Category Archives: 2012

Willing Suspension of Disbelief

That 2012 Stuff

This is, as the old song says, “the most wonderful time of the year.”  If you celebrate any sort of holiday in December — from Hanukkah to Christmas to Festivus to Yuletide to Kwanzaa to many, many others, you’re familiar with wonderful traditions that celebrate something at this time of year.

There’s an astronomy component to celebrations at this time of year and it has to do with the winter solstice — the shortest day of the year and the point at which the Sun appears at its lowest point in the sky (for the northern hemisphere, anyway).  Historically, the earliest humans likely noted the position of the Sun in the sky throughout the year and devised rituals and celebrations around the solstice times (the summer solstice marks the point when the Sun is at its highest point in the sky).  Over time, as other cultures, religions, and rituals evolved, people began ascribing more mystical and ritual significance to this otherwise purely physical lineup of the Sun and Earth as Earth orbits the Sun.

I think it’s only natural that people at any age of our history would devise such rituals — although they have nothing to do with our scientific understanding of Earth’s orbit around the Sun, and the Earth’s tilt on its axis, and so forth.  They’re rituals that began as ways to help people deal with what seemed to be supernatural — i.e, the Sun’s yearly and daily path across the sky, the changing sets of star patterns we see at night throughout the year, and so forth. Charting those constellations and the motions of the Sun, Moon and planets across the backdrop of the sky was the basis for the ancient practice of astrology.   Astronomical charts came to us through those early sky mappers who were, nonetheless, adherents to mysticism, which is not a scientific way of thinking.

Science and mysticism moved apart pretty quickly when people began ascribing some powerful (but immeasurable and unprovable) influences to the constellations (which are, after all, simply random patterns of stars that we somehow recognize from our point of view on Earth as shapes of animals, people, and things), or some magical power that a planet that lies billions of miles away has on a child at birth.  Such ideas are more in the realm of human mysticism and spirituality and the forces and processes they invoke have never been detected or measured scientifically. And, in science, if it can’t be observed and measured, it’s tough to prove it exists or does what people claim it does. That’s why scientific investigations of things like ESP and astrology and crop circles and UFO “apparitions” always turn up empty — there’s nothing to measure or prove. And, just because someone says something’s mystical and wonderful and THEY can see it, doesn’t mean it exists in the reality-based world of science.

That doesn’t mean that people aren’t attracted to the mysticism that early skygazers imagined existed within the stars and planets.  Humans are born with this ability to suspend disbelief in order to believe that something exists or happened, even if it never did. Look at it this way — we read fantasy and science fiction and watch anime movies and follow Star Trek (for example) and we know that those events and people don’t exist, but we can overlook that for the sake of a good story.  Cultural star legends are built around the constellations and planets, but they’re often couched in terms of gods and goddesses, kings and queens, and mythical animals like centaurs. Those legends teach lessons and transmit cultural information. But, they have little to do with the science that explains those stars and planets.

When mysticism claims to have proofs that pretend to be science or even supplant or ignore scientific research (such as is done with modern-day astrology), then it goes too far, even for a “good story.”  One of the “good stories” I’ve been reading about lately (and it’s not even all that good since it doesn’t hang together logically as a fairy tale, let alone as good science), is about the so-called 2012 Prophecies. They conflate a  somehow-apocalyptic line-up of planets, combined with some kind of galactic beam that’s headed straight for us, along with a mysterious planet (that nobody’s observed yet, but some folks claim it exists) that’s going to shift out of its orbit and collide with Earth, into a world-bashing scenario that boggles the mind. Some Web sites that “discuss” this set of predictions also include some peripheral claims that we’ll be experiencing pole shifts, increased volcanic eruptions, psychic disruptions (well, they may be right there, but not in the way they think) and — oh my gawd — human evolution!!!

Can you stand it??

All this is being touted by a mind-boggling collection of astrologers, mystics, out-of-body proponents, crop-circle believers, amateur archaeologists, and others with little to no scientific training or understanding. Oh, and people who have books and other products to sell about this nonsense.

Apparently all this apocalyptic oogah-boogah is going to happen on the winter solstice in the year 2012. And, at the root of the thing is a claim that the whole thing was predicted by the Maya civilization that largely died out in the 1500s.  There’s even been a movie made exploiting the pseudo-scientific claims that the 2012 Apocalypse pushers are splashing all over the Web.  I heard the movie did boffo biz at the box office, and that it has great special effects.

Well, the 2012 predictions and associated pseudo-science don’t reflect reality any more than a fairy tale does. But, interestingly, the whole thing does reflect our very human propensity to suspend disbelief for the sake of a good story. It essentially combines end-of-the-world predictions (which are pretty common) with ancient religions and misunderstandings about science to create a nonsense mashup of epic proportions that sounds vaguely scientific and “woooooo” all at the same time. What’s not to like about that?

Of course, all of us who talk and write about astronomy are getting questions about this 2012 stuff. It’s inevitable — and it’s also a good chance to do a little proactive astronomy teaching and help people build up their Nonsense Detectors.  I did this with two of my cruise lectures and people seemed to appreciate the “heads-up” on the phenomenon. Of course, I think a lot of people don’t really buy into the 2012 “predictions” — but there are enough of them out there that do.

So, I and people like my friend Dr. Ed Krupp at Griffith Observatory, and many others are giving talks and writing articles and blog entries to give people the “straight skinny” on what it’s all about. I highly recommend Dr. Krupp’s article and a recorded talk he gave for the National Academies of Science on the subject. Dr. Krupp is an engaging speaker and, as one of the world’s experts on the astronomy of the Maya, is the man to talk to when it comes to what the Maya calendar says as it relates to astronomy and any s0-called “predictions” the Maya are claimed to have made. He’s also an astronomer and all-around good guy.  Check it out!

Nobody Knows!!! WOOOO!!!!!!

Breathless Hyperbole and Critical Thinking

More than a week ago humans stood on the cusp of change. We were rapidly coming to the end of the Year-count — a calendrical numbering system derived from ancient counting methods first devised by the Egyptians, refined by the Romans, and revised into today’s form through a set of mysterious-seeming changes instituted by Pope Gregory XIII.

In short, we were rapidly approaching a change-over.  As the last days of December ticked away, we were all faced with the knowledge that a cycle of time was coming to an end.  There wasn’t a lot of information available to us about what would happen after that cycle ended. Nobody knew what would happen when 2009 finally arrived. There was zero scientific evidence that anything WOULD happen, but there were numerous things that could easily threaten humans in the new year.  Things like war.  Peace.  Asteroid sightings. Financial ruin. Political changes.  Medical issues.  Pestilence.

And all these things could be connected back to this mysterious changeover of time from one year to the next.

Worried yet?  No?

Good for you.  You probably recognized that I was talking about the the New Year, when we ticked over from 11:59:59 31 December 2008 to 12:00:00 1 January 2009.  At that moment, the very human-based method of timekeeping that we call the Gregorian Calendar, ticked over from one year to the next. And with it, life on Earth stepped forward one more instant into the future.  We are a time-based species and each second is a step into the future. No second is any more special than the next in the grand scheme of things.  We keep breathing, eating, sleeping, working, making war, making peace, doing things. The planet keeps going around the Sun. The Sun keeps moving through the galaxy, and the galaxy keeps spinning around.

There’s nothing mysterious about any of this because it’s all part of our existence — time flows forward and things happen.

Cum hoc ergo propter hoc (or, Correlation Does Not Imply Causation)

You may have noticed a certain breathless hyperbole about the coming year 2012. This is a time when, according to a widely varying number of woo-woo “historians,” overeager New Agers, and folks who have books they want to sell are telling everybody that somehow something is going to happen that will affect all of mankind.  This is pretty standard woo stuff; amusing to read and usually having little basis in logical thought. It speaks to a human propensity to attach meaning to things that are usually unrelated in an effort to tell a good story. There’s nothing wrong with good storytelling, but there’s an unsubtle difference between doing so and coming up with wild theories that sorta kinda sound scientific and attaching them to distinctly odd metaphysical weirdness.

Anyway, this latest spate of delusional storytelling is based on the Maya Long Count, which is simply a calendar that the ancient Maya came up with to count time. It’s a calendar, not a prediction device. It doesn’t have weird powers or require that you have a doctorate to understand that it measures time just like the calendar in your kitchen does.

However, some folks saw that the Long Count is coming to an end in 2012 and attached meaning to things that they think will happen at that time as evidence that the Long Count is somehow connected (or even causing) these events.  Some of the events are simply made up; others (like climate changes and political events) are going to happen no matter what, but they make a good story when connected to the 2012 “tick-over” of the Long Count.

Like every other calendar, the Long Count has an end date, and like every other calendar, it expects to tick over to a new period of time. It’s as simple as going from 1:59:59 31 December 2008 ticked to 12:00:00 1 January 2009.  I’d like to point out that on New Year’s Day, we all flipped over our calendars and proceeded along with our lives as we always do.

There’s an excellent quote on the Wikipedia article about the Maya calendar and the end of the Long Count that I will share with you here:

“”For the ancient Maya, it was a huge celebration to make it to the end of a whole cycle,” says Sandra Noble, executive director of the Foundation for the Advancement of Meso-American Studies, Inc. in Crystal River, Florida. To render December 21, 2012, as a doomsday or moment of cosmic shifting, she says, is “a complete fabrication and a chance for a lot of people to cash in.”

Of course, there are all kinds of web sites out there that are taking this Long Count business WAY outside of the realm of logic and critical thinking. They are promulgating things like mysterious galaxy-wide metaphysical beams that will somehow bring along a new age of enlightenment or something. One of my favorite sites for this Woo-vian blah-blah even goes so far as to say “Nobody knows what will happen!”  And then goes on to imagine the most amazing spun fantasies that seem kinda, sorta scientific if you don’t look too closely.

We’ll probably be hearing more about all this nonsense over the coming years. Hollywood has weighed in with some silly movie about researchers fighting off volcanic eruptions and typhoons for 2012.  Of course, volcanoes erupt every year, and typhoons are a yearly occurrence so, I’m not sure why they’d take on more meaning in 2012. But hey, I’m not woo, either.  Anyway, based on hard evidence from other movies I’ve seen that take on science (and science loses nearly every time), I predict that the science in the 2012 movie will suck and the critical thinking factor will be just about zero. I just keep telling myself, “It’s only a movie… ”

Anyway, for your edification, I submit Ian O’Neill’s lovely posting about the 2012 “enigma” here.  He does a good job debunking this whole 2012 thing.  And, while you’re at it, go read here about the Maya calendar. If you’re interested in learning more about Mesoamerican cultures and astronomy, I suggest you pick up Ed Krupp’s SkyWatchers, Shamans, & Kings. his Echoes of the Skies, or Tony Aveni’s Stairways to the Stars: Skywatching in Three Great Ancient Cultures.