Lauren, as usual you bring something fascinating to the community. Growing up, my father was intimately involved in NASA and many other facets of space research, so I became addicted to all things "Space". To see how those early days of the great unknown have evolved so quickly to the present, where such amazing photos and information are readily available on our home desk (or lap) is almost unfathomable. Thanks for sharing a little outward perspective which led to some very deep inner perspective.
Still, it reminds me most of the final scene in Men In Black..... I am SUCH a movie junkie.
Thanks, gorgeous!
Originally Posted by topguntex
I'm flattered that you enjoy my being a Dork
I have long been addicted to all things Space, born out of my general childlike sense of wonderment. In part it also comes from a spiritual place, as I believe that at it's core spirituality and science should not at all clash, but feed each other.
My fascination with the universe is born out of the complexity of reality: Relativity playing a huge role in that, the nature of space and time being so ever changing and organic, when at our own tiny level it seems so rigid and distinct. String theory absolutely absorbs me with fascination.
I also believe that "God" is the soul of the universe, much like Einstein I do not believe in a personal God, but that we can glimpse this grand network of elegance through both the tiniest details in science, and the grandest details in science. If life can evolve from inanimate objects over millions of years, and souls (intelligence, creativity and emotion) can develop out of an organic form, then my personal faith holds close the possibility that a soul evolved out of the universe as a whole. I guess my theory is a bit backward: God didn't give birth to the universe, the universe gave birth to God.
Seeing this picture was like seeing a snap shot of a piece of God. I love it, I wish I could get a huge poster of it made and framed.