Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
1
00:00:54,795 --> 00:00:57,195
There are two ways to view the stars:
2
00:00:57,398 --> 00:01:01,528
As they really are
and as we might wish them to be.
3
00:01:01,735 --> 00:01:03,965
There are the Pleiades...
4
00:01:04,171 --> 00:01:06,867
...a group of young stars
astronomers recognize...
5
00:01:07,074 --> 00:01:11,602
...as leaving their stellar nurseries
of gas and dust.
6
00:01:14,448 --> 00:01:16,643
And this is the Crab Nebula...
7
00:01:16,850 --> 00:01:18,943
...a stellar graveyard,
where gas and dust...
8
00:01:19,153 --> 00:01:22,054
...are being dispersed back
into the interstellar medium.
9
00:01:22,256 --> 00:01:25,521
Inside it is a dying pulsar.
10
00:01:28,095 --> 00:01:30,393
Both the Pleiades
and the Crab Nebula...
11
00:01:30,831 --> 00:01:33,857
...are in a constellation
astrologers long ago named...
12
00:01:34,068 --> 00:01:36,229
...Taurus the Bull.
13
00:01:36,437 --> 00:01:39,895
They imagined it
to influence our daily lives.
14
00:01:43,610 --> 00:01:45,908
Astronomers say that
the planet Saturn...
15
00:01:46,113 --> 00:01:49,640
...is an immense globe
of hydrogen and helium...
16
00:01:49,850 --> 00:01:53,251
...encircled by a ring of snowballs...
17
00:01:53,454 --> 00:01:56,082
...50,000 kilometers wide...
18
00:01:56,290 --> 00:02:00,317
...and that Jupiter's great red spot
is a giant storm raging...
19
00:02:00,527 --> 00:02:02,688
...for perhaps a million years.
20
00:02:02,896 --> 00:02:07,424
But the astrologers see the planets
as affecting human character and fate.
21
00:02:07,634 --> 00:02:11,968
Jupiter represents a regal bearing
and a gentle disposition.
22
00:02:12,473 --> 00:02:15,340
And Saturn, the gravedigger...
23
00:02:15,542 --> 00:02:20,070
...fosters, they say, mistrust,
suspicion, and evil.
24
00:02:22,016 --> 00:02:25,713
To the astronomers, Mars is
a place as real as the Earth...
25
00:02:25,919 --> 00:02:28,786
...a world awaiting exploration.
26
00:02:32,793 --> 00:02:35,125
But the astrologers see
Mars as a warrior...
27
00:02:35,329 --> 00:02:39,265
...the instigator of quarrels,
violence and destruction.
28
00:02:45,406 --> 00:02:48,773
Astronomy and astrology
were not always so distinct.
29
00:02:48,976 --> 00:02:53,003
For most of human history,
the one encompassed the other.
30
00:02:53,213 --> 00:02:54,305
But there came a time...
31
00:02:54,515 --> 00:02:58,212
...when astronomy escaped
from the confines of astrology.
32
00:03:00,421 --> 00:03:02,753
The two traditions began to diverge...
33
00:03:02,956 --> 00:03:05,925
...in the life and mind
of Johannes Kepler.
34
00:03:06,126 --> 00:03:09,459
It was he who demystified
the heavens by discovering...
35
00:03:09,663 --> 00:03:13,190
...that a physical force lay behind
the motions of the planets.
36
00:03:13,400 --> 00:03:18,337
He was the first astrophysicist
and the last scientific astrologer.
37
00:03:20,841 --> 00:03:23,469
The intellectual foundations
of astrology...
38
00:03:23,677 --> 00:03:26,111
...were swept away 300 years ago...
39
00:03:26,313 --> 00:03:31,148
...and yet, astrology is still taken
seriously by a great many people.
40
00:03:31,351 --> 00:03:36,015
Have you ever noticed how easy it is
to find a magazine on astrology?
41
00:03:36,223 --> 00:03:39,954
Virtually every newspaper in America
has a daily column on astrology.
42
00:03:40,160 --> 00:03:44,256
Almost none of them have even
a weekly column on astronomy.
43
00:03:44,698 --> 00:03:46,859
People wear astrological pendants...
44
00:03:47,067 --> 00:03:49,627
...check their horoscopes
in the morning...
45
00:03:50,003 --> 00:03:52,904
...even our language preserves
an astrological aspect.
46
00:03:53,407 --> 00:03:56,638
For example, take the word "disaster".
47
00:03:56,844 --> 00:03:59,472
It comes from the Greek
for "bad star".
48
00:03:59,680 --> 00:04:04,174
Italians once believed disease was
caused by the influence of the stars.
49
00:04:04,384 --> 00:04:07,547
It's the origin
of our word "influenza."
50
00:04:10,057 --> 00:04:12,685
The zodiacal signs used
by astrologers...
51
00:04:12,893 --> 00:04:16,989
...even ornament this statue
of Prometheus in New York City.
52
00:04:17,464 --> 00:04:21,560
Prometheus, who stole fire
from the gods.
53
00:04:37,117 --> 00:04:40,416
What is all this astrology business?
54
00:04:40,621 --> 00:04:43,055
Fundamentally,
it's the contention that...
55
00:04:43,257 --> 00:04:46,749
...the constellations of the planets
at the moment of your birth...
56
00:04:46,960 --> 00:04:49,451
...profoundly influences your future.
57
00:04:49,663 --> 00:04:51,460
A few thousand years ago...
58
00:04:51,665 --> 00:04:54,998
...the idea developed that
the motions of the planets...
59
00:04:55,202 --> 00:04:57,762
...determined the fates of kings...
60
00:04:57,971 --> 00:05:00,599
...dynasties, empires.
61
00:05:00,807 --> 00:05:04,436
Astrologers studied the motions
of the planets and asked...
62
00:05:04,645 --> 00:05:07,239
...what had happened
last time that, say...
63
00:05:07,447 --> 00:05:10,644
...Venus was rising in
the constellation of the Goat?
64
00:05:10,851 --> 00:05:13,081
Maybe something similar
would happen this time.
65
00:05:13,287 --> 00:05:16,381
It was a subtle and risky business.
66
00:05:17,824 --> 00:05:21,851
Astrologers became employed
only by the state.
67
00:05:22,062 --> 00:05:25,225
In many countries
it became a capital offense...
68
00:05:25,432 --> 00:05:30,062
...for anyone but official astrologers
to read the portents in the skies.
69
00:05:30,270 --> 00:05:31,430
Why?
70
00:05:31,638 --> 00:05:35,472
Because a good way to overthrow
a regime was to predict its downfall.
71
00:05:35,676 --> 00:05:39,612
Chinese court astrologers
who made inaccurate predictions...
72
00:05:39,813 --> 00:05:41,144
...were executed.
73
00:05:41,348 --> 00:05:43,578
Others simply doctored the records...
74
00:05:43,784 --> 00:05:47,345
...so that afterwards they were
in perfect conformity with events.
75
00:05:47,554 --> 00:05:50,318
Astrology developed
into a strange discipline:
76
00:05:50,524 --> 00:05:54,984
A mixture of careful observations,
mathematics and record-keeping...
77
00:05:55,195 --> 00:05:58,790
...with fuzzy thinking
and pious fraud.
78
00:06:00,901 --> 00:06:03,529
Nevertheless, astrology survived...
79
00:06:03,737 --> 00:06:05,534
...and flourished. Why?
80
00:06:05,772 --> 00:06:07,467
Because it seems to lend...
81
00:06:07,674 --> 00:06:10,438
...a cosmic significance
to our daily lives.
82
00:06:10,644 --> 00:06:13,704
It pretends to satisfy our longing...
83
00:06:13,914 --> 00:06:16,815
...to feel personally connected
with the universe.
84
00:06:17,017 --> 00:06:20,111
Astrology suggests
a dangerous fatalism.
85
00:06:20,854 --> 00:06:24,756
If our lives are controlled by a set
of traffic signals in the sky...
86
00:06:24,958 --> 00:06:27,950
...why try to change anything?
87
00:06:33,834 --> 00:06:35,062
Here, look at this.
88
00:06:35,269 --> 00:06:38,636
Two different newspapers, published
in the same city on the same day.
89
00:06:39,106 --> 00:06:41,973
Let's see what they do
about astrology.
90
00:06:42,175 --> 00:06:43,699
Suppose you were a Libra...
91
00:06:43,910 --> 00:06:47,676
...that is born between
September 23 and October 22.
92
00:06:47,881 --> 00:06:51,248
According to the astrologer
for the New York Post:
93
00:06:51,785 --> 00:06:54,015
"Compromise will help ease tension."
94
00:06:54,221 --> 00:06:56,655
Well. maybe. It's sort of vague.
95
00:06:56,957 --> 00:07:00,051
According to the
New York Daily News' astrologer:
96
00:07:00,627 --> 00:07:03,653
"Demand more of yourself."
Well, also vague.
97
00:07:03,864 --> 00:07:05,422
But also pretty different.
98
00:07:06,133 --> 00:07:10,126
It's interesting that these
predictions are not predictions.
99
00:07:10,337 --> 00:07:13,500
They tell you what to do,
they don't say what will happen.
100
00:07:13,707 --> 00:07:16,403
They're consciously designed
to be so vague...
101
00:07:16,610 --> 00:07:18,510
...that it could apply to anybody...
102
00:07:18,712 --> 00:07:21,306
...and they disagree with each other.
103
00:07:22,049 --> 00:07:25,815
Astrology can be tested
by the lives of twins.
104
00:07:26,019 --> 00:07:27,782
There are many real cases like this:
105
00:07:27,988 --> 00:07:29,956
One twin is killed in childhood...
106
00:07:30,157 --> 00:07:33,923
...in, say, a riding accident,
or is struck by lightning...
107
00:07:34,127 --> 00:07:37,494
...but the other lives
to a prosperous old age.
108
00:07:37,864 --> 00:07:40,799
Suppose that happened to me.
109
00:07:42,502 --> 00:07:44,595
My twin and I would be born...
110
00:07:44,805 --> 00:07:47,968
...in precisely the same place
and within minutes of each other.
111
00:07:48,175 --> 00:07:51,770
Exactly the same planets would
be rising at our births.
112
00:07:51,978 --> 00:07:53,946
If astrology were valid...
113
00:07:54,414 --> 00:07:58,111
...how could we have such
profoundly different fates?
114
00:07:58,518 --> 00:08:02,614
It turns out that astrologers
can't even agree among themselves...
115
00:08:02,823 --> 00:08:04,552
...what a given horoscope means.
116
00:08:04,758 --> 00:08:07,318
In careful tests
they're unable to predict...
117
00:08:07,527 --> 00:08:11,122
...the character and future of people
they know nothing about...
118
00:08:11,331 --> 00:08:13,356
...except the time and place of birth.
119
00:08:13,567 --> 00:08:16,058
Also, how could it possibly work?
120
00:08:16,269 --> 00:08:20,433
How could the rising of Mars at
the moment of my birth affect me...
121
00:08:20,640 --> 00:08:22,369
...then or now?
122
00:08:22,576 --> 00:08:26,672
I was born in a closed room.
Light from Mars couldn't get in.
123
00:08:26,880 --> 00:08:30,338
The only influence of Mars which
could affect me was its gravity.
124
00:08:30,550 --> 00:08:33,678
But the gravitational influence
of the obstetrician...
125
00:08:33,887 --> 00:08:37,118
...was much larger than
the gravitational influence of Mars.
126
00:08:37,324 --> 00:08:39,155
Mars is a lot more massive...
127
00:08:39,359 --> 00:08:41,919
...but the obstetrician
was a lot closer.
128
00:08:50,470 --> 00:08:53,166
The desire to be connected
with the cosmos...
129
00:08:53,373 --> 00:08:55,466
...reflects a profound reality...
130
00:08:55,675 --> 00:08:57,142
...for we are connected.
131
00:08:57,344 --> 00:09:01,838
Not in the trivial ways that the
pseudo-science of astrology promises...
132
00:09:02,315 --> 00:09:04,249
...but in the deepest ways.
133
00:09:09,189 --> 00:09:13,717
Our little planet is
under the influence of a star.
134
00:09:14,094 --> 00:09:17,029
The sun warms us. It drives the weather.
135
00:09:17,864 --> 00:09:20,856
It sustains all living things.
136
00:09:21,067 --> 00:09:25,595
Four billion years ago,
it brought forth life on Earth.
137
00:09:26,006 --> 00:09:27,371
But our sun...
138
00:09:27,574 --> 00:09:32,102
...is only one of
a billion trillion stars...
139
00:09:32,312 --> 00:09:34,678
...within the observable universe.
140
00:09:35,449 --> 00:09:39,647
And those countless suns
all obey natural laws...
141
00:09:39,853 --> 00:09:42,913
...some of which are
already known to us.
142
00:09:46,326 --> 00:09:50,228
How did we discover
that there are such laws?
143
00:09:51,531 --> 00:09:55,126
If we lived on a planet
where nothing ever changed...
144
00:09:55,335 --> 00:09:57,132
...there wouldn't be much to do.
145
00:09:57,337 --> 00:09:59,635
There'd be nothing to figure out.
146
00:09:59,906 --> 00:10:02,340
There'd be no impetus for science.
147
00:10:02,776 --> 00:10:05,973
And if we lived in
an unpredictable world...
148
00:10:06,179 --> 00:10:08,841
...where things changed
in random or complex ways...
149
00:10:09,049 --> 00:10:12,041
...we wouldn't be able
to figure things out.
150
00:10:12,252 --> 00:10:14,482
And again, there'd be
no such thing as science.
151
00:10:15,222 --> 00:10:18,214
But we live in
an in-between universe...
152
00:10:18,425 --> 00:10:20,325
...where things change, all right...
153
00:10:20,527 --> 00:10:23,724
...but according to patterns, rules...
154
00:10:23,930 --> 00:10:27,263
...or as we call them,
laws of nature.
155
00:10:29,970 --> 00:10:32,097
If I throw a stick up in the air...
156
00:10:32,539 --> 00:10:34,939
...it always falls down.
157
00:10:35,642 --> 00:10:38,543
If the sun sets in the west...
158
00:10:38,745 --> 00:10:42,943
...it always rises again
the next morning in the east.
159
00:10:43,149 --> 00:10:45,811
And so, it's possible
to figure things out.
160
00:10:46,019 --> 00:10:50,456
We can do science, and with it
we can improve our lives.
161
00:10:54,094 --> 00:10:56,756
Human beings are good
at understanding the world.
162
00:10:56,963 --> 00:10:58,760
We always have been.
163
00:10:58,965 --> 00:11:03,231
We were able to hunt game
or build fires...
164
00:11:03,436 --> 00:11:06,837
...only because we had
figured something out.
165
00:11:24,858 --> 00:11:26,723
There once was a time...
166
00:11:26,927 --> 00:11:28,417
...before television...
167
00:11:28,628 --> 00:11:32,223
...before motion pictures,
before radio, before books.
168
00:11:32,666 --> 00:11:36,466
The greatest part of human existence
was spent in such a time.
169
00:11:38,972 --> 00:11:42,339
And then over the dying embers
of the campfire...
170
00:11:42,842 --> 00:11:44,673
...on a moonless night...
171
00:11:45,445 --> 00:11:47,879
...we watched the stars.
172
00:11:52,419 --> 00:11:56,583
The night sky is interesting.
There are patterns there.
173
00:11:56,790 --> 00:11:59,588
If you look closely,
you can see pictures.
174
00:12:02,963 --> 00:12:05,830
One of the easiest constellations
to recognize...
175
00:12:06,032 --> 00:12:08,592
...lies in the northern skies.
176
00:12:08,802 --> 00:12:12,670
In North America,
it's called the Big Dipper.
177
00:12:12,872 --> 00:12:16,467
The French have a similar idea.
They call it La Casserole.
178
00:12:16,676 --> 00:12:18,337
"The casserole."
179
00:12:23,316 --> 00:12:25,944
In medieval England,
the same pattern of stars...
180
00:12:26,152 --> 00:12:29,781
...reminded people of
a simple wooden plow.
181
00:12:36,529 --> 00:12:39,896
The ancient Chinese had
a more sophisticated notion.
182
00:12:40,100 --> 00:12:42,295
To them these stars carried...
183
00:12:42,502 --> 00:12:46,768
...the celestial bureaucrat on
his rounds about the sky...
184
00:12:46,973 --> 00:12:49,567
...seated on the clouds
and accompanied...
185
00:12:49,776 --> 00:12:52,609
...by his eternally
hopeful petitioners.
186
00:12:54,581 --> 00:12:57,311
The people of northern Europe
imagined another pattern.
187
00:12:57,517 --> 00:13:01,248
To them it was
Charles' Wain, or wagon.
188
00:13:01,454 --> 00:13:03,354
A medieval cart.
189
00:13:04,858 --> 00:13:08,419
But other cultures saw these seven
stars as part of a larger picture.
190
00:13:08,628 --> 00:13:11,256
It was the tail of a great bear...
191
00:13:11,464 --> 00:13:14,126
...which the ancient Greeks
and Native Americans saw...
192
00:13:14,334 --> 00:13:16,325
...instead of the handle of a dipper.
193
00:13:16,536 --> 00:13:20,768
But the most imaginative interpretation
of this larger group of stars...
194
00:13:20,974 --> 00:13:22,737
...was that of the ancient Egyptians.
195
00:13:22,942 --> 00:13:26,844
They made out a curious procession
of a bull and a reclining man...
196
00:13:27,047 --> 00:13:31,347
...followed by a strolling hippopotamus
with a crocodile on its back.
197
00:13:31,551 --> 00:13:35,282
What a marvelous diversity
in the images various cultures saw...
198
00:13:35,488 --> 00:13:37,251
...in this particular constellation.
199
00:13:37,457 --> 00:13:41,188
But the same is true
for all the other constellations.
200
00:13:42,529 --> 00:13:46,659
Some people think these things
are really in the night sky...
201
00:13:46,866 --> 00:13:49,528
...but we put these pictures
there ourselves.
202
00:13:49,736 --> 00:13:51,704
We were hunter folk...
203
00:13:51,905 --> 00:13:54,032
...so we put hunters and dogs...
204
00:13:54,240 --> 00:13:57,175
...lions and young women
up in the skies.
205
00:13:57,377 --> 00:14:01,108
All manner of things
of interest to us.
206
00:14:02,515 --> 00:14:06,508
When 17th century European sailors
first saw the southern skies...
207
00:14:06,753 --> 00:14:09,847
...they put all sorts of things
of 17th century interest up there.
208
00:14:10,056 --> 00:14:13,423
Microscopes and telescopes,
compasses...
209
00:14:13,626 --> 00:14:15,753
...and the sterns of ships.
210
00:14:16,830 --> 00:14:20,630
If the constellations had been
named in the 20th century...
211
00:14:20,834 --> 00:14:24,998
...I suppose we'd put there
refrigerators and bicycles...
212
00:14:25,205 --> 00:14:29,437
...rock stars,
maybe even mushroom clouds.
213
00:14:29,642 --> 00:14:33,100
A new set of human hopes and fears...
214
00:14:33,313 --> 00:14:35,804
...placed among the stars.
215
00:14:36,883 --> 00:14:40,375
But there's more to the stars
than just pictures.
216
00:14:40,587 --> 00:14:44,182
For example, stars always
rise in the east...
217
00:14:44,390 --> 00:14:46,290
...and always set in the west...
218
00:14:46,493 --> 00:14:50,953
...taking the whole night to cross
the sky if they pass overhead.
219
00:14:51,164 --> 00:14:54,497
There are different constellations
in different seasons.
220
00:14:54,701 --> 00:14:59,263
The same constellations always rise
at, say, the beginning of autumn.
221
00:14:59,472 --> 00:15:01,736
It never happens that
a new constellation...
222
00:15:01,941 --> 00:15:05,308
...suddenly appears out of the east,
one that you never saw before.
223
00:15:05,512 --> 00:15:09,073
There's a regularity, a permanence...
224
00:15:09,282 --> 00:15:11,807
...a predictability about the stars.
225
00:15:12,018 --> 00:15:15,886
In a way, they're almost comforting.
226
00:15:27,867 --> 00:15:31,428
The return of the sun
after a total eclipse...
227
00:15:31,738 --> 00:15:36,402
...its rising in the morning after
its troublesome absence at night...
228
00:15:36,609 --> 00:15:40,636
...and the reappearance of the
crescent moon after the new moon...
229
00:15:40,847 --> 00:15:43,213
...all spoke to our ancestors...
230
00:15:43,416 --> 00:15:46,146
...of the possibility
of surviving death.
231
00:15:46,352 --> 00:15:51,255
Up there in the skies
was a metaphor of immortality.
232
00:15:51,991 --> 00:15:55,392
Almost a thousand years ago
in the American Southwest...
233
00:15:55,595 --> 00:15:57,756
...the Anasazi people
built a stone temple...
234
00:15:57,964 --> 00:16:02,526
...an astronomical observatory
to mark the longest day of the year.
235
00:16:02,735 --> 00:16:06,569
Dawn on that day must
have been a joyous occasion...
236
00:16:06,773 --> 00:16:10,265
...a celebration of
the generosity of the sun.
237
00:16:24,924 --> 00:16:26,983
They built this ceremonial calendar...
238
00:16:27,193 --> 00:16:30,685
...so that the sun's rays
would penetrate a window...
239
00:16:30,897 --> 00:16:33,661
...and enter a particular niche...
240
00:16:33,967 --> 00:16:36,367
...on this day alone.
241
00:16:40,840 --> 00:16:44,571
That kind of precision is
a triumph of human intelligence.
242
00:16:44,777 --> 00:16:46,938
It outlives its creators.
243
00:16:47,146 --> 00:16:51,913
Today, this is a lonely place.
The Anasazi people are no more.
244
00:16:52,118 --> 00:16:54,882
They had learned to predict
the changing of the seasons.
245
00:16:55,088 --> 00:16:57,648
They could not predict
the changing of the climate...
246
00:16:57,857 --> 00:16:59,620
...and the failure of the rains.
247
00:16:59,826 --> 00:17:02,124
But their temple continues to catch...
248
00:17:02,328 --> 00:17:05,320
...the sun's first rays
on the summer solstice.
249
00:17:09,903 --> 00:17:13,168
I imagine the Anasazi people...
250
00:17:13,406 --> 00:17:17,866
...gathered in these pews
every June 21...
251
00:17:18,077 --> 00:17:20,068
...dressed with feathers
and turquoise...
252
00:17:20,280 --> 00:17:23,078
...to celebrate the power of the sun.
253
00:17:23,316 --> 00:17:25,716
These upper niches...
254
00:17:25,919 --> 00:17:28,410
...there are 28 of them...
255
00:17:28,621 --> 00:17:31,715
...may represent the number of days
for the moon to reappear...
256
00:17:31,925 --> 00:17:33,984
...in the same constellation.
257
00:17:34,594 --> 00:17:38,121
These people paid a lot
of attention to the sun...
258
00:17:38,331 --> 00:17:40,265
...and the moon and the stars.
259
00:17:40,466 --> 00:17:43,697
And other devices based
on somewhat similar designs...
260
00:17:43,903 --> 00:17:47,498
...can be found in Angkor Wat
in Cambodia...
261
00:17:47,707 --> 00:17:49,197
...Stonehenge in England...
262
00:17:49,409 --> 00:17:51,604
...Abu Simbel in Egypt...
263
00:17:51,811 --> 00:17:54,143
...Chichén Itzá in Mexico...
264
00:17:54,347 --> 00:17:56,781
...and in the Great Plains
of North America.
265
00:17:56,983 --> 00:18:00,248
Now, why did people
all over the world...
266
00:18:00,453 --> 00:18:04,651
...go to such great trouble
to teach themselves astronomy?
267
00:18:08,728 --> 00:18:12,027
It was literally
a matter of life and death...
268
00:18:12,231 --> 00:18:15,564
...to be able to predict the seasons.
269
00:18:16,869 --> 00:18:19,337
We hunted antelope or buffalo...
270
00:18:19,539 --> 00:18:22,804
...whose migrations
ebbed and flowed...
271
00:18:23,009 --> 00:18:24,533
...with the seasons.
272
00:18:24,978 --> 00:18:28,106
Fruits and nuts were
ready to be picked...
273
00:18:28,314 --> 00:18:30,475
...in some times and not in others.
274
00:18:30,683 --> 00:18:33,811
When we invented agriculture,
we had to take care...
275
00:18:34,020 --> 00:18:38,457
...and sow our seeds and harvest
our crops at just the right season.
276
00:18:38,658 --> 00:18:42,094
Annual meetings of
far-flung nomadic peoples...
277
00:18:42,295 --> 00:18:44,729
...were set for prescribed times.
278
00:18:45,498 --> 00:18:46,726
Now...
279
00:18:46,966 --> 00:18:50,527
Some alleged calendrical devices
might be due to chance.
280
00:18:50,737 --> 00:18:52,204
For example...
281
00:18:52,705 --> 00:18:56,300
...the accidental alignment
of a window and a niche...
282
00:18:56,509 --> 00:19:01,037
...but there are other devices,
wonderfully different.
283
00:19:10,390 --> 00:19:13,951
Today, only the dry ruins
of the great Anasazi cities...
284
00:19:14,160 --> 00:19:17,129
...have survived the ravages of time.
285
00:19:19,832 --> 00:19:24,565
Not far from these ancient cities
in an almost inaccessible location...
286
00:19:24,771 --> 00:19:26,671
...there is another solstice marker.
287
00:19:26,873 --> 00:19:29,967
This one of singular
and unmistakable purpose.
288
00:19:30,943 --> 00:19:34,003
The deliberate arrangement
of three great stone slabs...
289
00:19:34,213 --> 00:19:36,443
...allows a sliver of sunlight...
290
00:19:36,649 --> 00:19:40,107
...to pierce the heart
of a carved spiral...
291
00:19:40,319 --> 00:19:43,618
...only at noon on
the longest day of the year.
292
00:19:51,064 --> 00:19:55,057
The wind whips through the canyons
here in the American Southwest...
293
00:19:55,268 --> 00:19:58,032
...and there's no one
to hear it but us.
294
00:19:58,504 --> 00:20:02,031
A reminder of
the 40,000 generations...
295
00:20:02,241 --> 00:20:05,108
...of thinking men and women
who preceded us...
296
00:20:05,311 --> 00:20:08,610
...about whom we know
next to nothing...
297
00:20:08,915 --> 00:20:12,976
...upon whom our society is based.
298
00:20:26,899 --> 00:20:31,302
When our prehistoric ancestors
studied the sky after sunset...
299
00:20:31,504 --> 00:20:34,598
...they observed that some
of the stars were not fixed...
300
00:20:34,807 --> 00:20:38,402
...with respect to the constant
pattern of the constellations.
301
00:20:38,611 --> 00:20:41,808
Instead, five of them moved...
302
00:20:42,014 --> 00:20:44,380
...slowly forward across the sky...
303
00:20:44,584 --> 00:20:48,111
...then backward for a few months,
then forward again...
304
00:20:48,321 --> 00:20:50,551
...as if they couldn't
make up their minds.
305
00:20:50,756 --> 00:20:52,883
We call them planets...
306
00:20:53,092 --> 00:20:55,492
...the Greek word for "wanderers".
307
00:20:55,695 --> 00:20:58,186
These planets presented
a profound mystery.
308
00:20:58,397 --> 00:21:02,458
The earliest explanation was
that they were living beings.
309
00:21:02,668 --> 00:21:06,331
How else explain
their strange, looping behavior?
310
00:21:06,539 --> 00:21:08,837
Later, they were thought to be gods...
311
00:21:09,041 --> 00:21:13,034
...and then disembodied
astrological influences.
312
00:21:15,348 --> 00:21:17,976
But the real solution
to this particular mystery...
313
00:21:18,184 --> 00:21:21,676
...is that planets are worlds,
that the Earth is one of them...
314
00:21:21,888 --> 00:21:25,847
...and that they go around the sun
according to precise mathematical laws.
315
00:21:26,058 --> 00:21:28,618
This discovery has led directly...
316
00:21:28,828 --> 00:21:31,922
...to our modern global civilization.
317
00:21:33,499 --> 00:21:35,865
The merging of imagination
with observation...
318
00:21:36,068 --> 00:21:39,367
...produced an exact description
of the solar system.
319
00:21:39,572 --> 00:21:41,870
Only then could you answer
the fundamental question...
320
00:21:42,074 --> 00:21:43,769
...at the root of modern science:
321
00:21:44,544 --> 00:21:46,705
What makes it all go?
322
00:21:47,446 --> 00:21:50,973
Two thousand years ago, no such
question would have been asked.
323
00:21:51,184 --> 00:21:54,244
The prevailing view had then been
formulated by Claudius Ptolemy...
324
00:21:54,487 --> 00:21:56,011
...an Alexandrian astronomer...
325
00:21:56,222 --> 00:21:59,851
...and also the preeminent
astrologer of his time.
326
00:22:02,995 --> 00:22:06,453
Ptolemy believed that the Earth
was the center of the universe...
327
00:22:06,666 --> 00:22:10,363
...that the sun and the moon
and the planets like Mars...
328
00:22:10,570 --> 00:22:12,401
...went around the Earth.
329
00:22:12,605 --> 00:22:14,436
It's the most natural idea
in the world.
330
00:22:14,640 --> 00:22:18,337
The earth seems steady,
solid, immobile...
331
00:22:18,544 --> 00:22:22,674
...while we can see the heavenly bodies
rising and setting every day.
332
00:22:22,882 --> 00:22:26,215
But then, how explain
the loop-the-loop motion...
333
00:22:26,419 --> 00:22:29,479
...of the planets in the sky?
Mars, for example?
334
00:22:29,689 --> 00:22:32,852
This little machine shows
Ptolemy's model.
335
00:22:33,226 --> 00:22:36,093
The planets were imagined
to go around the Earth...
336
00:22:36,295 --> 00:22:38,490
...attached to
perfect crystal spheres...
337
00:22:38,698 --> 00:22:40,962
...but not attached directly
to the spheres...
338
00:22:41,167 --> 00:22:44,466
...but indirectly through
a kind of off-center wheel.
339
00:22:49,242 --> 00:22:51,767
The sphere turns,
the little wheel rotates...
340
00:22:51,978 --> 00:22:56,108
...and as seen from the Earth,
Mars does its loop-the-loop.
341
00:23:04,390 --> 00:23:08,019
This model permitted
reasonably accurate predictions...
342
00:23:08,227 --> 00:23:10,218
...of planetary motion.
343
00:23:10,429 --> 00:23:13,728
Good enough predictions
for the precision of measurement...
344
00:23:13,933 --> 00:23:16,834
...in Ptolemy's time and much later.
345
00:23:18,304 --> 00:23:21,671
Supported by the church
through the Dark Ages...
346
00:23:21,874 --> 00:23:24,399
...Ptolemy's model
effectively prevented...
347
00:23:24,610 --> 00:23:27,272
...the advance of astronomy
for 1500 years.
348
00:23:27,480 --> 00:23:31,416
Finally, in 1543,
a quite different explanation...
349
00:23:31,617 --> 00:23:33,676
...of the apparent motion
of the planets...
350
00:23:33,886 --> 00:23:38,755
...was published by a Polish cleric
named Nicolaus Copernicus.
351
00:23:39,859 --> 00:23:42,259
Its most daring feature
was the proposition...
352
00:23:42,461 --> 00:23:44,691
...that the sun was
the center of the universe.
353
00:23:44,897 --> 00:23:48,663
The Earth was demoted
to just one of the planets.
354
00:23:48,868 --> 00:23:51,098
The retrograde,
or loop-the-loop motion...
355
00:23:51,304 --> 00:23:54,330
...happens as the Earth
overtakes Mars in its orbit.
356
00:23:54,540 --> 00:23:58,738
You can see that,
from the standpoint of the Earth...
357
00:23:58,944 --> 00:24:01,504
...Mars is now going
slightly backwards...
358
00:24:01,714 --> 00:24:05,514
...and now it is going
in its original direction.
359
00:24:05,718 --> 00:24:08,744
This Copernican model worked
at least as well...
360
00:24:08,954 --> 00:24:11,149
...as Ptolemy's crystal spheres.
361
00:24:11,357 --> 00:24:14,019
But it annoyed an awful lot of people.
362
00:24:14,226 --> 00:24:17,559
The Catholic Church later
put Copernicus' work...
363
00:24:17,763 --> 00:24:20,391
...on its list of forbidden books.
364
00:24:20,599 --> 00:24:24,695
And Martin Luther described
Copernicus in these words:
365
00:24:24,904 --> 00:24:28,601
"People give ear
to an upstart astrologer.
366
00:24:28,808 --> 00:24:32,369
This fool wishes to reverse...
367
00:24:32,578 --> 00:24:35,046
...the entire science of astronomy."
368
00:24:35,247 --> 00:24:36,908
Close quote.
369
00:24:37,383 --> 00:24:42,082
The confrontation between
the two views of the cosmos...
370
00:24:42,288 --> 00:24:44,449
...Earth-centered and sun-centered...
371
00:24:44,657 --> 00:24:46,852
...reached its climax with a man...
372
00:24:47,059 --> 00:24:50,893
...who, like Ptolemy, was both
an astronomer and an astrologer.
373
00:24:57,336 --> 00:24:58,633
He lived in a time...
374
00:24:58,838 --> 00:25:01,102
...when the human spirit
was fettered...
375
00:25:01,307 --> 00:25:03,537
...and the mind chained...
376
00:25:03,743 --> 00:25:06,234
...when angels and demons
and crystal spheres...
377
00:25:06,445 --> 00:25:08,640
...were imagined up there
in the skies.
378
00:25:08,848 --> 00:25:11,476
Science still lacked
the slightest notion...
379
00:25:11,684 --> 00:25:14,676
...of physical laws underlying nature.
380
00:25:14,887 --> 00:25:17,481
But the brave and lonely
struggle of this man...
381
00:25:17,690 --> 00:25:19,089
...was to provide the spark...
382
00:25:19,291 --> 00:25:22,522
...that ignited the modern
scientific revolution.
383
00:25:23,929 --> 00:25:28,491
Johannes Kepler was born
in Germany in 1571.
384
00:25:28,701 --> 00:25:32,398
He was sent to the Protestant
seminary school in Maulbronn...
385
00:25:32,605 --> 00:25:34,835
...to be educated for the clergy.
386
00:25:37,977 --> 00:25:41,037
It was a strict, disciplined life.
387
00:25:41,247 --> 00:25:44,705
Up before dawn to begin
a long day of prayer and study.
388
00:25:51,390 --> 00:25:53,950
This was the age of the Reformation.
389
00:25:54,160 --> 00:25:58,859
Maulbronn was a kind of educational
and ideological boot camp...
390
00:25:59,064 --> 00:26:02,124
...training young Protestants
in theological weaponry...
391
00:26:02,334 --> 00:26:05,861
...against the fortress
of Roman Catholicism.
392
00:26:16,315 --> 00:26:18,749
There was little reassurance
or comfort here...
393
00:26:18,951 --> 00:26:21,215
...for a sensitive boy like Kepler.
394
00:26:21,420 --> 00:26:23,320
He was intelligent and he knew it.
395
00:26:24,089 --> 00:26:28,423
That, together with his stubbornness
and his fierce independence...
396
00:26:28,627 --> 00:26:31,425
...served to isolate him
from the other boys.
397
00:26:31,630 --> 00:26:35,464
Kepler made few friends
in his two years at Maulbronn.
398
00:26:35,968 --> 00:26:37,595
Amen.
399
00:26:38,971 --> 00:26:43,465
So he kept to himself, withdrawn
into the world of his own thoughts...
400
00:26:43,676 --> 00:26:45,166
...which were often concerned...
401
00:26:45,377 --> 00:26:47,743
...with his imagined unworthiness
in the eyes of God.
402
00:26:47,947 --> 00:26:51,246
He despaired of ever
attaining salvation.
403
00:26:59,158 --> 00:27:02,889
But God to him
was more than punishment.
404
00:27:03,462 --> 00:27:07,626
God was also the creative power
of the universe.
405
00:27:08,167 --> 00:27:11,603
And the young Kepler's
curiosity about God...
406
00:27:11,804 --> 00:27:13,863
...was even greater than his fear.
407
00:27:14,373 --> 00:27:18,036
He wanted to know
God's plan for the world.
408
00:27:18,244 --> 00:27:21,941
He wanted to read the mind of God.
409
00:27:23,349 --> 00:27:25,909
This was his obsession.
410
00:27:26,452 --> 00:27:29,216
It was to inspire
all his great achievements.
411
00:27:29,421 --> 00:27:32,390
It was to take him, and Europe...
412
00:27:32,591 --> 00:27:35,583
...out of the cloister
of medieval thought.
413
00:27:43,869 --> 00:27:48,306
In places like Maulbronn, the faint
echoes of the genius of antiquity...
414
00:27:48,507 --> 00:27:50,270
...still reverberated.
415
00:27:50,543 --> 00:27:53,068
Here, in addition to theology...
416
00:27:53,279 --> 00:27:58,080
...Kepler was exposed to Greek
and Latin, music and mathematics.
417
00:27:59,051 --> 00:28:01,849
And it was in geometry
that he thought he glimpsed...
418
00:28:02,054 --> 00:28:04,079
...the image of perfection.
419
00:28:16,969 --> 00:28:18,664
He was later to write:
420
00:28:18,904 --> 00:28:22,203
"Geometry existed
before the Creation.
421
00:28:22,408 --> 00:28:26,037
It is coeternal with the mind of God.
422
00:28:26,378 --> 00:28:28,346
Geometry provided God...
423
00:28:28,614 --> 00:28:31,208
...with a model for the Creation.
424
00:28:31,917 --> 00:28:33,282
Geometry...
425
00:28:34,186 --> 00:28:36,347
...is God himself."
426
00:28:47,866 --> 00:28:51,529
But the real world of Kepler's time
was far from perfect.
427
00:28:51,737 --> 00:28:55,696
It was haunted by fear,
pestilence, famine and war.
428
00:28:55,908 --> 00:28:59,309
Superstition was a natural refuge
for people who were powerless.
429
00:28:59,712 --> 00:29:03,443
Only one thing seemed certain:
the stars themselves.
430
00:29:03,649 --> 00:29:07,244
It was remembered that in ancient
times, the astrologer, Ptolemy...
431
00:29:07,453 --> 00:29:09,546
...and the sage, Pythagoras,
had taught...
432
00:29:09,755 --> 00:29:13,247
...that the heavens were
harmonious and changeless.
433
00:29:16,428 --> 00:29:21,058
Ptolemy had said that the motions
of the planets through the stars...
434
00:29:21,266 --> 00:29:23,632
...were portents
of events here below.
435
00:29:25,838 --> 00:29:29,638
Was it the influence of Mars and Venus
that made his father a brutal man...
436
00:29:29,842 --> 00:29:32,436
...a mercenary who had abandoned him?
437
00:29:37,216 --> 00:29:40,879
Did an unfortunate conjunction
of planets in an adverse sign...
438
00:29:41,086 --> 00:29:44,351
...make his mother a mischievous
and quarrelsome woman?
439
00:29:48,861 --> 00:29:51,455
If such things were fated
by the stars...
440
00:29:51,664 --> 00:29:54,326
...then perhaps there were
hidden patterns...
441
00:29:54,533 --> 00:29:57,195
...underlying the unpredictable
chaos of daily life.
442
00:30:11,784 --> 00:30:15,379
Patterns as constant as the stars.
443
00:30:24,863 --> 00:30:28,060
But how could you discover them?
Where would you begin?
444
00:30:28,267 --> 00:30:31,498
If the world and everything in it
was crafted by God...
445
00:30:31,704 --> 00:30:35,697
...then shouldn't you begin with
a careful study of physical reality?
446
00:30:36,075 --> 00:30:38,669
Was not all of creation
an expression...
447
00:30:38,877 --> 00:30:41,471
...of the harmonies
in the mind of God?
448
00:30:41,680 --> 00:30:46,140
The book of nature had waited
1,500 years for a reader.
449
00:31:02,968 --> 00:31:06,096
In 1589, Kepler left Maulbronn...
450
00:31:06,305 --> 00:31:10,173
...to continue his studies
at the great university in Tübingen.
451
00:31:13,145 --> 00:31:15,045
It was a liberation
to find himself...
452
00:31:15,247 --> 00:31:18,648
...amidst the most vital
intellectual currents of the time.
453
00:31:18,851 --> 00:31:20,785
One of his teachers
revealed to him...
454
00:31:20,986 --> 00:31:24,012
...the revolutionary ideas
of Copernicus.
455
00:31:24,656 --> 00:31:26,590
Kepler relished...
456
00:31:26,792 --> 00:31:30,125
...this urbane scholarly community.
457
00:31:30,929 --> 00:31:34,865
Here, his genius
was recognized at last.
458
00:31:42,141 --> 00:31:45,133
Kepler was not to be ordained
after Tübingen.
459
00:31:45,344 --> 00:31:50,213
Instead, to his surprise, he found
himself summoned to Graz in Austria...
460
00:31:50,415 --> 00:31:53,543
...to become a teacher
of high school mathematics.
461
00:31:55,187 --> 00:31:58,020
Kepler was not a very good teacher.
462
00:31:59,324 --> 00:32:03,351
The first year in Graz, his class
had only a handful of students.
463
00:32:03,562 --> 00:32:06,122
The second year, none.
464
00:32:07,399 --> 00:32:10,061
He mumbled. He digressed.
465
00:32:10,269 --> 00:32:13,238
He was, at times,
utterly incomprehensible.
466
00:32:15,941 --> 00:32:18,341
He was distracted
by an incessant clamor...
467
00:32:18,544 --> 00:32:22,207
...of speculations and associations
that ran through his head.
468
00:32:29,054 --> 00:32:30,988
One pleasant summer afternoon...
469
00:32:31,190 --> 00:32:34,250
...with his students longing
for the end of the lecture...
470
00:32:34,459 --> 00:32:37,951
...he was visited by a revelation
that was to alter radically...
471
00:32:38,163 --> 00:32:41,655
...the future course
of astronomy and the world.
472
00:32:47,339 --> 00:32:49,807
There were only six planets
known in his time:
473
00:32:50,008 --> 00:32:53,307
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars,
Jupiter and Saturn.
474
00:32:53,645 --> 00:32:55,806
For some time,
Kepler had been wondering:
475
00:32:56,381 --> 00:32:58,872
Why only six planets?
476
00:32:59,084 --> 00:33:01,575
Why not 20 planets, or 100?
477
00:33:02,020 --> 00:33:05,421
And why this particular spacing
between their orbits?
478
00:33:05,624 --> 00:33:08,889
No one had ever asked
such questions before.
479
00:33:09,661 --> 00:33:11,959
In the course of
a lecture on astrology...
480
00:33:12,164 --> 00:33:15,258
...Kepler inscribed within
the circle of the zodiac...
481
00:33:15,467 --> 00:33:18,197
...a triangle with three equal sides.
482
00:33:18,403 --> 00:33:21,167
He then noticed, quite by accident...
483
00:33:21,373 --> 00:33:24,968
...that a smaller circle
inscribed within the triangle...
484
00:33:25,177 --> 00:33:27,702
...bore the same relationship
to the outer circle...
485
00:33:27,913 --> 00:33:31,474
...as did the orbit of Jupiter
to the orbit of Saturn.
486
00:33:32,451 --> 00:33:36,080
Could a similar geometry relate
the orbits of the other planets?
487
00:33:36,288 --> 00:33:39,587
Now Kepler remembered
the perfect solids of Pythagoras.
488
00:33:39,791 --> 00:33:42,851
Of all the possible
three-dimensional shapes...
489
00:33:43,061 --> 00:33:47,020
...there were only five
whose sides were regular polygons.
490
00:33:49,801 --> 00:33:52,531
He believed that
the two numbers were connected...
491
00:33:52,738 --> 00:33:54,797
...that the reason
there were only six planets...
492
00:33:55,007 --> 00:33:57,908
...was that there were
only five regular solids.
493
00:33:58,110 --> 00:34:02,171
In these perfect solids,
nested one within the other...
494
00:34:02,381 --> 00:34:05,316
...he believed he had discovered
the invisible supports...
495
00:34:05,517 --> 00:34:08,748
...for the spheres of the six planets.
496
00:34:13,292 --> 00:34:16,523
This connection
between geometry and astronomy...
497
00:34:16,728 --> 00:34:19,390
...could admit only one explanation:
498
00:34:19,598 --> 00:34:23,728
The hand of God, mathematician.
499
00:34:38,917 --> 00:34:42,751
"The intense pleasure I received
from this discovery...
500
00:34:42,955 --> 00:34:45,446
...can never be told in words,"
he said.
501
00:34:45,657 --> 00:34:48,592
"Now I no longer became weary at work.
502
00:34:48,794 --> 00:34:52,025
Days and nights
I passed in mathematical labors...
503
00:34:52,230 --> 00:34:56,496
...until I could see if my hypothesis
would agree with Copernicus'...
504
00:34:56,702 --> 00:35:01,071
...or if my joy would vanish
into thin air."
505
00:35:07,012 --> 00:35:11,278
But no matter how he hard tried, the
perfect solids and planetary orbits...
506
00:35:11,483 --> 00:35:13,849
...did not agree
with each other very well.
507
00:35:15,954 --> 00:35:17,444
Why didn't it work?
508
00:35:17,656 --> 00:35:20,124
Because, unfortunately, it was wrong.
509
00:35:20,325 --> 00:35:23,123
The true orbital sizes
of the planets we now know...
510
00:35:23,328 --> 00:35:26,820
...have absolutely nothing to do
with the five perfect solids...
511
00:35:27,032 --> 00:35:30,763
...as the later discovery
of Uranus, Neptune and Pluto shows.
512
00:35:30,969 --> 00:35:33,767
But Kepler spent
the rest of his life...
513
00:35:33,972 --> 00:35:37,703
...pursuing this
geometrical phantasm.
514
00:35:38,076 --> 00:35:42,172
He couldn't abandon it,
and he couldn't make it work.
515
00:35:42,381 --> 00:35:45,009
His frustration
must have been enormous.
516
00:35:45,217 --> 00:35:46,878
Finally he decided that...
517
00:35:47,085 --> 00:35:50,646
...the accepted planetary
observations were inaccurate...
518
00:35:50,856 --> 00:35:53,791
...and not his model
of the nested solids.
519
00:35:55,127 --> 00:35:58,961
Only one man had access
to more precise observations.
520
00:35:59,164 --> 00:36:02,258
That man was Tycho Brahe...
521
00:36:02,467 --> 00:36:06,767
...who, coincidentally, had recently
written Kepler to come and join him.
522
00:36:06,972 --> 00:36:11,272
Kepler was reluctant at first,
but he had no choice.
523
00:36:15,547 --> 00:36:19,278
In 1598, a wave of oppression
enveloped Graz.
524
00:36:19,885 --> 00:36:22,911
It was spearheaded
by the local archduke...
525
00:36:23,155 --> 00:36:26,181
...who vowed to restore Catholicism
to the province...
526
00:36:26,391 --> 00:36:28,916
...and in his own words...
527
00:36:29,127 --> 00:36:31,857
..."would rather make
a desert of the country...
528
00:36:32,064 --> 00:36:34,259
...than rule over heretics."
529
00:36:46,945 --> 00:36:48,674
Kepler's school was closed.
530
00:36:48,880 --> 00:36:52,441
People were forbidden to worship
or to sing hymns...
531
00:36:52,651 --> 00:36:55,620
...or to own books
of a heretical nature.
532
00:36:56,421 --> 00:37:00,915
Those who refused Catholicism
were fined 10% of their assets...
533
00:37:01,126 --> 00:37:04,254
...and exiled from the country
on pain of death.
534
00:37:05,063 --> 00:37:07,588
Kepler chose exile.
535
00:37:11,970 --> 00:37:14,962
"Hypocrisy, I have never learned.
536
00:37:15,173 --> 00:37:19,576
I am in earnest about faith.
I do not play with it."
537
00:37:34,893 --> 00:37:38,192
For Kepler, it was only the first
in a series of exiles...
538
00:37:38,396 --> 00:37:41,490
...forced upon him
by religious fanatics.
539
00:37:46,838 --> 00:37:51,172
Now he decided to accept
Tycho Brahe's open invitation.
540
00:37:51,376 --> 00:37:55,642
Brahe, a wealthy Danish nobleman,
lived in great splendor...
541
00:37:55,847 --> 00:38:00,341
...and had recently been appointed
Imperial Mathematician at Prague.
542
00:38:00,685 --> 00:38:04,280
Kepler left Graz
with his wife and stepdaughter...
543
00:38:04,489 --> 00:38:07,287
...and set out
on the difficult journey.
544
00:38:07,926 --> 00:38:10,690
Kepler's wife was not a happy woman.
545
00:38:10,896 --> 00:38:14,730
She was chronically ill and
had recently lost two young children.
546
00:38:14,933 --> 00:38:16,764
The marriage was no comfort.
547
00:38:16,968 --> 00:38:19,493
She had no understanding
of his work...
548
00:38:19,704 --> 00:38:22,468
...and regarded his profession
with contempt.
549
00:38:31,583 --> 00:38:33,778
Kepler was married to his work...
550
00:38:33,985 --> 00:38:37,318
...and every tedious mile
was bringing him closer...
551
00:38:37,522 --> 00:38:40,855
...to the great Tycho Brahe,
whose observations...
552
00:38:41,059 --> 00:38:44,825
...he devoutly hoped,
would confirm his theory.
553
00:38:45,230 --> 00:38:50,167
Kepler envisioned Tycho's domain as
a sanctuary from the evils of the time.
554
00:38:50,368 --> 00:38:53,804
He aspired to be a worthy colleague
to the illustrious Tycho...
555
00:38:54,005 --> 00:38:56,166
...who for 35 years
had been immersed...
556
00:38:56,374 --> 00:38:59,207
...in exact measurements
of a clockwork universe...
557
00:38:59,411 --> 00:39:01,845
...ordered and precise.
558
00:39:13,692 --> 00:39:18,095
But Tycho's court was not at all
what Kepler had expected.
559
00:39:19,297 --> 00:39:20,423
Vinol
560
00:39:22,701 --> 00:39:25,169
Tycho himself was
a flamboyant figure...
561
00:39:25,370 --> 00:39:27,838
...adorned with a gold nose.
562
00:39:28,340 --> 00:39:30,808
The original was lost
in a student duel...
563
00:39:31,009 --> 00:39:33,876
...fought over who was
the superior mathematician.
564
00:39:34,079 --> 00:39:37,139
And he maintained
a circus-like entourage...
565
00:39:37,349 --> 00:39:39,874
...of assistants, distant relatives...
566
00:39:40,085 --> 00:39:42,383
...and assorted hangers-on.
567
00:39:52,030 --> 00:39:55,090
Kepler had no use
for the endless revelry.
568
00:39:55,300 --> 00:39:57,598
He impatient to see Tycho's data.
569
00:39:57,802 --> 00:40:01,863
But Tycho would give him
only a few scraps at a time.
570
00:40:03,942 --> 00:40:08,675
"Tycho," he said, "gave me no
opportunity to share in his studies.
571
00:40:09,014 --> 00:40:12,211
He would only,
in the course of a meal, mention...
572
00:40:12,417 --> 00:40:14,248
...as if in passing...
573
00:40:14,452 --> 00:40:17,387
...today, the figure
of the apogee of one planet.
574
00:40:17,589 --> 00:40:21,025
Tomorrow, the nodes of another."
575
00:40:23,028 --> 00:40:25,553
Kepler was ill-suited
for such games...
576
00:40:25,764 --> 00:40:28,028
...and the general climate
of intrigue...
577
00:40:28,233 --> 00:40:30,861
...offended his sense of propriety.
578
00:40:38,009 --> 00:40:41,001
Their cruel mockery of
the pious and scholarly Kepler...
579
00:40:41,413 --> 00:40:44,211
...depressed and saddened him.
580
00:40:48,153 --> 00:40:51,179
"My opinion of Tycho is this:
581
00:40:51,389 --> 00:40:53,220
He is superlatively rich...
582
00:40:53,525 --> 00:40:56,221
...but knows not how
to make proper use of it."
583
00:40:56,861 --> 00:41:01,798
Tycho possesses the best observations,
he also has collaborators.
584
00:41:02,000 --> 00:41:04,332
He lacks only the architect...
585
00:41:04,536 --> 00:41:07,300
...who would put all this to use."
586
00:41:19,084 --> 00:41:21,780
Tycho was unable
to turn his observations...
587
00:41:21,986 --> 00:41:25,387
...into a coherent theory
of the solar system.
588
00:41:25,757 --> 00:41:29,249
He knew he needed
the brilliant Kepler's help.
589
00:41:30,195 --> 00:41:33,653
But simply to hand over
his life's work to a potential rival?
590
00:41:33,865 --> 00:41:36,299
That was unthinkable.
591
00:41:46,778 --> 00:41:49,611
Tycho was the greatest observational
genius of the age...
592
00:41:49,814 --> 00:41:52,112
...and Kepler
the greatest theoretician.
593
00:41:53,485 --> 00:41:55,817
Either man alone could not
achieve the synthesis...
594
00:41:56,020 --> 00:41:58,420
...which both felt was now possible.
595
00:42:00,658 --> 00:42:01,989
Keplerel
596
00:42:03,862 --> 00:42:05,796
The birth of modern science...
597
00:42:05,997 --> 00:42:08,465
...which is the fusion
of observation and theory...
598
00:42:08,867 --> 00:42:13,634
...teetered on the precipice
of their mutual distrust.
599
00:42:31,322 --> 00:42:33,483
The two repeatedly quarreled...
600
00:42:33,691 --> 00:42:35,488
...and were reconciled.
601
00:42:35,693 --> 00:42:38,355
Until, a few months later...
602
00:42:38,563 --> 00:42:42,932
...Tycho died of
his habitual overindulgence...
603
00:42:43,134 --> 00:42:46,035
...in food and wine.
604
00:42:48,406 --> 00:42:50,499
Kepler wrote to a friend:
605
00:42:50,909 --> 00:42:54,436
"On the last night
of Tycho's gentle delirium...
606
00:42:54,646 --> 00:42:58,605
...he repeated over
and over again these words...
607
00:42:58,817 --> 00:43:01,308
...like someone composing a poem:
608
00:43:01,986 --> 00:43:05,581
'Let me not seem
to have lived in vain.
609
00:43:05,790 --> 00:43:09,351
Let me not seem
to have lived in vain.'
610
00:43:14,065 --> 00:43:15,760
And he did not."
611
00:43:18,203 --> 00:43:20,467
Eventually, after Tycho's death...
612
00:43:20,672 --> 00:43:24,403
...Kepler contrived
to extract the observations...
613
00:43:24,609 --> 00:43:27,601
...from Tycho's reluctant family.
614
00:43:27,812 --> 00:43:30,406
Observations of the apparent motion...
615
00:43:30,615 --> 00:43:33,209
...of Mars through
the constellations...
616
00:43:33,418 --> 00:43:37,878
...obtained over
a period of many years.
617
00:43:38,189 --> 00:43:40,555
The data, from the last few decades...
618
00:43:40,758 --> 00:43:43,283
...before the invention
of the telescope...
619
00:43:43,495 --> 00:43:47,625
...were by far the most precise
ever obtained up to that time.
620
00:43:51,503 --> 00:43:55,405
Kepler worked with
a kind of passionate intensity...
621
00:43:55,607 --> 00:43:58,337
...to understand Tycho's observations.
622
00:43:58,543 --> 00:44:02,206
What real motions of the Earth...
623
00:44:02,413 --> 00:44:04,881
...and Mars about the sun...
624
00:44:05,083 --> 00:44:07,779
...could explain,
to the precision of measurement...
625
00:44:07,986 --> 00:44:12,923
...the apparent motion, as seen
from the Earth, of Mars in the sky.
626
00:44:13,324 --> 00:44:14,655
And why Mars?
627
00:44:14,859 --> 00:44:18,260
Tycho had told Kepler that
the apparent motion of Mars...
628
00:44:18,463 --> 00:44:22,297
...was the most difficult
to reconcile with a circular orbit.
629
00:44:22,867 --> 00:44:27,065
After years of calculation,
he believed he'd found the values...
630
00:44:27,272 --> 00:44:30,901
...for a Martian circular orbit
which matched...
631
00:44:31,109 --> 00:44:35,239
...ten of Tycho Brahe's observations
within two minutes of arc.
632
00:44:35,446 --> 00:44:39,542
There are sixty minutes of arc
in an angular degree...
633
00:44:39,751 --> 00:44:44,245
...and of course,
90 degrees from horizon...
634
00:44:44,455 --> 00:44:45,513
...to zenith.
635
00:44:45,723 --> 00:44:48,624
So a few minutes of arc is
a small quantity to measure...
636
00:44:49,193 --> 00:44:50,990
...especially without a telescope.
637
00:44:51,195 --> 00:44:54,096
But Kepler's ecstasy of discovery...
638
00:44:54,299 --> 00:44:56,733
...soon crumbled into gloom.
639
00:44:56,935 --> 00:45:01,736
Two further observations by Tycho
were inconsistent with his orbit...
640
00:45:01,940 --> 00:45:04,841
...by as much as eight minutes of arc.
641
00:45:05,376 --> 00:45:09,540
Kepler wrote, "If I had believed we
could ignore these eight minutes...
642
00:45:09,747 --> 00:45:12,409
...I would've patched up
my hypothesis accordingly.
643
00:45:12,617 --> 00:45:15,177
Since it was not permissible
to ignore them...
644
00:45:15,386 --> 00:45:18,116
...those eight minutes
pointed the road...
645
00:45:18,323 --> 00:45:21,156
...to a complete reformation
of astronomy."
646
00:45:21,492 --> 00:45:25,929
The difference between a circular orbit
and the true orbit of Mars...
647
00:45:26,130 --> 00:45:30,226
...could be distinguished
only by precise measurement...
648
00:45:30,435 --> 00:45:33,598
...and by a courageous
acceptance of the facts.
649
00:45:33,805 --> 00:45:38,572
Kepler was profoundly annoyed
at having to abandon a circular orbit.
650
00:45:38,943 --> 00:45:42,811
It shook his faith in God...
651
00:45:43,014 --> 00:45:46,916
...as the Maker of
a perfect celestial geometry.
652
00:45:47,352 --> 00:45:49,582
"Having cleaned the stable...
653
00:45:49,787 --> 00:45:52,950
...of astronomy of circles
and spirals," he said...
654
00:45:53,157 --> 00:45:55,148
...he was left...
655
00:45:55,360 --> 00:45:59,490
...with "only a single
cartful of dung."
656
00:45:59,697 --> 00:46:03,599
He tried various oval-like curves,
calculated away...
657
00:46:03,801 --> 00:46:06,201
...made some arithmetical mistakes...
658
00:46:06,404 --> 00:46:09,237
...which caused him
to reject the correct answer.
659
00:46:09,440 --> 00:46:13,570
Months later, in some desperation...
660
00:46:13,778 --> 00:46:17,646
...he tried the formula
for the first time for an ellipse.
661
00:46:17,849 --> 00:46:21,751
The ellipse matched
the observations of Tycho beautifully.
662
00:46:23,855 --> 00:46:26,380
In such an orbit,
the sun isn't at the center.
663
00:46:26,591 --> 00:46:31,494
It is offset.
It's at one focus of the ellipse.
664
00:46:31,796 --> 00:46:35,254
When a given planet is at the far
point in its orbit from the sun...
665
00:46:35,466 --> 00:46:36,797
...it goes more slowly.
666
00:46:37,001 --> 00:46:40,198
As it approaches the near point,
it speeds up.
667
00:46:40,405 --> 00:46:42,930
Such motion is why
we describe the planets...
668
00:46:43,141 --> 00:46:46,042
...as forever falling
towards the sun...
669
00:46:46,244 --> 00:46:47,734
...but never reaching it.
670
00:46:47,945 --> 00:46:51,676
Kepler's first law of
planetary motion is simply this:
671
00:46:51,883 --> 00:46:54,750
A planet moves in an ellipse...
672
00:46:54,952 --> 00:46:57,682
...with the sun at one focus.
673
00:47:00,892 --> 00:47:03,520
As a planet moves along its orbit,
it sweeps out...
674
00:47:03,728 --> 00:47:08,165
...in a given period of time,
an imaginary wedge-shaped area.
675
00:47:08,366 --> 00:47:11,392
When the planet's far from the sun,
the area's long and thin.
676
00:47:11,602 --> 00:47:15,561
When the planet is close to the sun,
the area is short and squat.
677
00:47:15,907 --> 00:47:18,171
Though the shapes of
the wedges are different...
678
00:47:18,376 --> 00:47:22,312
...Kepler found that
their areas are exactly the same.
679
00:47:22,914 --> 00:47:27,044
This provided a precise description
of how a planet changes its speed...
680
00:47:27,251 --> 00:47:29,776
...in relation to its distance
from the sun.
681
00:47:29,987 --> 00:47:31,955
Now, for the first time...
682
00:47:32,156 --> 00:47:35,023
...astronomers could predict
where a planet would be...
683
00:47:35,226 --> 00:47:38,423
...in accordance with
a simple and invariable law.
684
00:47:38,629 --> 00:47:41,189
Kepler's second law is this:
685
00:47:41,399 --> 00:47:45,233
A planet sweeps out equal areas
in equal times.
686
00:47:46,370 --> 00:47:49,168
Kepler's first two
laws of planetary motion...
687
00:47:49,373 --> 00:47:52,865
...may seem a little
remote and abstract.
688
00:47:53,077 --> 00:47:57,844
Planets move in ellipses and they
sweep out equal areas in equal times.
689
00:47:58,049 --> 00:47:59,812
So what?
690
00:48:00,218 --> 00:48:03,381
It's not as easy to grasp
as circular motion.
691
00:48:03,588 --> 00:48:06,284
We might have a tendency
to dismiss it...
692
00:48:06,491 --> 00:48:09,187
...to say it's a mere
mathematical tinkering...
693
00:48:09,393 --> 00:48:13,090
...something removed
from everyday life.
694
00:48:13,297 --> 00:48:17,757
But these are the laws
our planet itself obeys.
695
00:48:17,969 --> 00:48:21,632
As we, glued by gravity
to the surface of the Earth...
696
00:48:21,839 --> 00:48:23,534
...hurtle through space...
697
00:48:23,741 --> 00:48:26,437
...we move in accord
with laws of nature...
698
00:48:26,644 --> 00:48:29,078
...which Kepler first discovered.
699
00:48:29,280 --> 00:48:31,874
When we send spacecraft
to the planets...
700
00:48:32,083 --> 00:48:34,074
...when we observe double stars...
701
00:48:34,285 --> 00:48:37,584
...when we examine the motion
of distant galaxies...
702
00:48:37,789 --> 00:48:42,726
...we find that all over the universe,
Kepler's laws are obeyed.
703
00:48:43,427 --> 00:48:44,689
Many years later...
704
00:48:44,896 --> 00:48:49,333
...Kepler came upon his third
and last law of planetary motion.
705
00:48:49,534 --> 00:48:53,698
A law which relates the motion of
the various planets to each other...
706
00:48:53,905 --> 00:48:55,736
...which lays out correctly...
707
00:48:55,940 --> 00:48:59,068
...the clockwork of the solar system.
708
00:49:01,179 --> 00:49:03,409
He discovered
a mathematical relationship...
709
00:49:03,614 --> 00:49:05,673
...between the size
of a planet's orbit...
710
00:49:05,883 --> 00:49:08,875
...and the average speed at
which it travels around the sun.
711
00:49:09,086 --> 00:49:11,281
This confirmed his long-held belief...
712
00:49:11,489 --> 00:49:15,016
...that there must be a force in
the sun that drives the planets.
713
00:49:15,226 --> 00:49:18,195
A force stronger for
the inner, fast-moving planets...
714
00:49:18,396 --> 00:49:21,456
...and weaker for
the outer, slow-moving planets.
715
00:49:21,666 --> 00:49:25,762
Isaac Newton later identified
that force as gravity.
716
00:49:25,970 --> 00:49:28,768
Answering at last
the fundamental question:
717
00:49:28,973 --> 00:49:31,373
What makes the planets go?
718
00:49:32,844 --> 00:49:35,005
Kepler's third or Harmonic Law...
719
00:49:35,213 --> 00:49:38,740
...states that the squares
of the periods of the planets...
720
00:49:38,950 --> 00:49:41,441
...the time for them
to make one orbit...
721
00:49:41,652 --> 00:49:44,553
...are proportional to the cubes,
the third power...
722
00:49:44,755 --> 00:49:47,724
...of their average distances
from the sun.
723
00:49:47,925 --> 00:49:52,055
So the further away a planet is
from the sun, the slower it moves...
724
00:49:52,263 --> 00:49:55,824
...but according to
a precise mathematical law.
725
00:49:56,033 --> 00:49:59,799
Kepler was the first person in
the history of the human species...
726
00:50:00,004 --> 00:50:03,303
...to understand correctly
and quantitatively...
727
00:50:03,507 --> 00:50:05,134
...how the planets move...
728
00:50:05,343 --> 00:50:07,903
...how the solar system works.
729
00:50:20,057 --> 00:50:23,288
The man who sought harmony
in the cosmos...
730
00:50:23,494 --> 00:50:28,431
...was fated to live at a time
of exceptional discord on Earth.
731
00:50:28,699 --> 00:50:32,692
Exactly eight days after
Kepler's discovery of his third law...
732
00:50:32,904 --> 00:50:35,031
...there occurred in Prague
an incident...
733
00:50:35,239 --> 00:50:38,868
...that unleashed
the devastating Thirty Years' War.
734
00:50:39,076 --> 00:50:43,536
The war's convulsions shattered
the lives of millions of people.
735
00:50:45,149 --> 00:50:50,052
Kepler lost his wife and young son
to an epidemic spread by the soldiery.
736
00:50:50,421 --> 00:50:52,946
His royal patron was deposed...
737
00:50:53,157 --> 00:50:55,955
...and he was excommunicated
from the Lutheran church...
738
00:50:56,160 --> 00:51:00,290
...for his uncompromising independence
on questions of belief.
739
00:51:00,498 --> 00:51:02,693
He was a refugee once again.
740
00:51:04,101 --> 00:51:05,295
The conflict...
741
00:51:05,503 --> 00:51:09,405
...portrayed on both sides
as a "holy war"...
742
00:51:09,607 --> 00:51:12,735
...was more an exploitation
of religious bigotry...
743
00:51:12,944 --> 00:51:15,344
...by those hungry for land and power.
744
00:51:24,055 --> 00:51:27,218
This war introduced
organized pillage...
745
00:51:27,425 --> 00:51:30,087
...to keep armies in the field.
746
00:51:32,964 --> 00:51:36,297
The brutalized population of Europe
stood by helpless...
747
00:51:36,500 --> 00:51:39,025
...as their plowshares
and pruning hooks...
748
00:51:39,236 --> 00:51:43,764
...were literally beaten
into swords and spears.
749
00:51:43,975 --> 00:51:47,536
Rumor and paranoia swept
through the countryside...
750
00:51:47,745 --> 00:51:50,873
...enveloping especially
the powerless.
751
00:51:51,549 --> 00:51:53,710
Among the many scapegoats chosen...
752
00:51:53,918 --> 00:51:58,252
...were elderly women living alone,
who were charged with witchcraft.
753
00:52:08,899 --> 00:52:11,891
Kepler's mother was taken away
in the middle of the night...
754
00:52:12,536 --> 00:52:14,663
...in a laundry chest.
755
00:52:16,874 --> 00:52:20,935
It took Kepler six years
of unremitting effort...
756
00:52:21,145 --> 00:52:22,942
...to save her life.
757
00:52:25,516 --> 00:52:30,180
In Kepler's little hometown,
about three women were arrested...
758
00:52:30,388 --> 00:52:34,256
...tortured and killed
as witches every year...
759
00:52:34,458 --> 00:52:38,189
...between 1615 and 1629.
760
00:52:38,396 --> 00:52:42,127
And Katarina Kepler was
a cantankerous old woman.
761
00:52:42,333 --> 00:52:46,030
She engaged in disputes
which annoyed the local nobility...
762
00:52:46,237 --> 00:52:47,670
...and she sold drugs.
763
00:52:48,339 --> 00:52:51,968
Poor Kepler thought that
he himself had contributed...
764
00:52:52,176 --> 00:52:55,737
...inadvertently,
to his mother's arrest.
765
00:52:55,946 --> 00:52:58,278
It came about
because he had written...
766
00:52:58,482 --> 00:53:00,575
...one of the first works
of science fiction.
767
00:53:00,785 --> 00:53:04,221
It was intended to explain
and popularize science...
768
00:53:04,422 --> 00:53:07,323
...and was called The Somnium.
769
00:53:07,525 --> 00:53:08,787
"The Dream."
770
00:53:18,936 --> 00:53:21,769
He imagined a journey to the moon...
771
00:53:21,972 --> 00:53:24,998
...with the space travelers
standing on the lunar surface...
772
00:53:25,209 --> 00:53:29,771
...looking up to see,
rotating slowly above them...
773
00:53:29,980 --> 00:53:32,710
...the lovely planet Earth.
774
00:53:34,685 --> 00:53:37,711
Part of the basis for the charge
of witchcraft was that...
775
00:53:37,922 --> 00:53:42,655
...in his dream, Kepler used his
mother's spells to leave the Earth.
776
00:53:42,860 --> 00:53:44,987
But he really believed that one day...
777
00:53:45,196 --> 00:53:48,529
...human beings would launch
celestial ships...
778
00:53:48,732 --> 00:53:52,133
...with sails adapted
to the breezes of heaven...
779
00:53:52,336 --> 00:53:54,998
...filled with explorers who,
he said...
780
00:53:55,206 --> 00:53:58,334
..."would not fear
the vastness of space."
781
00:53:58,976 --> 00:54:03,174
He speculated on the mountains,
valleys, craters...
782
00:54:03,380 --> 00:54:07,441
...climate and possible
inhabitants of the moon.
783
00:54:08,886 --> 00:54:10,046
Before Kepler...
784
00:54:10,254 --> 00:54:14,088
...astronomy had little connection
with physical reality.
785
00:54:14,959 --> 00:54:17,359
But with Kepler came the idea that...
786
00:54:17,561 --> 00:54:22,089
...a physical force moves
the planets in their orbits.
787
00:54:23,200 --> 00:54:26,761
He was the first
to combine a bold imagination...
788
00:54:26,971 --> 00:54:28,734
...with precise measurements...
789
00:54:28,939 --> 00:54:32,272
...to step out into the cosmos.
790
00:54:32,610 --> 00:54:35,238
It changed everything.
791
00:55:01,238 --> 00:55:04,332
This fusion of facts with dreams...
792
00:55:04,542 --> 00:55:07,272
...opened the way to the stars.
793
00:55:11,882 --> 00:55:13,076
As a boy...
794
00:55:13,284 --> 00:55:17,880
...Kepler had been captured
by a vision of cosmic splendor...
795
00:55:18,088 --> 00:55:19,885
...a harmony of the worlds...
796
00:55:20,090 --> 00:55:23,059
...which he sought so tirelessly
all his life.
797
00:55:23,260 --> 00:55:26,457
Harmony in this world eluded him.
798
00:55:26,664 --> 00:55:29,132
His three laws of
planetary motion represent...
799
00:55:29,333 --> 00:55:30,322
...we now know...
800
00:55:30,534 --> 00:55:33,094
...a real harmony of the worlds.
801
00:55:33,304 --> 00:55:36,933
But to Kepler, they were
only incidental to his quest...
802
00:55:37,141 --> 00:55:40,668
...for a cosmic system
based on the perfect solids.
803
00:55:40,878 --> 00:55:45,110
A system which, it turns out,
existed only in his mind.
804
00:55:45,316 --> 00:55:47,580
Yet, from his work...
805
00:55:47,785 --> 00:55:51,585
...we have found that scientific laws
pervade all of nature...
806
00:55:51,789 --> 00:55:55,452
...that the same rules apply
on Earth as in the skies...
807
00:55:55,659 --> 00:55:59,254
...that we can find
a resonance, a harmony...
808
00:55:59,463 --> 00:56:03,559
...between the way we think
and the way the world works.
809
00:56:06,537 --> 00:56:09,768
When he found that his long-cherished
beliefs did not agree...
810
00:56:09,974 --> 00:56:12,101
...with the most
precise observations...
811
00:56:12,309 --> 00:56:15,005
...he accepted
the uncomfortable facts.
812
00:56:15,212 --> 00:56:18,147
He preferred the hard truth...
813
00:56:18,349 --> 00:56:20,943
...to his dearest illusions.
814
00:56:21,151 --> 00:56:24,177
That is the heart of science.
69111
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.