposition of sodium and its gang of alkalines so easily leaves. Competitive with oxygen, for brilliance and beauty, is chlorine, a being perhaps even more appetitive yet neither as young nor as robust as her rival. Silicon, mineral and stable, even though it is in the sixth row, I see as a sort of giant who sustains the world; or preferably who constitutes it, since this simple element, in conjunction with flighty oxygen, comprises the earth we walk upon. One could also mention the friendly and loving advances of carbon, capable of uniting even with itself, with unpredictable oxygen, with odorific nitrogen, and with tiny hydrogen (the smallest member of the elements and at the same time that which contributes to all) to form the myriad substances enclosing the secret of life. The next time they ask me what I mean by the above I shall answer that, in truth, there is a literary world in the chemical. I think that might be the best approach. 12 February 2005 28. The symbols for the elements ONE COULD say that physics attained adulthood during the second half of the 17th century, with the publication of Isaac Newton's Principia. Since then, with a solid, theoretical reference point and the fundamentals of a common language firmly established, that science has undergone an impressive development which has led it to investigate (and in many instances explain) that from the world of the incredibly small to that of the unimaginably large, covering, in passing, all the phenomena that occur at our own scale. Therefore, it could be said that physics' younger sister, chemistry, reached adulthood at 100 years following, in the second half of the 18th century, the publication of Lavoisier's Traité élémentaire de chemie. But, as distinguished from physics, the theoretical reference point from which chemistry began was not as solid and its language was still quite confused and archaic, for it inherited many terms and even concepts imported from alchemy, a beautiful, enigmatic and arcane hermetic philosophy, yet really not a science. To illustrate this, it suffices to say that long after the publication of Lavoisier's work (1789) the chemists still had not come to agreement as to the names of many elements and compounds, and even less on their symbols, since realistically, almost every chemist invented their own symbols to represent chemical substances. And so toward the end of the 18th century there appeared a book compiling the different names and symbols that had been published in the chemical bibliography of the day; 35 different names appeared in it and 20 distinct symbols for mercury, for instance. At the beginning of the 19th century, the great English chemist John Dalton, to whom we owe, among other things, the modern formulation of the atomic theory, attempted, drawing upon his great prestige, to impose on his colleagues the symbols he had designed. It consisted of curious graphics made of circles containing points and arrows who composition depended on the element. The proposed system did not please his contemporaries: the language of chemistry was complicated enough without making it more torturous with those strange symbols which required, further, a sharp visual memory to manipulate them. Almost at the same time another chemist, with a certain name in the scientific circles of his era, proposed some symbols distinctive for their simplicity and clarity. One simply had to take the first letter of the Latin name of the element and write it with a capital: thus, hydrogen would have the symbol H, oxygen O and carbon C, for example. In the event that the first letter has been utilized, then the second would be added in lower case: calcium would be Ca and helium He. To represent a compound, it would be enough to unite the symbols of the elements that comprise it: water (which has two hydrogen atoms and one of oxygen) would be H2O and ammonium, NH3. He who proposed such an effective and practical method (that still is being used) was a notable Swiss chemist named Jöns Jacob Berzelius (1779- 1848). Contrary to what we might expect, Berzelius was not a practical person. From early youth, and to escape from the poverty that assailed him, he embarked upon enterprises which in that time were considered absurd. For example, he ceased practicing medicine to dedicate himself to the business of bottling mineral water. He failed precipitously; who, except for Berzelius himself, could have it in his head that bottling water would be a good business? Different times, as who can doubt. 19 February 2005 29. A man of his time IN THE year 1527, in Basel, Switzerland, the printer and humanist Johann Frobenius, who enjoyed great prestige in Protestant intellectual circles of his era, fell gravely ill due to a poorly treated leg infection. His doctors concluded that the only way to save the life of the patient was amputating the infirm member. When they were on the verge of doing the surgery, a friend of Frobenius recommended to him that he should consult a young doctor recently installed in the village and who was beginning to be known for his excellent behavior, the bold thesis he defended from his post at the University of Basel and the prodigious cures that he had achieved using mineral substances. The young doctor arrived at the home of the printer and expelled the venerable doctors and their surgical assistants, then, reviewed the patient and diagnosed that the leg was not yet gangrenous, so that it was still possible to cure it with medications. He prescribed for him a series of compounds that he himself prepared and to apply certain ointments to the wound, also prepared by him. The result was astonishing: a few days after the visit of the new doctor, the master Frobenius resumed his morning walks. When a beloved friend and client of the editor, the great humanist Erasmus of Rotterdam, learned of the miraculous intervention by the mysterious professor from the University of Basel, he wrote him an effusive letter, which concluded with the moving phrase: "You have saved Frobenius, who is the half of my life, from the world of the shades." It suffices to say that the cure of master Frobenius accelerated the nascent fame of the young practitioner, especially within the circles of the Protestant thinkers who in those times were sustaining an arduous struggle against privilege, corruption and the anachronistic thought of the hierarchy of the Catholic church. In turn, the irreverent doctor unleashed his own battle against the medical practices of his day, which were based upon the undeniable teachings of the wise Greeks, Romans and Arabs who had died hundreds of years ago. Proud of his successful intervention in the case of the famous editor and from the hundreds of letters that he received from his patients to thank him for curing the terrible syphilis thanks to prodigious doses of mercury, he dared to display his attitude toward the old medical science with a bold gesture he enacted before the astonished eyes of his students and some curious onlookers in that same 1527: he threw onto the bonfire that the university held every year in front of the Basel cathedral to celebrate the end of the school year, an ancient medical text written by the mythical Galen and another by Avicena, the brilliant Arab disciple of Aristotle. The man who performed that symbolic act, which well might mark the origin of the new science and the inevitable decline of the old, had the impossible name of Phillipus Aureolus Thoephrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim. To our good fortune, he himself decided to substitute that bombastic designation with the pseudonym Paracelsus, which much better reflects his rebel spirit: Paracelsus means "superior to Celsus," and Celsus had been a Roman medical doctor, as celebrated during the Middle Ages as he is unknown today. Paracelsus was the last great alchemist and the first modern scientist; yet he was, above all, a man of his time: vital, innovator, violent, iconoclastic, sublime and grotesque, as was the Renaissance itself. Son of a doctor and of the superintendent of the Einsiedeln, Switzerland hospital, Paracelsus (c. 1490-1541) grew up and was schooled among doctors and patients. Perhaps that decided his vocation: although he engaged in many and varied activities, all, in one form or another, were related to the Hippocratic science. He pursued the medical curriculum at the University of Basel. His critics claim that he never got his degree. However that may be, it did not impede him from delivering a sermon at that same university some years after having studied there. When he emerged from the university, he travelled to the south of Switzerland, the Tirol, and worked for a time in the mines existing in that region. There he had the chance to understand in depth the art of mining, with its obvious difficulties and dangers; the nature of the mineral substances, and the sicknesses that afflict the miners. In that epoch they became familiarized with the alchemy of the Arabs, which had included from mineral salts to the classical elements of sulphur and mercury in the composition of the material principles of the geologic stone. Armed with this knowledge, and with the experience he had acquired concerning the mine's products and the diseases derived from them, Paracelsus developed a peculiar pharmacopeia grounded in mineral baths, opium, mercury, lead, sulphur, arsenic, and copper sulfate and popularized the use of alcoholic tinctures and extracts. We have seen that the pharmacists who worked with those substances had had a certain success curing syphilis and they saved the master Frobenius' leg. When he returned to Basel, he imparted lessons in the university about the procedures he had developed. In line with the spirit of the Reformation free in Switzerland, he delivered his lectures in German and not in Latin as had been consecrated by custom. Soon his novel and irreverent ideas, heightened by an eccentric and high- strung character, created serious conflicts for him with his colleagues which obliged him, in 1528, to abandon the university and the city and begin a lengthy peregrination through many locales of central Europe, including Colmar, Nuremberg, Appenzell, Zurich, Pfäiffers, Augsburg, Villach, Meran, Middelheim, among others, until in 1541 he found refuge and protection in Salzburg, thanks to the invitation made to him by the archbishop of the area which, although Catholic, were devoted admirers of the Swiss doctor. The enjoyment of being well received did not last long: that same year, perhaps exhausted by the vicissitudes he had suffered during the more than ten years of itinerant exile, his body gave up and he exhaled his last breath the 24th of September of that same year. His enemies, who always had been abundant, attributed his demise to alcoholic congestion; meanwhile his admirers maintained that Paracelsus met his end thrown down a steep embankment at the hands of some emissaries sent by doctors and pharmacists jealous of him. Whichever it may be, he was buried in the holy ground of the church of San Sebastián in that city. There his remains rest, in the shadow of the monument that was erected in his honor in 1752, when sufficient time had already passed to digest the life and work of this singular personage. The ideas of Paracelsus are a strange mix of old medieval precepts with novel New Age discoveries. They could never free themselves from the canons of the ancient world; yet, in turn, they inspired the beginnings of modern science. It may be that, in the long run, they did not add anything important to knowledge of medical science; yet they nevertheless revealed an attitude and intention that would be fundamental for modern medicine. In the works that he wrote during his forays, Paracelsus shows a genuine desire to promote the progress of medicine, although his abilities were not synchronous with his desires. He recommended simplicity in medical practice, yet his prescriptions were extremely complicated; he exalted observation and experimentation and affirmed that the doctor personally, and not through his assistants, should supervise surgical interventions, yet he refused to direct any operation except for lithotomies while, at the same time, proposing various new theories about the art of surgery. Fundamentally, his system was based on a Neo-Platonic philosophic vision in which the life of mankind is seen as inseparable from the life of the universe. For him, the Biblical limus terrae, the dirt from which man was created, is in reality a composite of all the beings previously created. Basically it is a compound of "salt," "sulphur" and "mercury," and the separation in the human body of those mystical elements is the cause of sickness. Such doubling is due to bad functioning of the Archaeus, a vital occult force that is situated in the stomach, whose function is to separate the useful from the poisonous. We have seen that, to treat illness, Paracelsus introduced mineral baths, added opium, mercury, arsenic, and other mineral salts to the pharmacy, and popularized the use of tinctures and alcoholic extracts, all with the goal of helping the Archaeus to adequately accomplish its functions. Given that the human body contains all the elements and needs them to cure its infirmities, the doctor, thought Paracelsus, should know the physical sciences and alchemy; similarly, he should know astronomy, because the stars not only influence health, but also man, like all material beings, is permeated by astral spirit. Finally, the doctor should know theology since, as well as body and spirit, the human being has a third factor, the soul, that was created by God, and for which the spirit is a sort of body. Around this singular character who, as we have seen, structured a unique system based, on one side, upon the spirit of observation and experimentation of modern science, and upon the eldest medieval superstitions on the other, many legends have been woven. Perhaps the most notable is of a manuscript attributed to him where he details the growth of a human embryo developing in the uterus of a mare: the sperm of a man was placed in the womb of the animal and a handsome fetus of almost seven months results which, unfortunately, died. In the document the experiment is described and is even accompanied with illustrations. One might judge that in fact it was completed notwithstanding a small detail, that the maternal egg to form the embryo is not mentioned, simply because in the times of Paracelsus this sexual cell was unknown. Manuscripts are also attributed to him where the formula and the experimental procedure appear that lead to the philosopher's stone and the elixir of eternal youth. Probably this is because during the 17th and 18th centuries Paracelsus was transformed into a legend among the alchemists, as had happened thousands of years previously with "Thrice Great" Hermes, and to him were attributed whatever novelties were emitted by the devotees of that arcane practice. Be that as it may, it is unpleasant to think that the Swiss doctor had been a great liar; we prefer to suppose he was a great dreamer. 26 February 2005 30. One must learn to dream NOT ONLY in literature and art is the capacity to dream, to aim the imagination beyond the physical world that surrounds us, the usual charge for the creative act; also in science it is common that dreams guide the task of the dreamer. Here we see a fine example. Benzene, the volatile hydrocarbon discovered by Faraday in 1825 and obtained for the first time in the laboratory beginning with coal tar by A. W. Hofmann in 1845, can be considered one of the fundamental substances of organic chemistry. From its derivatives can be obtained compounds with diverse uses such as colorants, medicines (the celebrated aspirin is one of them) or explosives (TNT is the most well-known). During the time when the peculiar characteristics of that substance were beginning to be discovered, the German chemist Friedrich August Kekulé (1829-1896) worked on the valence theory, that is, on the way in which the atoms of two or more elements link to form a compound. His investigations had led him to conclude that carbon is tetra-valent, i.e. that one atom of this element could combine with four other elements; he also affirmed that one, two or three valences of the carbon atom could join another carbon atom and thereby form chains. His theory permitted the establishment of the structural formulas for a great number of hydrocarbons, which is what, in turn, allowed other researchers to obtain innumerable new compounds. During the boom in what could be called organic chemistry, whose results in the fields of medicine, of polymers (plastics) and energy revolutionized the daily life of the 20th century, the condensed formula was discovered for benzene: C6H6. Thus, in some fashion six carbon atoms had to be united with six hydrogen atoms, while in accord with Kekulé's theory, the carbon maintains its valence of four. Before the apparent shortage of the hydrogen, it was a true challenge to propose a formula articulated for that substance, attributing a valence of four to the carbon. Kekulé confronted the challenge and after many attempts overcame it. He liked to recount how he arrived at the solution to the enigma. After various months of sterile efforts to capture the elusive formula, one night he had a visionary dream: he dreamt of six charming spider monkeys who danced, holding hands and with their tails erect, forming a circle that rotated endlessly. At first he gave no importance to the dream; yet it repeated various times, which caused him to suspect it contained some message. At last, one morning in 1865, Kekulé decoded that which his unconscious was telling him: the interlaced monkeys represented the carbon atoms in benzene united among themselves (for two valences), the tails were the unions with the hydrogen atoms (one valence) and the continual turning was the fourth valence, which alternately shared the six carbon atoms. The formula for the benzene molecule was unveiled. Kekulé depicted it as a hexagon with a carbon atom united to one of hydrogen at each vertex, and with a circle inscribed in the hexagon that represents the shared valence. To this day, that is the most common way of portraying that substance. "One must learn to dream," Kerkulé would note every time he concluded his story. We are sure that that thought is worthy and opens more possibilities for fruitful existence beyond multifaceted benzene. 6 March 2004 31. A mirror image AT THE 2000 Hanover fair there was a sort of telephone booth where one can see one's entire body reflected in a mirror. When I went into the area and saw my figure reflected in it, at first I did not get what was the point of that apparatus. I was looking at myself for a while and it did not take me long to notice something strange about the image which looked at me from the other side of the mirror: it was I whom I saw, in effect, but there was something odd about my reflection that made me think it was not completely me, but that whom I saw was something like an imperfect double of myself. At last, upon seeing the reflection of my left wrist, I observed that my watch was on it, on the left wrist of the image; that is, the image of my left arm was not in front of my left arm, as occurs in any mirror, but in front of my right arm. I then understood the nature of that device: through an optical illusion (based upon some side mirrors that I discovered later) the reflected image was not that of a mirror but instead the true image, such as one might see in a photograph. I spent a long time considering the time my mind had been distracted, thinking how little in reality we physically know of ourselves. The image of the face and of the frontal part of our body, in general, we see in a mirror and what we see (I now became aware) is considerably different from how we actually appear. The back side of our body is even more unknown to us; we rarely see it and when we do, it is through a mirror, which means, strictly, we do not see it as it is. Something similar occurs with our voice: that which we are accustomed to hear is different from that heard by others, since our own voice is heard from the outside and from the inside, which produces in our hearing a distinct tone and timbre from that heard when the voice comes from the outside. That is why all have had the experience of not recognizing their voice upon hearing it on a recorder, and find it strange, as the image of myself that I saw in that apparatus in Hanover was strange. A phenomenon also came to mind that occurs in some organic substances: optical isomers. This has to do with substances whose molecules have the same elements and the same amounts of them, yet arranged in such a way that their structures are the mirror images of each other, which the chemists call enantiomers. Despite being identical in everything, except the order in which their components are placed, these substances can have very distinct, even antagonistic, physical and chemical properties. Glucose, for example, has two isomers: dextrose glucose and laevulose glucose. They are mirror images of one another, the only difference being the place held by one of its components (one to the right, the other to the left). Notwithstanding, when these molecules unite to form long chains, those that are D-isomers form starch, the fundamental substance to provide calories to living beings. We all know how starch is: an amorphous white powder. On the other hand, the L-isomers form chains of cellulose, that is, the wood that comprises part of vegetation. Cellulose (except for some bacteria and insects that are capable of digesting it) does not provide nourishment to living beings. I cannot help thinking that if the being whom I see every day in the mirror were to fill with life, it would be an individual very different from myself, perhaps antagonistic and who knows what chains of relations would develop. 7 May 2005 32. Science and patience IT MAY be that the most important attribute an individual should have who decides to dedicate themself to scientific activity would be patience. The history of scientific projects is plagued with deeds which testify to this. Perhaps the most famous case would be that of the U.S. physicist Robert A. Millikan who labored for more than ten years and performed innumerable tests to succeed, at last, in experimentally measuring the charge/ mass relation in the electron. Another bit could be said of Paul Ehrlich, the discoverer of the first substance that chemically attacked syphilis, Salvarsan 606, so called because of the number of substances its discoverer had tested before arriving at that arsenical preparation against syphilis. Or of the team of researchers who spent long years literally plunged into the deepest mine in South Africa trying to detect neutrinos. Who can doubt these tasks being worthy of Sisyphus. In 1960 an enzyme called synthetic ATP was isolated for the first time. Beginning then, scientists from many parts of the world foundered in the search for its structure and functioning. It was not until 1994, ten years ago, that the team from the Molecular Biology Laboratory of the Cambridge Council for Medical Research, headed by John H. Walker, after 12 years of studying the biochemistry of that substance and its crystallization, succeeded at last in decoding a key portion of the atomic structure of synthetic ATP. In addition to being a beautiful example that patience is the most relevant quality for a scientific task, the discovery by Doctor Walker and his team opened unsuspected perspectives in medical science. Synthetic ATP is the central molecule in the generation of energy for almost all forms of life. This protein motivates (or is the catalyzer for) the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), a substance that warehouses chemical energy in a special link in its structure, called a high energy phosphate bond. When this link is broken, or is hydrolyzed, the stored energy is made instantaneously available. By means of some additional chemical reactions, this energy can be transformed, for example, into the necessary energy to cause muscle cells to contract, to convert amino acids into proteins, or to transmit signals across the nerve fibers. In animals ATP is formed in some cellular substructures called mitochondria so as to metabolize nutrients. Plants create ATP in the chloroplasts, where photosynthesis converts solar energy into chemical energy. The discovery by John E. Walker will help to answer many questions concerning the way in which living organisms produce energy. Walker also predicts that the establishment of the structure of this enzyme could shed new light on the molecular basis of aging: the mitochondrial genes, which direct the production of part of the synthetic ATP molecule, mutate in the nucleus of the cell at a much greater speed than conventional genes. Walker and other scientists suspect that the mutations accumulate with time as an organism ages. These changes affect the ability of the organism to produce energy, such that they perhaps are a key factor in Parkinson's disease, in Alzheimers and other degenerative illnesses of age. Paradoxically, time is the one responsible for cellular aging; but it is time itself, that which the men of science spend with such generosity, that may soon overthrow old age. 3 July 2004 33. Lucy turns 50 Our outer perception is an inner dream that occurs in harmony with outer things; and instead of saying that an hallucination is a false exterior perception one must say that the outer perception is a true hallucination. TAINE SINCE TIME immemorial man has utilized substances whose origin may be mineral, vegetable or animal to cure his ailments, to relax, to wake up, to go to sleep, to eliminate his adversaries and even to dream. The generic name for such substances is that of drugs. An elastic word that is, for to it equally are attached the synonyms medicine as well as poison, debt (here in Mexico) as well as lies (in Argentina) and applies equally to soft (Indica hemp, for example) as to hard (heroin and cocaine). The alkaloids comprise the most well-known family of drugs. They are called this due to the base or alkaline quality of the salts that are formed with them and almost all are substances of vegetable origin (some are of animal origin) which are characterized by causing some physiological effect on the human body. In 1816, the German chemist Sertürner announced that he had discovered a "new organic compound, alkaline, apparently related to the ammonium with which various salts had been prepared whose physiological action was harmless." We deal with morphine, which Sertürner had obtained from opium, which in turn is obtained from the fruit of the poppy. It was the first alkaloid that had been isolated in a laboratory. From then on the 19th century chemists dedicated themselves with true frenzy to seek the substances that became to active principle of myriad drugs already known and even many others that were discovered along the way. They also observed a curious relation between the metabolism of the plant and the place in the body where the alkaloid accumulates. Thus, it was found that in perennial species it accumulated everywhere, but especially in the bark and the shell of the fruit (as with quinine and morphine); in the leaves and seeds of the annual species (as with cocaine and strychnine), and in the roots of biennial plants (as with nicotine). This caused many scientists to think that in reality the alkaloids are destructive substances that do not serve the plant. Others believe they fulfill a defensive function for the species. However that may be, more than 800 alkaloids are known today thanks to the work of those men, in addition to many others that were discovered or synthesized during the past century. The knowledge and utilization of these substances began a revolution in health sciences comparable to the industrial. Although today the name that denotes them is sufficiently demonized because of the boom that the use of hard alkaloids has had beginning in the second half of the past century, it is fair to recognize that many human beings have carried out a longer and healthier physical or mental life thanks to them. I wanted to recall now that one of them, certainly synthesized, which became a sort of milestone in the Seventies, which opened the doors of perception and illumination for many and also those of hell for many of the confused, which even inspired one of the Beatles' most famous songs, is going to turn 50 years old. In 1955, the Eli Lilly & Co. laboratory announced the synthesis of lysergic acid "from which is derived a very useful alkaloid in the treatment of high blood pressure and migraine." 15 January 2005 34. From the "Aeolipile" to the automobile THE FIRST thermal machine (device capable of transforming heat into movement) is due to the talent of Hero of Alexandria (c. 130 b.C.). The Greek called his invention the "Aeolipile," which is described in detail in his book Pneumatica. It deals with a curious artifact that consists of a crystal sphere supported at two opposite points to enable it to rotate freely and with a pair of thin, curved tubes whose respective orifices are also opposed. If one put a little water in the sphere and externally heated it, the vapor exited pressurized in the small tubes causing the sphere to revolve at great velocity. In his book Hero himself describes another apparatus that surely also was a thermal machine. He does not well describe its functioning, but indicates that it was a device capable of causing the doors of the altar in a temple to open with the single act of igniting the burners placed at each side of the door; upon extinguishing them, the doors closed. Most probable is that, from the flame of the burners, water would be heated in a secret compartment and the pressure of the steam would cause the doors to open. Upon turning them off, the water would cool and condense and the pressure of a vacuum would cause the doors to close. These surprising inventions, which concealed in their heart the key to one of the most powerful and efficient means to transform energy did not advance beyond being curiosities, mere toys. Perhaps the abundant workforce provided by the system of slavery practiced by the Greeks and Romans did not necessitate a search for alternative sources of energy. Almost two millennia had to transpire for attention to return to the force of heat. Now it was an Englishman, Thomas Savery, who employed thermal energy to drain a coal mine. His machine, which in 1698 earned him a prize offered by the mine owners, functioned in a very similar manner to the artifact that Hero used to open the altar doors: it simply produced steam from water that was transported to a large still; when the still was full of vapor (that is, when the steam had displaced the air in the container), it cooled, such that, upon condensing, a vacuum was created in the receptacle. It was sufficient to open the spigot to some pipes that connected the still to the water that flooded the mine for this to be sucked towards the receptacle by the pressure of the vacuum. Savery's device was notably efficient as compared to the habitual measures then employed to drain the mines, yet even so it consumed enormous quantities of fuel. A countryman and namesake of Savery, Thomas Newcomen, perfected the invention to utilize the pressure of the vapor to move a piston (a device that, in turn, had recently been invented by Denis Papin). In 1705, exactly three centuries ago, Newcomen announced his new invention: the steam engine. Perfected 50 years later by James Watt, this artifact became responsible for the Industrial Revolution and its direct consequence: the new economic, political and social order that would be established, first in Europe and then in the rest of the world, at the outset of the 19th century and which we continue to unfold. Paradoxes of science: an invention that was conceived to rationalize the use of energy has exhausted, in only two centuries, much more fuel than mankind has consumed since its origins as a species. And it is running out. 9 April 2005 BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION 35. Why do women have breasts? I REMEMBER that I once read a commentary by Bertrand Russell referring to the obsessive precision of men of science compared to the ambiguous complacency of political discourse. He said this, approximately: Whereas a scientist, in reporting the results of some research, accompanies the collected data with rigorous specifications of its margins for error, the politicians document the supposed achievements of their actions or specify the figures for their future enterprises in round, absolute, unquestionable and, of course, almost always wrong numbers. But, in the end, it is not of this that I wished to speak. It is more about the first, that is, about the obsessive precision of men of science. I happen to be translating a splendid book by Paul H. Ehrlich, a reputed evolutionary biologist at Stanford University, titled Human natures. As the name of the text suggests, Ehrlich does not believe there could be a human nature, unique and universal, toward which we could always appeal to justify our defects or praise our virtues. In his extensive book, Ehrlich attempts to decode the entire interaction between biological and cultural evolution, which has given the modern human natures as a result, with all their richness and all their misery. An ambitious project, who would doubt, which the author undertakes with a rare mixture of erudition, geniality and humor, with the result that the task of translating it has been transformed to a pleasure. And it is in this pleasant task where I have been surprised by the moving obsession of the scientist to be precise, not to affirm timorously, by always starting with words such as "seemingly," "supposedly," "in probability," etc. in sentences that refer to an observation, hypothesis or theory that is not fully demonstrated. It likewise surprised me to know how many things science still ignores. In fact, this spacious compendium of human evolution that is Ehrlich's book is also a sum of conjectures and speculations which tries to shed some light on many known, however not explained, facts. For example, it is known that women are the only primate animals who, when they are sexually adult, have permanently distended mammaries; it is also known that this occurs because some of their 100,000 genes activate a process that stimulates the development of the tissues which comprise the breasts; and last, it is known that that gene is dominant because, over the duration of some 200,000 generations, the females who carried it had more opportunities to survive and reproduce. That which is absolutely unknown is why did this selection occur, meaning, why did the females with full chests among our hominid ancestors have more chance to survive. The first explanation that comes to mind, i.e. that the size of the chest will be in proportion to the quantity of maternal milk produced, cannot be sustained: there is no connection between them. The second, apparently very plausible, is that developed mammaries were very conspicuous charms of sexual attraction in individuals who walked upright. Thus, the females with more developed breasts were more attractive to the males and, thereby, had more opportunities to reproduce themselves. Unfortunately, what occurs in modern populations contradicts this hypothesis: prominent breasts are of sexual attraction only in societies, such as ours, where it is customary to cover them. Among the populations accustomed to have the torso uncovered, the sight of the pectorals provokes no emotion in the males. Ehrlich cites a third hypothesis, sufficiently ingenious yet which seems implausible: the prominent chest was a comfortable pillow for the offspring whom the women gatherers almost always carried with them. In this way, the women with better pillows had more probability of nurturing their offspring and, with that, of transmitting their hereditary characteristics. The situation is that no scientist knows, clearly and unambiguously, the reason for the existence of those marvelous feminine appendages (I am still convinced that they are there so that Rubens and several others could paint them); however, and this is an example that many politicians should follow, the men of science have no problem with admitting their ignorance. 29 August 2003 36. Ah! love I NATURE HAS unfolded an infinity of methods and techniques so that living beings can fulfill the most fundamental of their functions: to reproduce. These range from a simple chemical stimulus that causes a bacterium to split in two, through the contact at a distance that two plants have through the medium of an insect which transfers the pollen that is produced in the anther of one to the stigma of the flower of the other, until arriving at an enamored youth who writes lyrical poems to his beloved with the goal of getting her to open her heart to him, to finally be enabled, through a prolonged embrace, to deposit his sperm in the depths of his female's uterus. The mystery of reproduction has always fascinated me. It may be because it is there, at least for me, that the genesis is of the most universal of human sentiments, of the concept to which the most words have been dedicated in the literature of all times and all countries, that which has generated the most art and music and which has sustained many religions: that of love. In the case of the animals, evolution has perfected an instrument, to give it a name, that guarantees encounters between two beings of the same species but different genders with the purpose of perpetuation: that is desire. We were on the verge of saying that that last word is too human to account for a phenomenon so universal in nature, yet in the final analysis I told myself: and what word is not too human? I shall call desire, then, the evolutionary instrument that leads creatures of the same species but different genders to pair off with the goal of reproducing. So then, this desire can manifest itself in two forms; one of them more primitive than the other, or if you like, less evolved, and therefore corresponding to less complex species in biological terms: the desire to reproduce versus the desire for the other. Consider the case of the arachnids. Indubitably it is not desire for his companion that leads a male scorpion or spider to couple. It is well known that the arachnids are one of the most ferocious and perpetually hungry groups in the animal kingdom. When a scorpion approaches a female of his species to sow his sperm in her, he literally plays with his life in the attempt. It must employ all its cunning and cleverness (the females are in general larger and stronger than the males) to take its counterpart by surprise and suddenly clasp her claws with his. Thus connected, with weapons neutralized, the pair begins to dance. They move forward and back with their tails straightened, sometimes intertwined. After having cleaned the floor by their dancing, the male removes a packet of sperm from beneath its thorax and deposits it on the floor. Still attached to the female by the pincers, the male shakes her and lifts her forwards, until her sexual aperture is dragged directly over the packet of sperm. She recovers it, and now arrives the most difficult part for the unhappy male: to release and quickly depart from the encounter before his lady lunches on him. Sometimes he does not achieve this and ends his days in the belly of his wife. Yet in terms of the success of the species as such, those disasters are of small consequence: the loss of its life after, not before, having completed his endeavor. Other species, such as our own, do not manifest a desire to reproduce, but instead more to couple oneself with a member of the opposite sex. Although at times we may be disposed to risk our lives to obtain the other's favors, as much as it may upset the venerable hierarchy of the Catholic church, it is not the desire to have children that impels us to do so. What we really desire is another (or the other). Seen otherwise, that which we desire in reality is to pair off, not to reproduce ourselves. Will love begin here? 4 September 2004 II The birds, those magnificent beings that have been capable of defeating implacable gravitation and transporting themselves to the heights of the heavens, without ever suffering from vertigo and from the permanent fear of falling to the earth that we undergo when humans travel by air, a species condemned by its evolution to remain at ground level, but whose ingenuity permitted them, up to a certain point, to emulate the feathered bipeds. The birds, it has been said, have certain similarities to ourselves with regard to their sexual habits and cohabitation. Many species of birds do not look for a member of their species of the opposite sex in order to consume them or quickly and fearfully deposit their sperm in it with the goal that fecundation occurs and then to abandon them. Instead they search, like us, for a mate with whom to cohabit, like us incubate the products of the encounter, raise and educate them when they leave the shell and let them go when they reach maturity; to begin again, permanently together, a new cycle. Many species of birds, then, like ourselves, form families. Although we shall see below that not all are so monogamous, given that the males of certain species are as promiscuous as a sultan (with this comparison it becomes clear that in this too they resemble us). What all share, monogamous or promiscuous, and which they also share with us, is the attraction for the other. They have many means of attracting the opposite sex. The smallest birds, timid and fragile, those that are an easy feast for the predators, and who therefore live almost always hidden in the thicket of the foliage, utilize song to attract their mate. Few animals manage to emit such beautiful and harmonious sounds as do these miniscule birds. Perhaps one would have to seek in music another of the arcane origins of love. It is difficult, for example, to hear a good soprano or good tenor sing an aria of Mozart or a Schumann cantata and not feel something resembling a profound amorous yearning. The largest and most powerful species that do not need to hide to survive are more likely to use physique to attract females; now it is not the song of the peacock, harsh and monotonous, that attracts the peahen but instead its splendid plumage, a hallucinatory ornament that may weigh more than the rest of the bird and which makes him almost useless although, to be sure, absolute master of a harem of starved females. The more decorated is the male of a species, the more promiscuous is that species and the most distant from the idyllic idea of family life that we have of the birds. At the other extreme, there are birds that are strongly monogamous and never separate once they have met. In these cases it is neither the plumage nor the song that brings the pair together. Strictly speaking it is unknown what it is that attracts them, for they are so similar between themselves that not even they themselves can identify the opposite sex. So it is with the penguins, whose elegant smock has the same cut and color in both females and males. So that, when one of these charming animals searches for a mate, he takes a small stone in his beak, aligns himself in front of the other who is alone and solemnly deposits it at their feet. If he receives a pecking, he knows he has committed a terrible error, involving another male. If its offering is received with indifference, then he has met a female who is not ready to come over or which already is paired. He retrieves his underappreciated gift and departs from there. But if the stranger receives the present with a deep tipping, then he has found his true mate. The tipping is returned and the two extend their necks and bellow a nuptial chorus to celebrate. Isn't it true that they seem like ourselves? 11 September 2004 III Perhaps the explanation of how love originated and how humans understand it is not in the characteristics of sexual habits and cohabitation that we share with other animals but instead in those which are unique to our species. I refer to three. The biologist Paul H. Ehrlich asserts that woman is the only female mammal who is receptive every day of the year. As opposed to their cousins the chimpanzees, the gorillas and the orangutans, who manifest sexual urgency during short periods and a few times per year, precisely during those times when their eggs have matured to be fertilized, our women are capable of receiving the embrace of the male at any moment. And the males, for our part, are disposed to join with them at the slightest provocation. Therefore perhaps, as Ehrlich himself notes, the theme of sex is, for many, that to which we dedicate the most time in our thoughts. Not a day passes in our life, from puberty to old age, they say, without our thinking various, not to say many, times about sex. I think they are justified; at least in my case, which is the only one I can relate, his assertion is royally fulfilled. Yet it was not always so. It is very probable that the females of our hominid ancestors only were receptive during ovulation (in fact that continues to be the period during which the majority of females feel the most intense sexual appetite) as occurs with the rest of the primates. What was it that led the females of our species to prolong their fertility on one hand, and hide it on the other? For one must add that women, as opposed to the other mammals, do not make their receptivity conspicuous (in general it is the odor that alerts the males that the woman is ready and, in the case of the primates, as well as the odor, the females display a beckoning and colorful inflammation of the sexual organs during this period). The biologists think that, precisely because this state is not obvious in the woman, that is why men are disposed to couple with them any day of the year. However, the question persists; strictly speaking we do not know the answer. The only thing that evolution can tell us is that the female hominids who were less distinguishable when they were in heat had more opportunities of surviving than the others, such that, after some 25,000 generations, the traces disappeared of those attributes that attracted the attention of the male. It is not possible, then, to know the origin of this change, but we certainly can draw interesting conclusions from its results. I warn that what follows are my own lucubrations, and very well could be a string of foolishness, yet they do not cease being an attempt to decipher the amorous enigma, which interests me almost as much as sexual desire. When the female is receptive every day of the year, the capacity to care for the partner (and vice versa) is accentuated in our species as in no other. The obsession for cohabitation that fills a large part of our thoughts, sharpened, so to speak, our capacity to desire the other, the care for them for one thing and, finally, to love them. A second unique sexual characteristic in our species reinforces the thesis that is broached above. According to J. Bronowski's testimony, and I have no reason to doubt it, humans are the only mammals who make love face to face and not, as the rest of those animals usually perform it, penetrating the female from the rear. Furthermore, the same Bronowski affirms, although in this case I have my doubts, that the woman is the only female in the animal kingdom that experiences orgasm... 18 September 2004 IV Drinking without thirst and making love anytime, ma'am, is all that distinguishes us from the other animals. BEAUMARCHAIS We said that human beings are the only mammals that accomplish the sexual act face to face. The face is the part of our body that gives us an identity. Such that, when one wants to commit a misdeed, or an heroic act, it is sufficient to cover the face so as not to be discovered; behind a mask, we all are more or less equal. But the face reveals much more than the identity of a person. The features of an individual, if we know how to read them, tell us much regarding him; upon the face is revealed, in addition to the physical identity, the spiritual identity of its owner. It may be that that is why a person's face is that which awakens an amorous sentiment towards her and the more intense that sentiment is, the more intense our observance, we feel more urgency to caress it and, above all, to kiss it. The shared kiss is the culmination and at the same time the principle of an amorous relation. Thus the importance of human beings performing the sexual act face to face. Was it an amorous sentiment that led our antecedents to change the posture the mammals use when they copulate? Upon doing that in the latter manner the only thing that the male can see of his partner is the back, the shoulders and the head; while the female cannot even see those: her gaze points in the opposite direction from whoever enters her; in a purely receptive act, she cannot contemplate the scene of their union. It could be thought it was they who revolved their bodies to receive their lover from the front, to be able to view his face, to allow kissing of the lips at the same instant of being possessed, so converting what was merely an animal act into an amorous rite. The simultaneity of the kiss and of copulation (possession of the spirit, possession of the body) is one of the most lovely and enigmatic habits of human beings, and a good part of the mystery of love, I think, is contained in that rite. The third wholly human characteristic which can shed a certain light on the amorous phenomenon is the fact that our offspring are subject to a long period of dependency upon the parents, especially the mother, to survive. Indubitably the origin of the amorous sentiment that we consider most pure and sublime is in those languorous years when the son depends completely on his mother: she who is willing to give everything, even life, without receiving anything in return. In the enormous force of maternal love our best sentiments are supported and it is her example upon which the principal religions of the world are founded. We admire and revere a capacity to love we know is ours yet, nevertheless, is so difficult to attain that we literally sanctify those who are capable of fully realizing it. Because, unfortunately, if our nature gave us the ability to be loving, it also allowed our being egoistic, fatuous and envious (one would have to see from what human characteristics those sentiments are derived); but above all we got the capacity to experience a feeling as intense as love and equally one limited to our species: hatred. Are the same characteristics that led us to survey the sublime those which made us able to kill our fellows even at the cost of oneself dying? Or in other words, are we so good at hating because our ancestors had continuous periods of receptivity, copulated face to face and dedicated long years to the upbringing of their offspring? It is difficult to say. 25 September 2003 37. The man from Flores THE ISLE OF FLORES, in Indonesia, is a very peculiar ecosystem. Separated by what is more than two million years from the Asiatic continent, the species that live on it have had the chance to evolve without external species intervening in the process. Something like the Galapagos Islands. And like in the Galapagos, on Flores Island there are giant lizards. Those animals could grow to their dimensions by there being abundant plant food for them and there not existing species to prey on them. There was also a dwarf elephant there called the Stegodon. This animal, now extinct, had no natural enemies either, which is why it was not necessary to attain gigantic dimensions like their cousins in Asia and Africa (size is a form of protection in some species) so permitting it to rationalize its food functions. The inhabitants of this island are descendents of the homo sapiens who began to populate Polynesia 45,000 years ago, and who in turn descended, like all of us, from the homo sapiens who left the African continent about 60,000 years ago. These aborigines, just as in all human cultures, sustain very ancient myths and legends. Among them there is one that refers to some little men who populated the isle before them which they called the Ebu Gogo meaning, "grandmother who eats everything." The tales of the astonishing deeds of the Ebu Gogo have always been one more of the endless legends which the human imagination has produced, such that only a couple of months ago a group of Australian and Indonesian researchers announced the discovery of homo floresiensis or the human from Flores. This fascinating creature, our distant cousin, only a yard high and a massive brain compared to the chimpanzee, established itself on the island during at least the last 90,000 years and when it had only existed for 12,000 gave signs (through tools and the utensils that have been found which they used) of having a very conscious intelligence. This discovery, as spectacular as it was unexpected, has suggested many more questions than answers to the scientists. How did that fragile little person get there? How could they display so advanced an intelligence with such a small brain? How were their dealings with homo sapiens, with whom they no doubt lived? Why did they disappear? Perhaps the answer to those inquiries is found, lately, in evolution itself. We know that for almost two million years a group of hominids, homo erectus, left their African birthplace to populate the Asiatic and European continents (the famous Peking man is one of their descendents). These individuals, gifted with an intelligence that enabled them to fashion tools and primitive boats, arrived on Flores Island about 800,000 years ago, as evidenced by the remains of the most ancient artifacts found in the area. Might they be the predecessors of the homo floresiensis? At first sight it appears not: homo erectus was much larger than the Flores people and his brain size much greater. But if it is taken into account that the evolution of species responds to the pressures of its environment, then that possibility is not so remote. Perhaps, as happened with the dwarf elephants, homo erectus, settled on Flores Island, having no natural enemies, did not need big dimensions yet instead, a small body which would permit it to simplify nourishment. Eight hundred thousand years is a reasonable duration for evolution to accomplish such a work; that is, for homo erectus on Flores Island to shrink to two thirds their original size. Yet, why did they disappear, if indeed they have disappeared? 4 December 2004 38. Compulsive communicators The limits of my language mean the limits of my world. LUDWIG WITTGENSTEIN One of the many questions posited by the discovery of the man of Flores or homo floresiensis is whether those close cousins of ours had developed a language similar to that developed by homo sapiens or whether they had only managed to construct a protolanguage (the archaic form of communication, based on grunts, gestures and bodily signals which the first hominids seem to have developed). Language is so tightly connected with other unique elements involved in communication among the societies of homo sapiens, especially religion and art, that some students believe it may have evolved some 50,000 years ago, in time to be responsible for the great revolution in tool technology that occurred in that era and which the scholars call the "great leap forward." In opposition, many other scientists suspect that language evolved over a very long period, and that some of its most ancient roots perhaps can stretch back into the history of non-human animals, including birds and frogs, in which the left hemisphere of the brain is, as with human beings, more involved in vocalization. It seems reasonable to suppose that, in essence, a continuum exists between the verbal communications of our simian ancestors (communications which may resemble those we find even in today's vervet monkeys, with a relatively small brain, yet who are capable of distinguishing different predators and utilizing distinct alarm calls for raptor birds, serpents and leopards) through to completely modern language. It is evident that if one could demonstrate that the man of Flores possessed the faculty of speech, the second hypothesis would gain in robustness, given that homo floresiensis had not achieved, so far as is known, a technological revolution on the scale of the "great leap forward," and this would confirm that such a revolution is, in a certain sense, the result of abilities that homo sapiens had to communicate gutturally and not the reverse, as was held by the defenders of the idea that language is the result of the above revolution. Perhaps the key to deciphering this enigma would be in the cranium of those beings: if the skulls of a chimpanzee and a human adult are compared it will be seen that in the chimp language is completely within the mouth, while in the human being the rear part of the tongue forms the front of the upper larynx vocal tract, giving it that element of flexibility which allows speech. The highest position in the chimpanzee's larynx can move upwards and close the nasal cavity during breathing, such that the air can go to the lungs without obstructions while food traverses the throat on the other side. The lower portion of the pharynx of the human adult means that air and food travel a common course behind the tongue, increasing the risk of asphyxiation. In recently born human beings the structure is arranged as with the chimpanzees, so that the babies can breathe and nourish themselves simultaneously without danger. At an age of a year and a half, when they have already learned to eat and to breathe, the larynx lowers in order to facilitate speech. A similar comparison between the cranium of Flores man and homo sapiens (although that would not be easy to accomplish, for one would have to seek that descent of the larynx via the traces it may have left in the anatomy of the cranium of the former) would shed much light upon the theme and show up to what point our little parents were, in the words of the great naturalist David Attenborough, compulsive communicators, as we ourselves are. 18 December 2004 39. The reptilian or R-complex brain ON THE SUBJECT of the resurgence of the P.R.I. dinosaur, a book comes to mind that I read now many years ago and which impressed me profoundly. It concerns The dragons of Eden, written by the great revealer of science Carl Sagan; a book that made him certainly deserving of the 1978 Pulitzer Prize. The work offers an intelligent panorama of the human brain's evolution, a process that began around 500 million years ago beginning with a small protuberance that developed on the extreme front of the spinal medula of fish in that period. Natural selection and the run of the years were responsible for that small swelling growing in size and complexity until finally becoming our resplendent brain, indubitably the most elaborate, intricate and enigmatic machinery that nature has created. Now then, the theory of evolution tells us that nature is much more thrifty and efficient than the neoliberal governments, since it never wastes that which took millions of years to create; that is, each new evolutionary stage of an organism contains and includes the previous stage, in a similar way to what occurs with the skin of an onion. That is to say that the small protuberance in the fish of the Ordovician period still exists in the deepest recess of our brain. As exist, of course, all the subsequent evolutionary stages, until arriving at the neocortex or neopallium (the famous grey matter), a stage fully developed in the mammals and which in human beings is more evolved than in any other species. On this point, Sagan cites the work of a researcher named Paul MacLean: MacLean has developed a captivating model of brain structure and evolution that he calls the triune brain. "We are obliged," he says, "to look at ourselves and the world through the eyes of three quite different mentalities..." The human brain "amounts to three interconnected biological computers," each with "its own special intelligence, its own subjectivity, its own sense of time and space, its own memory, motor, and other functions"*. These three components of the brain MacLean calls the "reptilian complex" or R-complex, which is, it is supposed, the most primitive, the "limbic system" and the "neocortex" or cerebral cortex. Further on, Sagan asserts, "If the thesis that we have evolved is correct, one can suppose that in a certain sense the R-complex continues to serve the same functions in the human brain that it served in the dinosaur, and that the limbic cortex generates the stereotypes of the lions and the lambs" (the italics are mine). Lastly, he extracts from all that a satisfying conclusion: MacLean has demonstrated that the R-complex plays an important role in aggressive behavior, territoriality, ritual and the establishment of social hierarchies. Despite occasional welcome exceptions, this seems to me to characterize a great deal of human bureaucratic and political behavior... It is striking how much of our actual behavior--as distinguished from what we say and think about it--can be described in reptilian terms. With due respect to the reptiles, Lord knows there exist examples of the latter in our abject political class! Although, if one must be fair, the examples extend to the political classes throughout the planet: have you noticed, alert reader, the horrific visage of baby Bush? It is impossible not to think of a lizard when seeing him. * The citations are taken from Carl Sagan, "The Dragons of Eden", Random House, New York, 1977, chap.3. 2 October 2003 40. The telomeres and cancer THE MAIN difference between the bacteria and the higher organisms is the way in which their DNA is arranged in their genetic legacy or genome. While the former in general maintain their genome as circular molecules, the animals and the plants arrange their genome nucleii as linear groupings of molecules called chromosomes. Although a linear architecture has its advantages, it also presents problems; perhaps the most notable may be what to do with the ends. This problem has at least two faces: on one side, the free ends of the DNA molecules are notoriously unstable; they degrade chemically and undergo recombinations with much more frequency than the inner parts. On the other side, the enzyme responsible for replicating the genome nucleus during the proliferation of the cell has trouble copying the ends of the DNA molecules exactly, such that, without special care, the extremes of the molecular sequence tend to be lost in the copies. To attack those problems, the cells cover the extremities of their chromosomes with some special structures called telomeres, which are also protein molecules. Studies performed in the last ten years (in 1995 the first DNA telomeres from a human cell were isolated) have provided ever more evidence that the telomeres and the enzyme or enzymes that produce or maintain them carry out a fundamental role in cellular aging and in the immortalization of cells, which very often is associated with cancer. It appears that, with time, the normal cells of the human body exhaust the telomeric "caps" that protect the ends of its chromosomes. When they are completely exhausted, the cell dies. Experiments have been performed with cells cultivated from tissues of young persons and old, and it has been shown that the former live much longer than the latter; similarly, it has been verified that the telomeric structures that cover the ends of the chromosomes of those cells were considerably larger in the case of young persons. The telomerase or enzyme that the telomeres form exists in reasonable quantities when the cell is young. At the end of the time, its activity diminishes until it completely disappears. But in our body there exist other cells that we may consider "immortal," for once formed they cease to reproduce, as occurs, for example, with the sexual cells or gametes. These cells always produce telomerase to maintain the telomeres that cover the ends of the chromosomes intact. When, whether by the action of a viral agent or of a mutation, a normal cell begins to replicate itself uncontrollably creating a cancerous tumor, it begins also to produce large quantities of the enzyme telomerase, which facilitates the proliferation of the diseased cell. If the production of a pharmaceutical capable of inhibiting this enzyme were achieved, then the cancerous cell would cease reproducing and would die. Nothing would happen to the healthy cells, for they are accustomed to functioning with little or none of that enzyme ever since adulthood. So then, to whomever discovers or produces that substance surely the Nobel Prize will be awarded, and the satisfaction of having cured many, many people. 22 October 2004 41. Of sequoias and communication Who upbraids the tree when its fruit falls into the mire? HÖLDERLIN ONCE a friend of mine asked me what I should like to be in the event of being reincarnated. Without thinking much, I answered a tree, specifically a sequoia. And I was serious about it. I cannot conceive of a more beautiful and imposing living being than that plant. It is the biggest organism existent upon the planet (easily doubling the size and tripling the weight of a blue whale), one of the most long-lived and, best of all, is absolutely independent: it does not need to draw on another living being to subsist. The air, the sunlight and the water and the nutrients that it absorbs from the ground suffice for it to grow and remain living. When he heard my reply, my friend seemed surprised. "A tree?" he said, "That seems Buddhist. The trees are static and insensible beings, incapable of communicating. They are the most distant that can be from a human." I was in agreement with him that the trees are not exactly a type of life very close to our own, yet they absolutely seem non-static to me. It is enough to observe them on a windy day to become captivated by the capricious movements of their leaves and branches. And not only when there is wind do they move. They are in continuous movement; what happens is that the speed at which they do it is so interrupted that we do not manage to capture it. Anyone who has seen a film edited from pictures at various times of a plant will understand what I say. My friend understood it, yet insisted: "Alright, they move, but they do not travel. If they could see, they would always see the same." That too is not totally true, especially in the case of the sequoias. Even though they cannot travel, their life is so lengthy that, literally, what moves is the scenery where they live. After a thousand years or more, they doubtless would have seen many things, in the event that they could see. "The scenery they have before them moves, alright," my friend insisted, "but it does them no good, for they cannot see or feel it." "Of the latter do not be so sure," I answered, "for I think it is almost necessary that plants feel the world in some manner; if not, they would have neither evolved nor survived." "At least concede that they are not capable of communicating." On this point I had to concede. I just read an article that made me remember the scene which I related above. It was that about five years ago it was discovered that plants are capable of sending signals for help. It dealt with an ingenious system of defense to protect themselves from the insects that consume them: to synthesize and secrete large quantities of some volatile substances that attract the enemies (whether they be parasites or predators) of their enemies, that is, of the insects that eat them. Furthermore, the plants can distinguish among the herbivores by the simple mechanical damage inflicted on the leaves and even can distinguish an herbivorous insect from another herbivorous animal, for example, from a mammal, which can have a beneficent effect because it spreads its seeds. The substances released into the air are called elicitors and they serve as much to attract the benign herbivores as the enemies of their predators. Their message can cover great distances. Plants, then, communicate, although it is clear that their signals are directed to those who represent an advantage for them, just as with we humans. I hope my friend reads this article. 4 September 2004 42. Evolutionary throwbacks PAUL R. EHRLICH calls evolutionary throwbacks the results, generally catastrophic, of the apparent unlinking between the speed of biological evolution and cultural evolution in homo sapiens. From the biological point of view, we are a creature who has taken hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of years to physically become that which we now see. From the cultural viewpoint, we are social beings who radically changed our relations to ourselves and with the environment around us in only a few millennia. Biologically, then, we are equipped to survive in a world that no longer exists, for our vertiginous cultural evolution has completely transformed it. Given that nature would take thousands of years to adapt our body to the new situations we have imposed upon it, the only way to overcome the evolutionary throwbacks from which we suffer, if we are to succeed in overcoming them, must be culturally, something which does not seem easy. We suggest two examples. In the last 20 years, or maybe even further back, perhaps since the decade of the Seventies, the number of women from developed countries who have problems with pregnancy has increased almost exponentially. From the recent biological point of view the woman is capable of having children at 13 or 14 years of age. It is very probable that primitive women have their first pregnancy after having had an average of 20 or 25 menstruations. Today, the women in industrialized countries have their first child at an average age of 28, that is, after having had some 200 menstruations. It is not difficult to suspect that behind that deferment may be hidden the complaints and complications related to pregnancy suffered by modern women. Thousands of generations would have to pass (supposing that one would let those die who had complications, something which, of course, is not going to happen) for nature to adapt women to be pregnant at around 30 years of age. The only way then to confront this evolutionary throwback is employing the resources of modern medicine so that women prepare their organisms as best as possible for those late pregnancies and for them to be carefully attended during the pregnancy and the birth. The second example is more gloomy and more difficult to confront. Biologically the human being is a gregarious creature, but in small groups. We are adapted to deal and interact with 100 or 120 persons at the most. That was the approximate size of the groups of hunter gatherers who spent hundreds of thousands of years traversing the savannas of Africa in search of food. Today the human conglomerates consist of hundreds of thousands and up to millions of individuals. Our nature has not been conditioned to adapt to such magnitudes. We continue to respond before the masses as did our distant ancestors: with sullenness and fear; or, when we form part of it, we easily dissolve in the throng and lose our identity, as Elías Canetti notes, such that we are capable of committing the most aberrant extravagances or the most infamous acts of violence. Thus, that an individual like George W. Bush, whose intellectual consciousness does not exceed that of Cro-Magnon man and whose biological nature is identical to this last, should be responsible for the destiny of millions of human beings not only is an evolutionary throwback but is also an authentic nightmare, which we can only surpass by applying the same intelligence that, paradoxically, brought us to a similar contradiction. I hope that we achieve it before the world is the ultimate victim of our accelerated cultural evolution. 15 May 2004 43. Obesity IN SCIENCE fiction stories that I read during my youth, the man of the future in general appeared as a tall, thin creature, of refined features and large extremities, with a bald head, and bulging forehead considerably larger than that of actual man. If I were to write a story of that genre now I think I would abandon that cliché in describing my characters. If one must reflect that which actual science suggests for the future (something which, anyway, every good writer of science fiction must do) my characters would have artificially youthful faces, with that plasticized aspect that the skin acquires after two or three surgeries; the would not be bald, ultimately, for the implantation of hair would already be universalized, yet indubitably they would be very obese, of at least 330 pounds, not universally distributed, admittedly, for a good percentage of those would be found about the waist and in the buttocks. In fact, that model of the human being is already a reality in the very heart of the Empire: a very high percentage of the inhabitants of the North American midwest sends the needle on the scales far beyond 220 pounds in weight, and the measure of their waists surpasses by various centimeters the limit of 35 inches recommended by doctors, as we are assured with all the seriousness of the case by myriad scientific reports and with much more humor by the unforgettable José Donoso. In our own country which, although a proud member of the OECD, is very far from being developed, in recent times obesity has become a public health problem, as the sanitary authorities inform us, and prospects for the future forsee the sharpening of this problem. We know all that. What is not so well known is that the origin of this problem is found again in the disconnect between our biological and cultural evolutions. Said in other words: obesity is the consequence of an evolutionary throwback. The hominid who would evolve into homo sapiens bet on the brain as the instrument for its survival. But this organ requires a great deal of energy to function: although in weight it represents only 2.5 percent of the organism, it consumes almost 30 percent of its energy. The natural sources of energy for our body are the fats of meat products and the carbohydrates, most especially those that are rich in sugars, as is the case with honey. Nevertheless, for primitive man, whose basic diet consisted of vegetables, seeds, fruits and roots, those foods were not easy to obtain, so that natural selection acted in them in such a manner that they would fervently want to eat meat or honey at the first opportunity available, something that would occur at most a couple of times per month. The desire to eat such foods we have inherited from our ancestors, but in today's world we have access to them every day (at least in the industrialized nations and in the privileged sectors of the poor countries) and we consume them daily. If to this is added the fact that a good percentage of the meat we consume (here one would have to exclude fish) has been treated so that the animal which produces it fattens (and in consequence the animal who eats it also fattens) what we achieve, especially beginning at age 35, when the consumption of energy by the organism diminishes, is to model our shapes by the aesthetic canons of Rubens or, better still, of Botero. Once more it was our intelligence that placed us at this crux and to it we must turn (why not, for example, transfer the excess of nutrition that exists in rich countries to poor countries?) if we really wish to avoid that in the future our sad world will be populated by fat despots from Zempoala and Neros cohabiting with famished pygmies. 22 May 2004 44. With pain you will give birth to children To the woman he said, I will greatly increase your pains in childbearing; with pain you will give birth to children... Genesis, 3-16 WITH THAT curse that God delivered on Eve for having tasted, against the will of her Creator, the fruit of the Forbidden Tree, the Bible explains to us the origin of one of the most singular characteristics of the human species: the tortuous process of childbirth. It seems that no female of any species undergoes so much effort to put her offspring into the world with so much pain as do women. As usually occurs, the theory of evolution offers us a very different yet no less fascinating explanation of this phenomenon: the effort it requires and the pain that leads to parturition among women has its origin in an evolutionary competition between two characteristics of the feminine pelvis: the width of the birth canal and the narrowness of the hip; or expressed otherwise, between the capacity of a woman to give birth and the capacity of the same to walk upright; a competition in which natural selection left things exactly in the perfect middle. In a book that I finished translating, On Fertile Ground: a natural history of human reproduction, its author, Peter T. Ellison, dedicates a section to the matter of parturition in humans. Our most remote ancestors walked on four legs, like the rest of the mammals. Doubtless the females of those distant species had no difficulties in giving birth, like the rest of the mammals, since their birth canal (the passage through which the fetus navigates the maternal pelvis) was sufficiently loose so that the head of the child (the most voluminous part of the body at birth) could pass through it without difficulty. The problems began when our antecedents began to stand upright. To walk on two extremities it is necessary that they be as close as possible with the goal of better enabling keeping one's balance and allowing more rapid travel. In fact, we accomplish walking as if we followed a straight line extended just through the middle of our body, in the exact center between the two legs. Thus, the narrower are the hips (the plates of the ilium of the large pelvis) the better one walks upon two extremities; yet, at the same time, the narrower the hips so also is the birth canal, which makes parturition considerably more difficult, if we take into account that, as we evolved into bipeds, we became ever more intelligent and, ultimately, had bigger heads. The dilemma of our female hominid ancestors centered in that, if the hips were broad, they gave birth without much difficulty, but were slow and torpid of movement, and that in a world of hunter-gatherers signified a notable disadvantage. On the other hand, those who were narrow of hip moved with greater rapidity and assurance (as occurs with modern runners) but they ran the risk of dying during childbirth if not able to pass a child with a head a little bigger than average. As we said at the beginning, natural selection took matters to the middle ground: modern woman has hips sufficiently narrow to move without difficulty and the birth canal sufficiently wide so that a child can barely traverse it. That explains the complicated and painful human parturition; at least until recently, for medicine is charged with sending the divine curse into memory. 16 July 2005 45. Genes and nourishment WE RETURN to the theory of evolutionary throwbacks of the American biologist Paul R. Ehrlich, according to whom our organism, in response to hundreds of thousands of years of biological evolution, is adapted to survive in an environment similar to that in which our ancestors from the Stone Age lived. Cultural evolution in our species (in reality, a consequence of our biological evolution) has dramatically changed the habitat in which the major part of the inhabitants of the planet live, and that has resulted in that frequently the constitution of our organism enters into conflict with the environmental pressures that it has to confront. Thus, for example, we are genetically programmed to crave meat and honey, because they were the principal sources of energy available to our ancestors, and were difficult to obtain; yet, for that last reason, we are also programmed to ingest meat and honey at most a few times per month. However today many humans can consume those foods every time the desire moves them (which is quite frequent) which leads to an excess of fats in their organisms that frequently culminates in obesity, diabetes or heart attacks. The problem with these evolutionary throwbacks is that our cultural evolution occurs much more rapidly than the biological, which, according to Darwin's calculations, requires dozens of thousands of generations to accomplish significant changes in a species. Although perhaps biological evolution is not as slow as the English genius thought. The U.S. scientist of Lebanese origin Gary Paul Nabhan published a curious book titled Why Some Like It Hot: food, genes and cultural diversity (FCE, Mexico City, 2006) that deals with the relation existing between our genetic legacy and our alimentary habits. The interactions that occur between the genes, the foodstuffs and the pressures of the environment (that can be diseases, parasites and pathogenic agents) are very complex and surprisingly revealing. In the majority of cases we think that the biology dictates the cultural food preferences; that is, natural selection of certain genetic characteristics tends to annul the cultural traces that do not have an immediate value for survival. But the biological-cultural nexus can invert itself. See, for instance, the case of the ingestion of milk. Homo sapiens was genetically programmed to stop tolerating milk a little after weaning; in fact, this last is because the baby stops producing lactase, an enzyme that metabolizes lactose, the principal sugar in the milk which, if it is not metabolized, causes inflammation and cramps in the intestine. Until little more than 12,000 years ago (when livestock farming began) very few homo sapiens adults could tolerate lactose, except only those who had a dominant gene capable of producing the enzyme. In populations devoted to agriculture and livestock farming, that gene, until then recessive in almost all members, became dominant in a matter of only 5,000 years. Nabhan says: Although we do not know the historical details of the road which was followed, the final product--the tolerance of lactose through genetic control--suggests that the cultural practices of drinking raw milk and lactic products generated the selective pressure for the genetic change. Therefore, it is possible to go from the culture to the biology. And in a relatively short time. We shall see other examples. 24 September 2005 46. Why are chiles hot? For my beloved and admired uncle, Adolfo Sánchez Vázquez, on his 90th birthday THE CONSUMPTION of the very Mexican chile is a good example of how, in some cases, cultural evolution has guided the biological evolution of homo sapiens. The solanaceae is characterized as containing a unique chemical substance which serves to protect it from its antagonist, capsaisin. Human beings have in our body a pain sensor known as VR1 that "reads" the presence of capsaisin in the chile just as if reading an increment in temperature. It also provokes a painful sensation of tickling and burning when it is exposed to other substances similar to capsaisin which are found in black peppers and ginger. These irritants, just like the presence of fire itself, activate a dramatic response in our sensory nerve terminals and in those of all the mammals studied to date. Thanks to this substance, the chile plants avoid their fruits being food for the mammals, for if they were to ingest them, the probability of the enclosed seeds surviving would be practically nil, since they would be damaged by the action of the teeth or by the gastric juices of the mammal who might eat them. Birds, on the other hand, do not damage the chile seeds when they eat them, such that, whether they fall from the heights of a tree while being consumed, or later, when defecated, the seeds can germinate in fertile soil. This is why the chiles sting almost no birds when ingested: they are its transmission agents. Thus, with all certainty our most remote ancestors did not eat chiles, as all other mammals continue not to do; although it is probable that since several dozen thousands of years ago from time to time humans ingested the chile for medicinal purposes, and perhaps the smoke of the burned plant was used to scare away animals of prey. But beginning with the establishment of agriculture and livestock farming, around 12,000 years ago, our antecedents began to eat meat with much more frequency than before. It was in that era when some wise counselor must have discovered that chiles are splendid agents for disinfecting and preserving meat, something of vital importance especially in the warm regions of the world, where meat decomposes rapidly. In this way, the consumption of the Solanaceae has become ever more frequent, above all in the tropical regions of the planet. And this acclimatization has been accompanied by a transformation in the genetic legacy of the inhabitants of these regions: several genes in our organism have to do directly with the capacity of the palate to tolerate irritating substances. Hundreds of thousands of years ago, the genes whose action allows accepting the burning were recessive in the enormous majority of human beings. Today however, in wide swaths of the world population (again, especially among those who live in warm regions) those genes are dominant. And, once more, that occurred in a very short time (speaking, here, in Darwinian terms). Blessed genes that prevent rejection in physiological terms, but which permit us to delight ourselves with one of the most delicious and strange plants that nature has implanted in mother earth. 10 October 2005 47. Why do we mistreat women? I WRITE these lines on the day that the U.N. has dedicated to women throughout the world and cannot resist offering some reflections in turn on those beings who comprise a little more than half of humanity, or rather turning to those other beings who comprise a little less than half the human genus and who for millennia have sought to produce a rather unhappy life upon their sisters of the opposite sex. Why have men, at least throughout history (since of prehistory we know very little in this respect) treated our species companions as inferior beings? Why even today, when one supposes that we have developed an ethic that tells us that women and men have the same rights and obligations, that there should exist a plane of absolute equality in our relations, that, finally, we have recognized that they are, like ourselves, human beings, do we continue in myriad instances to deprecate, mistreat, violate and even assassinate them? Is it perhaps because, to utilize the concept of Paul R. Ehrlich, many of us suffer from an evolutionary throwback in relation to women? Or might it be that we deal with a cultural throwback? It is documented that in some primitive communities (like the Eskimos, for example) female infanticide was practiced. So that an eskimo woman might have the right to live, there must have been born before her one or more male siblings. That practice (which continues to occur in clandestine fashion in some regions of India and China) could be explained in terms of survival: the couple needed one or more male children to help the father in the arduous labor of the hunt so as to assure the survival of a daughter who could not perform such hard tasks. Within the species itself there was a selective advantage: the male was considered more useful and, ultimately, his natality was favored. Nevertheless, despite such a dubious effort, the number of men and women in those communities was equalized, which indicate that, in the final account, the women were more resistant and long-lived. If, as is probable, the prehistoric communities of hunters and gatherers participated in the practice, perhaps there may be a sensation of superiority in our genes shaped over hundreds of thousands of years to act as if we actually were. Thus then, if we suffer such an evolutionary throwback, it would lead us to consider inferior, and so distinguish, those whom we consider the weakest of our species, the female, and to act accordingly. Yet things could be exactly the reverse: perhaps during all of prehistory the arrangement between men and women was as completely egalitarian as we now desire and the problems began when we discovered agriculture and changed our habits of life. It is almost certain that there were women who performed the feat of domesticating plants, since they basically specialized in gathering while the men were absorbed in hunting and fishing. Maybe the enormous power that their discovery gave them permitted them to dominate the men (in many ancient cultures we speak of a mythical matriarchy) and they subjugated them over hundreds of years until the latter rebelled and imposed by force upon the cleverness of the women. Perhaps we still have not forgiven them, so that the mistreatment to which we subject them is a case of a cultural throwback. If only we knew. 12 March 2005 48. The beetle collector CHARLES ROBERT DARWIN was born in Shrewsbury, England, on February 12th, 1809. The history of the West records that year as one of the last in which continental Europe was subject to the power of the Napoleonic army and, above all, captivated by the fresh ideas of liberty, equality and fraternity that accompanied the French troops in their saga. Ideas that served, especially the first, to sustain and give a definitive victory to an economic order that since the Renaissance had struggled to be imposed. Darwin's grandfather was a famous doctor. In his work Zoonomia, or, the Laws of Organic Life, he formulated the idea of the evolution of species, that is, of the development of the organic world, although his notion was based upon Lamarck's theory that species changed deliberately to surpass themselves. The young Charles was an enthusiastic reader of his grandfather. Perhaps that led him to study medicine at the University of Edinburgh. Soon he lost interest in those studies; it was not curing people that interested the restless youth, but instead to understand the fascinating world of living things. After the failure in Edinburgh, his father sent him to Christ's College in Cambridge with the hope that his son would become a clergyman. Charles' curious and inquisitive spirit adapted even less to the arid pronouncements (at least to him) of his theology teachers. Loyal to his love of nature and for living things, he dedicated the greater part of the time he lived in Cambridge to collecting beetles and to reading Humboldt's tales about the unsuspected variety of species that populate the earth. In 1831 (a year in which the Napoleonic exploits were only a memory, for long before the old despotisms of the old European ruling houses had been restored, but now accompanied by the favorite son of liberalism, capital and its market, that was en route to becoming the dominant system) Darwin accepts the invitation of Henslow, his friend and professor, and embarks, as an on board naturalist with the sailing ship Beagle upon a voyage that had the objective of making a map of the Tierra del Fuego, and to return later to the British Isles via the route of the West Indies. Darwin's voyage on the Beagle is too well known to dwell upon it. It suffices to say that his encounter with the highly varied and exotic Brazilian flora and fauna and with the singular development of the species of birds and reptiles he observed in the Galapagos was what led him to establish the idea that species were not created in the shapes they now have, and that those which disappear (there already were in Darwinian times sufficient fossil remains so as to comprehend that species had existed which now are extinct) were not replaced through new creation, as Curvier thought in his curious theory of catastrophes, but that they were ancestors of modern ones. The species, thought Darwin, are transformed, in a very slow and eventful process, in adaptation to their medium. Those which accomplish that, survive; those which cannot do so, disappear. It concerns a process in which the divine hand does not participate, that is, God did not create the species (and among them, of course, man); it concerns a process of natural selection, to use Darwin's term. In the Galapagos he conceived the key ideas of evolution, but delayed more than 20 years in publishing his theory, for he was conscious of the bitter polemic that they would cause. At last, in 1859 (a year in which capitalist liberalism ferociously ruled in the western world) he publishes The origin of species, a fundamental work of modern biology that even today, a century and a half later, causes resentments, paradoxically in the countries assumed to be champions of modernity. 27 August 2005 49. "Intelligent design" I WE SAID that in 1859, during the boom of capitalist liberalism, Charles Darwin published The origin of species, where he presented his theory of the evolution of living beings. The importance of this theory in the confines of the biological sciences is equivalent to that of the quantum theory in the field of physics. In it the reply was found to innumerable questions that the discoveries of the naturalists had posed. Those strange fossils of beings that seemed absolutely unlike those seen in the real world were nothing more than the remote antecedents of those, creatures whose descendants little by little were transformed, pressured by the environment in which they lived, until finally becoming a contemporary species; or else, until disappearing, as occurred with the dinosaurs. Darwin's theory proposed that only those individuals survived who were best adapted to their medium. This pleased some philosophers (or perhaps it would be better to call them organic intellectuals) of the era when it was proposed, who drew a brief version of the principle of natural selection: for them, the strongest survived (who are not necessarily the most adapted), an idea that was blended with the thousand marvels of the dogma of the free market. Yet from the theory of evolution there emerged one consequence that absolutely did not please the organic intellectuals of the time and much less the religious authorities (whether Catholics or Protestants): man himself, as the natural creature that he is, also is the result of a long evolutionary process. We were not always as we are and we were not always here. Before we could exist, other beings similar to ourselves perambulated throughout the world, and even before them, other beings even more remote who walked upright lived on this planet, and even before them there were some primates from whose descendants come the simians, our ancestors who walked upright, and humans. We are, then, distant cousins, if not direct descendants, of the gorillas and the chimpanzees. One can imagine the scandal that this idea provoked in the good consciences of the late 19th century. Things got worse when, in 1892, the adventurer scientist Eugène DuBois proclaimed to the world the discovery of what he considered the remains of the "missing link," which he baptized as Java Man. Today we know that that refers to an individual of the species homo erectus (one of those ancestors of ours who walked on his rear quarters) who lived on that island about 800,000 to one million years ago. It took many years for humanity to digest this draft. Still in the decade of the Twenties of the past century there was a celebrated case in a city in the mid-west of the United States where the judge ruled that the teaching of evolution went counter to the principles and values of the "American" nation, such that he ordered that its teaching be superseded in the state public schools and that instead that the teaching of the Biblical theory on the origin of man be imparted. On that occasion Adam defeated Java Man. And even today, with a foothold in the third Millennium, under the implacable shadow of an economic neoliberalism perhaps even more cruel than its 19th century grandparent, there are those who refuse to accept that we are cousins of the chimpanzees. Since by now not even they can swallow the Biblical version of human origins, they now propose instead of evolution a supremely absurd idea which, paradoxically, they have christened as "intelligent design." The things that one sees... 3 September 2005 II That which the city most degrades in man is the intelligence, for it either traps him in vulgarity, or plunges him into ignorance. EÇA DE QUEIROZ Confronted with the impossibility of sustaining the Biblical hypothesis of creation, the enemies of Darwin's theory, those who think, with no scientific basis, that the human species does not belong to the great family of terrestrial fauna, propose a delirious theory as an alternative to natural selection: the famous "intelligent design." They concede to their critics that things occurred more or a little less than the theory of evolution describes, but in the key moments of the life saga (for example, when the aminoacids that were formed in the primordial sea which covered the earth united to form the first protein capable of reproducing itself) a superior intelligence also intervened in the process. Of course, the same intelligence also intervened billions of years later, when the genes of certain primates mutated to give rise to the family of hominids, whose latest descendents (that is to say, ourselves) would propound and be conscious of that intelligence which created them and made them unique. Tell me if the ways of the Lord are not tortuous! The Bible of those new prophets (many of them certainly Adventists) could begin as follows: About 12 billion years ago God created the universe; seven billion years later created the Earth; one billion years later he created the aminoacids and ordered them to grow and procreate, and some millions of years ago chose a primate and blessed it, he and his descendents, with the spark of his intelligence. Satisfied with his work, he rested one Sunday. The matter does not exceed being a bad joke were it not that an influential pressure group in the circles of economic and political power in the United States is fighting an arduous battle for the intelligent design theory to be taught in the schools of the country, for the students to be those who decide which of the two is correct. As if science were a matter of options! To make scientific knowledge banal never yields good results, except to the charlatans who cultivate these supposed "scientific theories" (remember the case of Dianetics) and can instead have fateful consequences. Recall, for example, the barbarities committed by the Nazis holding to the "theory of the Aryan race." Perhaps that which just happened with the terrible Katrina might be another good example of what can happen when scientific knowledge is scorned. 10 September 2005 50. Sir Alexander Fleming FEW people have the satisfaction of knowing that their work has served to save an infinitude of human lives; or rather, to prolong many lives through the cure of their bodies, for, as Cioran would say, human life cannot be saved. One of them is the Scottish doctor Alexander Fleming who, as is well known, discovered penicillin. What is not as well known is the life of this scientist who received the Nobel Prize in 1945 and who died, ten years later, the 11th of March of 1955, in the midst of great homages and with the title of Sir on his name. He was born in Ayrshire, Scotland, the 6th of August in 1881. Of humble origins, during his youth he had to make a living working in the wharves of London to be able to pay for his high school studies. Given his excellent unfolding as a student, in 1902 he obtained a scholarship that permitted him to wholly dedicate himself to his career at the University of London, as an intern in the medical school of the Santa María Hospital. Upon completing his studies with excellent grades he decided to continue in the university milieu to devote himself to research, without it mattering to him that in those days (as in our own) research and academia were much more poorly paid than the practice of the medical profession. Since he had been a student he had developed a live interest in bacteriology, especially in chemotherapy for illnesses, and he never strayed from this field throughout his long professional life. He formed a team with the doctor Almoth Wright, who was known in the scientific world for his vaccine to prevent typhoid fever. In those days, persons of science knew that the bloodstream contained cells called white globules or leucocytes that combat harmful microbes. Wright and Fleming sought the pharmacological agents that would augment the efficacy of the leucocytes in their natural battle against the invading germs. The first World War caught them in full activity. Both were transferred to the European fronts where they prolonged innumerable lives with the vaccine against typhoid. The conflagration ended, in 1918, Fleming returned to the Hospital of Santa María and one year later they named him a professor of the Royal College of Surgeons. In 1922 he had his first success as a researcher. He took advantage of a strong cold that he suffered to study the effects of his nasal secretion upon a microbe culture. He observed that in the spots where the drops of nasal fluid fell the microbes died. Encouraged, he tried with other bodily secretions (tears, saliva, etc.) and found that in every case the microbes died. He called the substance that was in those fluids lysozine, which had antibiotic properties and that turned out to be an enzyme. He reported his discovery, though he did not have too much success, for he was unable to isolate the pure enzyme. Six years later, in 1928, when he went to discard a decomposed staphylococcus culture, he noticed that within the culture there were some mould spots and that, because of this, around each spot the bacteria colony had disappeared. He isolated the mould and identified it with that called Penicillium notatum, relating it strictly to that found in old bread, and decided that that mould was responsible for the bacterial growth to have been inhibited. He published his work, but again, due to the lack of economic resources and the necessary infrastructure, he could not isolate the active principle in the mould. Ten years had to pass in which the English chemists Florey and Chain devoted themselves to isolating that substance, something they achieved in 1941, during the second World War. Since then penicillin may have prolonged as many or more lives than Nazism extinguished. Despite the enormous fame that his discovery procured for him, Fleming never ceased being a humble and simple person. He used to say: "I didn't do anything, nature makes the penicillin, I only found it." 11 March 2005 51. Connected vessels IN 1905, H. G. WELLS (whom the Encyclopedia Britannica describes as a "novelist, sociologist, historian, and utopian") published The modern utopia, a work that completed a vast cycle of novels, begun ten years previously with the publication of The time machine (1895), which gained him universal recognition as a pioneer of the science fiction genre. That same year, at his parents' initiative, Frederick Grant Banting enrolled in a seminary, a bright youth of 14 years and a native of Allison, Canada. He lasted briefly there. He was able to convince the pious fathers that his vocation was to serve not God but prefer instead the neighbor: he enrolled in Victoria College, where he received the title of doctor in 1916. Wells, born in Kent, England in 1866, the son of a professional cricket player and a housemaid, obtained, thanks to his remarkable intelligence, a scholarship to study at the Royal College of Science in South Kensington, and he graduated later with full honors from the University of London. Recently graduated, in 1888 he began his activity as a science teacher in the same university. In 1893, a severe health crisis moved him away from the podium and towards journalistic and literary work, an activity that suited him better, being quieter, with his illness, the terrible diabetes mellitus. One year after H. G. Wells graduated, in 1889, the German doctors Mening and Minkowski published an article in which they expounded their suspicions that the pancreas is related to diabetes, because when that organ is removed symptoms developed resembling those of that infirmity. They attempted without success to isolate the hormone existing in the pancreas responsible for regulating the sugar content in the blood. The young Canadian doctor read the article by the Germans and envisioned an experimental project to isolate that substance. Assisted by a young physiologist and biochemist named Charles Best and with the cooperation of various dogs who endured endless operations on the pancreas, they succeeded at last, in 1921, to isolate this hormone that they first named isletine (because of the form of isolate the cellular groups have which are separated); a little later they changed the name to the more elegant and Cervantine insulin and they tested its effect on terminal diabetics. The result was a true miracle: those condemned to die returned to life through receiving an injection of the hormone. But they discovered that one dose was insufficient; the diabetic had to administer herself insulin every day to control the sugar in the blood. In 1921, H. G. Wells was a writer and thinker recognized throughout the world, and also quite controversial, for his social ideas were profoundly critical and advanced. He put the capitalist apparatus as much as the novel socialist project of the brand-new Soviet Union into the balance. He expressed his ideas in a surprising number of books and articles, more surprising still if it is considered that the writer's health worsened day by day. In that age, his doctors could only promise him few years of life. In 1922, Banting and Best had managed to produce great quantities of insulin derived from the pancreas of the beasts sacrificed on the roads. Their miraculous cure expanded rapidly throughout the entire world. In 1923, H. G. Wells received the insulin treatment. Thanks to it, he lived to be 90 years old; he died in 1946. The second World War and the dawning of the atomic age embittered his spirit. His last works reflect a loss of faith in utopia. In 1923, Banting and McLeod (the individual who financed the project) received the Nobel Prize. Very disturbed that his comrade Charles Best was not included in the award, the Canadian doctor was on the point of refusing it. He accepted it in the end, although half of the money that he received he shared with Best. On February 21st, 1941 the bomber in which he was riding to Great Britain crashed in Newfoundland. 12 June 2005 52. Katrina IN 1718, THE governor of Louisiana, Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, founded the village of New Orleans, named this in honor of the duke of Orleans, the regent of the French reign in those times. He chose a promontory on the banks of the Mississippi, around 100 yards from its mouth, between the Bayou St. John and the river, to erect the settlement. Not very far from there, on the other bank of the river, the famous Barataria Preserve is found, where later the not less famous pirates John and Pierre Lafitte would find a formidable hideout with easy access to the seas of the Gulf of Mexico. Four years later, New Orleans would become the capital of the French colony. The city, located in an unhealthy region of swamps and bayous, and some meters below sea level in greater part, in a region with recurrent tropical storms, presented a formidable challenge to make it habitable; yet its strategic position as the gateway to the Mississippi river and as landing site for voyages from Cuba, the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean meant that the effort was worth the price. Thus, the history of this city is full of anecdotes about terrible inundations (the first occurred in 1719, only one year after the founding), epidemics of cholera and malaria, and feats of engineering and urbanism (in 1940 it claimed to be the most hygienic city relying on the most advanced drainage system in the world) that caused it to be one of the most beautiful and important cities of the United States. In the second decade of the past century a system of embankments was constructed to forever rescue the city from the threat of flooding that could occur from the overflowing of the Mississippi river or Lake Pontchartain which adjoin it. The engineers who performed the formidable work calculated that they could resist the fury of a hurricane up to grade three. They discounted the possibility of an event of greater intensity for, according to their calculations, the probability that a grade four or five hurricane would hit the town was less than 0.6 percent; this is, an event of such magnitude was not expected for at least 300 years. But those engineers did not take global warming into their calculations. Today it is known that, due to this phenomenon, the incidence of hurricanes and their intensity have been increasing notably over the last 20 years. It does not require a doctor in the matter to understand that, the higher the temperature gradient may be, that is, the warmer the surface of the marine water and the colder that of the atmosphere, the more velocity the winds will have. We all know this, except for the clique which governs in Washington and their "scientific" advisers. Repeatedly they have refused to subscribe to the Kyoto accords to attenuate global warming, offering as pretext that "there is insufficient scientific evidence" that this phenomenon is responsible for the climatic alterations we endure with ever greater frequency. Surely they consulted their ineffable "intelligent design" to arrive at that conclusion. We hope that the horror which Katrina has meant leads the people of the United States to disassociate once and for all from the rascals who govern them. 17 September 2005 ECOLOGY 53. Compulsive predators I MORE OR A little less, a celebrated cartoon from the unforgettable Abel Quesada recounted that Saint Peter, after having seen God create Mexico and deposit therein an abundance of property, beauty and riches, asked him: "Is that not to give too much to just one country, my Lord?" God, with his infinite justice, had this reply: "To compensate for so many gifts, Peter, I shall put Mexicans on that land." This acid anecdote came to my mind while I leafed through a book that fell into my hands as a Christmas present. We refer to Animales de México en peligro de extinción, by Gerardo Ceballos and Fulvio Eccardi, edited by the Alejo Peralta Foundation. Magnificently illustrated and written in a language accessible to laypersons in the matter, the work offers a wide panorama of the actual situation regarding biodiversity in our country. It is well known that Mexico occupies a leading place on the world scale if one is referring to biological diversity. In fact, one of every ten known species live in our territories; after Brazil and Indonesia, Mexico occupies third place in biodiversity. We are the country of the world that has the most variety in amphibians and reptiles, the third in mammals, the fourth in higher plants, and 11th in birds. Nevertheless, Ceballos and Eccardi also remind us that we are one of the countries whose population has grown most rapidly in the last century: there were eight million persons in Mexico at the beginning of the 20th century; by 1940 we were already 20 millions and at the dawn of the new millennium we account for 100 millions. A growth of 1,100 percent in only 100 years. There has been a direct correlation between the population growth and the decrease in biodiversity in our country. Simply in the case of vertebrate animals, the last century has seen disappear from our lands, lakes, seas and skies, 22 species of fish (18 of them endemic, that is, which live exclusively in our territories), 11 species of birds (five of them endemic) and another sum of mammals (seven of them endemic) among which are included the Mexican wolf, the grey bear and the sea otter. In the case of the fishes, all those species disappeared due to the modification or destruction of their habitat; half of the birds disappeared for the same reason and the other half were victims of overexploitation by hunters. In the case of the mammals, intensive hunting or the introduction of foreign species into their environment was the cause of their extinction. Summarizing, the direct or indirect reason for those 44 species having been extinguished in our nation has been humanity. That which took nature three billion years to create, we have eliminated in less than a century. And the future looks gloomy for many other species. Who knows how much longer we may see, to cite only a few, the formidable jaguar on our plains, the pronghorn antelope and the bighorn sheep traveling through the rugged mountains of the Baja California desert, the royal eagle, mythic Nagual of the Mexicans, and the gorgeous flamingos who paint the inlets of Quintana Roo pink, or the enigmatic manatees, who once were mistaken for Sirens and who have ever less room to live. It may be that the origin of this predatory conduct characterizing us is to be found in ignorance. Very few understand that by risking the planet's biodiversity, we put in greater risk the survival of our own species. 11 December 2004 II In the Museum of Natural History in Washington, D. C., repose the desiccated remains of Martha, who died in the Cincinnati Zoo in 1914. Martha was the last specimen of the passenger pigeon, a bird native to the United States. A century previously various colonies, each of around one billion of these birds, sliced through the airs of the North American midwest. This unique species had discovered its form of survival in massive reproduction and in the constant moving of the spots where they deposited their eggs, hatched and nurtured their offspring. Although they had many natural enemies (squirrels, hawks, foxes, among others) the vastness of their colonies were their defense against them. Given that they continually moved, their predators never managed to form sufficiently large groups to threaten the passenger pigeon species with extinction. In the second half of the 19th century a predator appeared in the region where passenger pigeons lived against which they had no defense. After the Civil War, with access to the midwest of the United States open thanks to trains, large groups of human beings, accompanied by their indispensable rifles and shotguns, established themselves in the region. As their misfortune, this type of bird made an excellent serving for the human palate such that, in addition to being massively consumed by the new inhabitants, they became one of the prime export articles for the zone: wagons replete with sacrificed birds were dispatched continuously to the east coast for their consumption. It is said that, in 1878, a single hunter embarked from Michigan with three million birds destined for those markets. By 1889 passenger pigeons were extinct in that state. 25 years later Martha died, the last exemplar of the species. Curiously, the extermination of the passenger pigeons was an important factor in the encouragement of the spread of an infectious disease, very damaging for human beings, known as Lyme's disease. The pigeons formed flocks of billions and ate beechnuts and acorns; with the extinction of these birds, there was more of this food for a type of rodent known as the deer mouse, which allowed the population of those mammals to flourish. This made the environment more favorable for some ticks parasitical to the mice that transmitted the spirochete which caused Lyme's disease. The commercial hunters, by provoking the extinction of the passenger pigeon, made the environment more favorable for the mice, the ticks and the spirochetes, and more unfavorable for homo sapiens. Martha's revenge? This is only one example among thousands of the risks that we run by imprudently exterminating a species. The links that comprise the chain of life on the planet are much more fragile than we suspect. Additionally, the unhappy fortune of those birds reminds us that recourse to forming massive populations to guarantee survival of a species almost always ends badly. Especially during the last two centuries the human population has grown so enormously that it reminds us of those birds: it seems that our guarantee of survival is in the great quantity of individuals we represent. However, the experience of the passenger pigeons, of the trilobites and of many other species demonstrates that, though it seems paradoxical, the more of us there are, the more risk we run of extinction. We should share space with all the living beings who accompany us on Earth. Let us proceed, then, doing less. 18 December 2004 54. The isle of Tikopia THE ISLANDS of Polynesia are a geographic location suitable for studying the elaboration of human societies in a situation of almost total isolation. At the same time, the study of these societies sheds a great deal of light on the mechanisms of individuals interacting with their environment and the cultural values that emerge from such interactions. On those islands there were communities, like there were on the Easter Islands, that after having achieved a great cultural flowering, accompanied by a notable increase in the population, began to degrade the surrounding natural resources and subsequently followed a gloomy path of decadence full of intertribal wars and even cannibalism, becoming almost extinct. However there were other communities that managed to harmonize their customs with the environment they lived in, which allowed them to live together in peace and relative abundance over many years. This is the situation with Tikopia, a solitary promontory that appears in the Pacific Ocean. During historic times, the small island maintained a population density almost five times greater than the average for other islands, although it was smaller in absolute terms. The islanders achieved this developing an intensive arboriculture system, which covered the island with a variety of gardens of economically valuable plants, with fruit and nut trees which gave shade to the sweet potatoes and other plantings. On the few spots where there were no trees, they had planted fields of sweet potatoes and other nourishing vegetable species. Fishing, carefully regulated through custom, was the principal source of proteins. Furthermore, and this may be the most important, the inhabitants of Tikopia utilized birth control mechanisms: celibacy, contraception, abortion, infanticide, almost suicidal sea excursions the young men (who were encouraged to embark on very dangerous expeditions) and, in some cases, expulsion of segments of the population. Indeed, zero population growth was incorporated as a central element of Tikopia's religion. The priests of that isle, as opposed to our Catholic prelates of today, inveighed for the virtues of birth control and warned of the severe punishment that the gods had prepared for whoever might have more than two children. Homo sapiens is the only species that practices birth control and anti-conception. And they have done so for a long time, perhaps ever since their biological and cultural evolution resulted in such a way that they had no other natural enemy than themselves. The example of the inhabitants of the small island of Tikopia is very instructive: the act of avoiding having a prolix number was not an affront in the eyes of the gods, but simply was a mechanism to ensure that their offspring would continue to have space to live. And today, what occurred in that minuscule island happens on a world scale: if we want our children to have space to live, it is imperative that we be fewer or the conditions will not exist on the planet for the survival of our species. Luckily, it seems that the great majority of the Catholic flock understands it this way. Although their Ultramontane hierarchy is still very far from doing so. Yet, in the final account, that is not excessively serious: the pledge of chastity to which the priests are subjected makes them valiant allies of birth control. They do not need the next day pill. The rest of us, we do need it. 31 January 2004 55. The mind that is anxious about the future is miserable THE OTHER night there fell where I live (Jiutepec, a community adjacent to Cuernavaca) a downpour of rain and hail such as I had never seen in the almost 25 years I have been living in Morelos. Luckily, it lasted no more than 15 minutes in all its intensity; had it gone on for several hours, surely my family and I would be in the category of refugees sleeping in the gymnasium of some public school in Cuernavaca. The fury and unexpectedness of the tempest brought to my mind (as always occurs when I read, always more often, news concerning climatic disasters) the pavilion that Japan constructed at the 2000 Hanover Expo, which I had the opportunity of visiting. I transcribe some notes I took about that place: The first thing that calls for attention are the materials it is made from: wood and paper. It was made that way with the intention of commemorating the establishment of the paper industry in Japan, according to my understanding after visiting it. From outside the building resembles an enormous caterpillar, white like the paper from which it is made: an ingenious and graceful interior structure of wood crossbeams form three grand cupolas covered in the said material which intersect over approximately a quarter part of their surface. At night, the structure is lighted from within, which results in, seen from the outside and thanks to the translucence of the paper, its appearance being spectacular, even more beautiful than by day. One enters it from one of its ends. All that can be seen from there is the wood passageway which guides the visitor; a story of white paper; the impressive vaults with their visible structure and their dazzling whiteness, and precisely in the center, like an island, a structure in the shape of a hemisphere, of some ten feet in radius, completely covered with natural vegetation. Within this island various television screens announce the motto of the pavilion, "The wisdom of nature," and announce to us the theme to be covered: the fearsome carbon dioxide. Afterwards, the wood walkway continues until the opposite end where there is a stairway that descends to the main floor. There we find five "islands" that also are paper hemispheres. In the middle of each one, by means of computer and television screens, the visitor is given a veritable survey of CO2, which culminates with the chilling message that, if urgent and energetic action is not taken to diminish the annual production rhythm of that substance, the planet will be condemned to overheat with all the catastrophic consequences that that implies. The great investment that this country made to construct the pavilion and the vehemence of its name, a desperate pleading to learn the wisdom of nature, and almost completely forgetting their legendary achievements in high technology, makes me think that surely the planet is much more contaminated with CO2 than is admitted, and that the terrifying superheating does not threaten Earth in the future, but instead is occurring now. Thus the sudden and abnormal climate changes that the planet has had during recent years are explained. "The mind that is anxious about the future is miserable," Seneca said, and I fear very much (after visiting the magnificent Japanese pavilion) that we was right. The warning was constructed only four years ago. Little has been advanced since then; at least insofar as the measures that have (not) been taken to avert the disaster: neither the United States nor Russia has deigned to subscribe to the Kyoto accords. What has advanced on the other hand, and by giant steps, is the furious response that nature is providing to its overheating. Will we detain it in time? 4 June 2004 56. Our perception of time THE EVOLUTIONARY biologist Paul R. Ehrlich points out that one of the causes which leads us to destroy our environment with such enviable zeal is the perception we have of time. The average duration of a human life is extraordinarily short if compared with the length of many natural events, especially those related to evolution. The simple and persistent process of erosion of the Colorado River, for example, took around 20 million years, that is, 20,000 millennia, to excavate the marvelous Grand Canyon. Our genes are not programmed to conceive, not even so to speak to intuit, such durations of time. We are only capable of taking note of the changes that occur almost instantaneously. Would anyone smoke, for example, if they knew that on the next day after consuming a carton they would awake with acute emphysema. Of course not. Yet, the 20 or 30 years that the disease takes to manifest itself in a chronic smoker is a sufficiently long lapse so as not to come to disquiet him. Something similar occurs in our interaction with the environment: if instead of a half century, it had taken a week for the gases that our vehicles and our industries produce to cover the skies of our cities with a skin of contaminant particles, surely we would have promptly suspended the activities that provoked such a disaster. Yet a half a century, a little more than half a life, is a sufficient lapse so that we become accustomed to the changes we cause almost without noticing them, just as we do not take account of how we are aging upon seeing ourselves every day in the mirror. Additionally, it is well to recognize that such a perception of time allows us to live life with a certain calm. If we could conceive of longer magnitudes of time, perhaps we would be much more careful with our natural surrounding, but doubtless we would live perpetually anxious against the very narrow margin (80, perhaps 90 years with great luck) of life that we have ahead of us at birth. If even thus we say that life seems to be one breath, what would we say if we could conceive a century's duration as if we dealt with a year? Ehrlich concludes that, before this practical limitation we have of conceiving large magnitudes of time, all that remains for us is to sharpen our conscience of what we do and, thereby, rely on the instruments which our ingenuity has allowed to develop. We cannot notice the damage that day by day global warming is causing the planet, for example, but we have instruments that are capable of doing so and with them we can measure this damage. Luckily, our capacity to imagine numeric magnitudes is much less limited than that for durations of time. If we know what is capable of causing a 30-foot wave, we can easily conceive of that which would cause a 300-foot wave. And that is the size that waves will form to be if we continue heating the earth. The codes that we read on these apparatuses can show us what will happen during a period too long for us to conceive of it, yet indubitably short if we compare it with how long we have lasted on the planet. Perhaps something similar occurs with the perception we have of sizes and of distances, and with the same disgraceful consequences for our surroundings. 19 February 2005 57. Like a soap bubble JUST AS the average duration of a human life is extremely short if compared with the times taken by evolution, the average size of homo sapiens is extremely small if compared, not to say with the magnitudes of the universe, but simply with the dimensions of our own planet. If we imagine an ant of, let us say, two millimeters in height next to a building 100 meters tall, this will be 5,000 times taller than that. If we compare the height of a 5' 6" individual with that of Mount Everest, it turns out that the individual is 5,000 times smaller. And if, at the same time, we compare Mount Everest with the length of the terrestrial circumference, it also turns out to be 5,000 times smaller. So therefore, the ratio that exists between our size and that of the world is the same as that existing between an ant and Mount Everest. Let us put it in another manner: if the surface of a billiard ball is observed with a powerful telescope, this will seem markedly rougher than the earth's surface. The peaks and valleys that can be seen in the marble are equivalent to mountains three times higher than Everest and depths several times deeper than the deepest in our oceans. With these comparisons perhaps we can give ourselves an idea of the enormous size of our planet in relation to ourselves, but above all, of how extremely thin is the terrestrial crust when compared with the size of the planet. It is so thin that it cannot even sustain comparison with a layer of the skin of an onion. That is, in proportion, hundreds of times thicker than the terrestrial crust. Much better would be to compare it to bulk of a soap bubble of, let us say, two yards across. Better yet would be to compare it with a sphere of that size full of a viscous and fluid material enclosed in a solid cap the thickness of a soap bubble. The solidity of the ground we walk on leads us to think that the earth is solid. Reality tells us something quite different. We literally are standing upon the cooled crust of an enormous hot mass that does not stop flowing and moving. Our oceans, with all the immensity that we attribute to them, form an even thinner coat which rests upon the cold floor. Until recently, our own smallness had left the terrestrial crust safe from our everyday doings; but during the last two centuries our unmeasured demographic growth and, above all, the huge quantity of energy that we have managed to convert to our use begin to seriously threaten that thinnest of membranes upon which we live. It seems a small matter that we have caused, for example, the oceans of the planet to augment their average temperature by one or two degrees. Yet if we see it as it truly is, as a finite spot of water spread across the earth, as if it were a puddle two millimeters deep across a surface of 500 square meters, two degrees of temperature are capable of notably increasing the level of evaporation and, with it, the intensity of the winds; which, in turn, alters the global climate, and delivers droughts and floods, hurricanes et cetera. Finally, if we manage to elevate that temperature a few more degrees, surely we will burst the soap bubble and no intelligent biped shall survive to tell of it. 26 February 2005 POPULAR SCIENCE 58. George Gamow (1904-1968) THE SPREAD of scientific knowledge is an issue as important as it is complicated. As well as informing the common man concerning the advances of scientific knowledge and of the puzzles that modern science confronts, and thereby making them more conscious of the challenges and risks that that understanding represents, the propagation of science should be a determining element in the vocational orientation of many young people. There are more than a few distinguished scientists who have confessed that their interest in science was born during their childhood after having read an article or book of scientific popularization. And we say that it is a complicated matter because it is not simple to expound that which should be complex and apparently involved in simple, comprehensible terms. What complicates the problem even more is that, in general, the persons who thoroughly know a scientific theme have no interest in communicating their understandings to those who are not their colleagues, or when they do have it, lack the capacity to communicate with simplicity and precision. The opposite must also occur: there are persons who have great facility in communicating with their neighbor and an enormous interest and enthusiasm for popularizing scientific knowledge; but, unfortunately, many of them lack a deep understanding of the themes they popularize, which results on many occasions in distorting the knowledge they offer for understanding. Very few, and in the end very valiant, are the individuals who possess a solid scientific background and at the same time a brilliant capacity to communicate it. George Gamow, who, if he had lived, would have completed 100 years this past March 4th, was one of those. A native of Odessa, in the Soviet Union, from his youth he showed interest in the world of science. He obtained the doctorate in physics from the University of Leningrad in 1928, and six years later abandoned his birth country to establish himself in the United States, where he remained until his demise, in 1968. His scientific work is impressive, as much for the importance of his contributions as for the variety of subjects that captured his interest. One could say it was he who heated up the Sun for, until Gamow proposed his theory about the nuclear combustion in the heart of the stars, it was thought that our ruling star is found in a continuous period of cooling. Gamow demonstrated that the nuclear reactions that occur in the interior of the star mean that, far from cooling, its temperature gradually increases until a distant day when the atomic fuel will begin to run out. We shall not perish of cold, as was thought at the beginnings of the last century; the theory that Gamow developed condemns the earth to an infernal bonfire. He also participated in structuring a model for the liquid core of the atomic nucleus; a model that was the basis of the theories of nuclear fusion and fission. His work on Lamaitre's theory of the creation of the universe is responsible, in large part, for the modern cosmogonic theory known with the name of great explosion or Big Bang. Biochemistry was not foreign to this scientist either, to whom we owe the concept of the genetic code made up of basic components of deoxyribonucleic acid. As if all this were not sufficient, Gamow found a way to dedicate a good part of his time to the spread of science, a field in which his contributions were as important as the science itself. 27 March 2004 59. Mister Tompkins GEORGE GAMOW launched his career in the popularization of science as an authentic novelist. Just as Cervantes created his Quixote, Conan Doyle his Sherlock Holmes or Malcolm Lowry his Consul, likewise the physicist of Russian origin gave life to his principal protagonist and created, like the others had done, a world around him. We refer to the ineffable Mr. Tompkins, a sympathetic and pleasant person of middle age who earned a living as a bank employee and who scientific attainments did not go beyond what he learned in high school. Perhaps because he had nothing better to do, or perhaps for another more intimate reason we shall detail below, Mr. Tompkins had "the bravery," as the author tells us, "to participate in some semi-popular conferences about problems in modern physics." The discussions that Mr. Tompkins heard in general he found a hard bone for his jaw to chew, such that it was common for him to allow his fatigued head to rest for a refreshing siesta halfway through the sessions. Yet in the case of Mr. Tompkins, as had occurred innumerable times in the literature, the dreams he had during his naps were revelatory: in that dream world he interpreted, through apparitions of fantastical personages or delirious situations, that which the tiring voice of the speaker caused to arrive at his ears. In dreams it is not difficult to see our dimensions shrunken so that we stride through the labyrinth of atoms of a metal, simultaneously dodging the speedy electrons that shoot by on one side or another; nor is it difficult to mount a ray of light and travel with it to the limits of the universe; there is no danger if we submerge ourselves in the nucleus of the sun and witness the formidable explosions that occur in it and we can wait without desperation the million years it takes to arrive to the surface of a star; in the world of Orpheus we can easily scale the spiral staircase that forms the basis of DNA and contemplate how it holds the aminoacids in its structure to form long chains of proteins; we can, finally, see how the miracle of life began in that primitive ocean which breathed ammonia and carbon dioxide and was riven by continual electrical discharges and penetrating beams of ultraviolet light. Thus, among dreams and lectures, Mr. Tompkins unexpectedly widened his vision of the world and his comprehension of the things that surround him. Something similar happens to the reader who becomes engrossed in the description of his adventures. If that were not enough, his assiduous attendance at those conferences rewarded our hero with a female lifelong companion. Maud, the daughter of the most frequent and wisest attender, looked favorably upon the timid bank employee who invariably slept during the lectures imparted by the father of the girl. There was a wedding, and the adventures and the dreams about the world of science (Maud also possessed the gift of dreaming) moved from the conference hall to the Tompkins' home, where the father-in-law took advantage of the slightest excuse to indoctrinate the son-in-law in scientific lore; and Gamow, in turn, took advantage of the opportunity to write more and more stories. It suffices to say that, as should occur in children's tales, Mr. Tompkins, Maud and the professor were very happy, as have been the thousands of readers who have had the opportunity to sink a tooth into the novels of George Gamow. 10 April 2004 60. Scientific popularizers IN RELATION to the article I published on another occasion that spoke of the labor of the Russian-North American physicist George Gamow in the field of the popularization of science, Mr. Jorge Luis Serrano Texta, a neighbor in Mexico City, had the kindness to send me electronic mail in which he reminds me that, although they are not as many as we might like, there are a good number of scientists who, in addition to excelling in the professional development, are excellent communicators. I transcribe the commentary of Mr. Serrano, for I consider the examples he suggests are very fitting and worth reading: Allow me to interrupt your valuable time to place under your consideration a brief commentary concerning your interesting contribution of March 27th in the weekly, Labyrinth, where you refer to the scientist George Gamow. It seems to me that some distinguished scientists have been able to lucidly communicate many themes that seemed thorny and destined for an elite, for example, Isaac Asimov with his New guide to science (Basic Books, 1984), a book in which he manages to captivate the ordinary reader, since he proceeds in simple and entertaining language from the origin of the universe to the emphasis on thermodynamics. We cannot omit the important presence of the Englishman Stephen Hawking, and his most popular book, A brief history of time (Bantam, 1998) and the great popularizer of science of United States origin, Carl Sagan, with his brilliant Billions and billions (Ballantine, 1998). Bondi, Bonnor, Lyttleton et al achieved this difficult objective in their exposition, El origen del universo (FCE, 1977) in which their dissertations were converted to a comparative report. This year, the noble institutions FCE, SEP and Conacyt, through "La Ciencia desde Mexico" (actually Science for All) have contributed towards enriching scientific culture in non-specialized readers with an outstanding recent book, Why there are no extraterrestrials on Earth from the teacher Armando Arellano Ferro, whose forceful affirmation in the title is supported with ample, irrefutable arguments from a scientific point of view. He removes the blindfold that covers our eyes for he provides the tools to doubt the apparent seriousness in which the theme of the existence of extraterrestrial life has been clothed. Of course "From the Ravine," of your authorship, and "The Uranium Mine" by E. Monteverde are the best cultural columns given the task of propagating scientific knowledge in the Mexico of today. (I am grateful for this last commentary and I clarify that if I dare to transcribe it, it is so not to omit the observation which our writer makes concerning the master Monteverde.) And while we are on this point, I would add to the list some brilliant scientists who come to mind. Albert Einstein, the most well-known physicist of the 20th century, wrote, together with Leopold Infeld, a fine book called The evolution of physics (Touchstone, 2008) in which the authors take the reader by the hand through the fascinating byways of modern physics. The great French mathematician and thinker Henri Poincaré also broke into the field of popularizing science with an essay entitled, Science and hypothesis (Cosimo Classics, 2007) in which he sharply revises the scientific understanding of the 19th century. Bronowski, in his "Ascent of man" (Little Brown, 1976) guides us, like a modern Virgil, through the formidable epic of scientific thought. 3 April 2004 61. Comical history and trip to the Moon ONCE Garcia Márquez, referring to the intimate and irreplaceable Diccionario de uso del español by María Moliner, noted a touching error that appears in the book: "Day--says Moliner--is the space of time the sun takes to make a complete revolution around the earth." Perhaps the involuntary mistake of the authoress of the dictionary is because our consciousness rebels at the idea that the huge mass upon which we live moves, and at a vertiginous velocity. Although today we know that more than 2,000 years ago the astronomers who met in Alexandria held acrid debates about which was the fixed center of the universe (whether the Earth or the Sun), the geocentric thesis, sustained by Hipparchus and Claudius Ptolemy and endorsed with the impeccable authority of Aristotle, finally imposed itself and no one put it seriously in doubt over 1,500 years. Lately, to suppose that the earth is fixed and that the sun and the other stars rotate around it comports well with our common sense and with daily experience. If it was not easy for Copernicus to convince his colleagues, learned men from beginning to end, of the mobility of our planet, it must have been much more difficult to convince the other mortals. For some time I have been investigating how the idea of heliocentrism kept penetrating western societies until it became converted into an irrefutable truth that we are taught in the schools from when we are infants, and have found that the process was much longer and more tortuous than I supposed at the beginning. For instance, more than a two thirds portion of French peasants during the second half of the 18th century still were convinced that the earth remained in repose and all the bodies revolved around her. In this search, I just uncovered a truly surprising text. It consists of a tale called, Comical history of the states and empires of the Moon, which came from the pen of the legendary Cyrano de Bergerac (that indomitable swashbuckler, as wise as he was combative, whom Edmond Rostand immortalized in his tragicomedy of the same name that he published in 1897) in the middle of the 17th century and who perhaps was one of the pioneers in the genre of science fiction. In broad strokes, the story deals with a person who was convinced that the moon, as one of the other celestial bodies which rotate around the sun, had types of life very similar to those of the earth, including, recently, the ferocious human beings. With the goal of proving his theory, he designs an ingenious contrivance that he imagines will serve to transport him to the moon and is distinguished by its simplicity: he attaches myriad jars full of dew and awaits the light of dawn to start the voyage, for it is well known that the heat of the sun attracts the morning dew into the heavens. The apparatus works, perhaps too well, for no sooner does the home star appear than our personage lifts into rapid flight...but towards the sun, not the moon. Frightened by the imminent catastrophe of being fried alive, he decides to break some of the jars to diminish the speed of the flight. He ends up breaking almost all of them, such that it ends by returning to earth. Upon touching down, somewhat battered by the impact, he does not recognize where he is. Shortly there appear some curious little men dressed as God delivered them who observe him with curiosity and fear. On speaking with one of them, he discovers that he has fallen into France, but the new one, that is, into Canada. "How is it possible in so few hours to cover that enormous distance?" he asks. He himself answers: "While I was on high, the earth continued to revolve, such that what moved was it and not myself." A little later, with the only civilized man extant in the remote Canadian hinterland, he expounds his explanation with one of the loveliest discourses in defense of the heliocentric theory: And for another thing, what evidence do you have to think that the sun does not move when we see that it does? And that the earth whirls around it so fast when we feel the ground motionless beneath our feet? Monsieur, I answered, I will tell you why we are obliged to think so. First, it is commonly accepted that the sun is in the center of the universe, since all the bodies in nature need this primordial fire at the heart of the realm to meet their needs promptly. Also, the cause of procreation is placed equally in the middle of bodies, just as wise nature has placed the genitals in man, seeds in the center of apples and pits in the middle of other fruit. Likewise, the onion protects with the hundred skins that envelop it the precious seed from which ten million more will take their essence. The apple is a small universe in itself, and the sun is the seed, warmer than the other parts. That globe sheds the heat that preserves it. And the onion seed is the small sun of that little world; it warms and nourishes the vegetative salt of that body. Given that, I say that the earth needs the light, heat and influence of that great fire. It revolves about it to receive equally in all its parts the energy that preserves it. It would be as ridiculous to believe that that great luminous body revolved about a point that it has nothing to do with as to imagine that when we see a skylark being roasted that the fireplace revolves around it in order to cook it. Besides, if the sun had to do all that work, it would be like saying that medicine needed a patient, that the strong had to yield to the weak, the greater serve the lesser, and that, instead of a vessel sailing along the coast of a province, the province moved around the vessel. * www.bewildering stories.com/issue28/cyrano3.html This was written only 22 years after Galileo had to retreat from the vehement defense of heliocentrism that he had published in his Dialogue concerning the two chief world systems and which condemned him to live in captivity the remainder of his days. But Cyrano was not only a good reader of Galileo, but also went even further than the master who no doubt inspired him: a little further along in the dialogue that we transcribe, the protagonist affirms: I think the planets are worlds revolving around the sun and that the fixed stars are also suns that have planets revolving around them. We can't see those worlds from here because they are so small and because the light they reflect cannot reach us. How can one honestly think that such spacious globes are only large, deserted fields? And that our world was made to lord it over all of them just because a dozen or so vain wretches like us happen to be crawling around on it? * en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Cyrano_de_Bergerac 17 May 2004 62. The passing of the years TODAY our life begins a new cycle of 365 days. Behind an act as simple as turning the page of the calendar there is a fascinating story that illustrates like few others the extent of human ingenuity. From very remote times humans observed regularity in the manifestation of certain natural phenomena: invariably the sun rose in the east after the same duration having elapsed; similarly, the moon appeared full high in the sky after a precise interval of time, and the sun set exactly at the same point on the horizon at the end of a year. Thus, nature itself offered man a very effective medium in which to carry out the range of his most important activities, that is, to create an almanac where the dates would appear of the events that, for one reason or another, he wished to recall. It is known that the Egyptians, the Sumerians and the people of Meso- America succeeded in implementing surprisingly precise calendars. However, our own is the heir of one which, in its origins, was far from being so. The tradition recounts that the mythical Romulus was responsible for the numeration of the Roman calendar, which was a hybrid of the solar and the lunar calendars. The record of this calendar began with the founding of the city of Rome, in the year 753 b.C. and consisted of ten months of 30 days. There were no months for winter, for it was thought that during that interval human activities were interrupted. The 65 days lacking to complete the solar year were added throughout the year to the taste of the priests and high functionaries to commemorate events whether civic or religious. The people were not permitted access to the calendar. In truth, except for the powerful, no Roman knew in which day they lived. By the year 550 b.C. Rome already was a vigorous nation that could not allow itself the luxury of having an imprecise calendar unknown to the population. Therefore, the consul Numa Pompilius had it published and changed it adding the months of January and February to sum to 355 days and added to it an extra month every two years with the goal of squaring it with the solar year. But the latter measures 365 1/4 days, which is why for the year 46 b.C. the calendar of Pompilius produced winter in the autumn months and autumn in those of summer. The great Julius Caesar ordered the problem of the calendar definitively resolved. He constituted it with 12 months alternating between 30 and 31 days, except February, which only had 29 days, to add to 365 and a day in February would be added every four years (the leap year) to adjust for the surplus of a fourth of a day of the solar year. He took the occasion also to baptize the seventh month with his own name. The year in which this adjustment was made, with the purpose that the spring equinox would fall of the 21st of March, had 15 months, and was known as the last year of confusion. His grandnephew and successor, the tireless Octavian Augustus, who not wanting to be left behind baptized the month that follows July with his name; yet since no one could stand that it should have a day less than its predecessor, he ordered that August also would have 31 days, which in the final account affected February, which remained with only 28. The Julian calendar (which Christianity adopted, changing the beginning date to the supposed one for the birth of Christ) functioned reasonably well, although it was slightly longer than the solar year: every 129 years it was a day ahead of the latter. In 1582, a year in which the spring equinox fell on March 10th due to this advance, Pope Gregory XIII ordered that the calendar be newly adjusted. Ten days were added to the month of October and it was agreed to add three days every 400 years. That is our actual calendar today. It is quite precise, although in 4317 it will have gained a day on the solar year. We shall not be there then to correct it. Happy new year! 1 January 2005
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