Starry Messenger: Cosmic Perspectives on Civilization
4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars | 4,542 ratings
Price: 13.12
Last update: 01-11-2025
Top reviews from the United States
Pachara Naripthaphan
5.0 out of 5 stars
never disappointed with Dr.Niel
Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2024
He is a lovely teacher, writer and always inspirational scientist. I only wish I knew him before, i would have been physicist by now.
G. A. BRAVO-CASAS
5.0 out of 5 stars
A remarkable message from someone close to the stars
Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2022
Highly recommended! - In his new book, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson provides a cosmic perspective to life on the planet. It is an excellent presentation of the adoption of a global perspective of nature, which is at the core of the yoga teachings and Indian philosophy. A global perspective helps us to recognize that we are all interconnected and therefore, interdependent. The right perspective facilitates us to properly view the details of reality, at the same time as we see the totality … it is the ability to see simultaneously the leaves of a tree and the entire tree. The better the view of the tree, helps to see better the leaves. Modern science tells us about the benefits of using a microscope and a “macroscope” to properly perceive our concerns.
The author (born in 1958) has been the director of the Hayden Planetarium at the Museum of Natural History in New York City since 1996. He attended Bronx High School of Science in NYC (source of eight Nobel Prizes), studied at Harvard, University of Texas, Columbia, and Princeton. He began his interest in astronomy at age nine when he visited the Planetarium. He has received 21 honorary doctorates, the Public Welfare Medal from the National Academy of Sciences, and Asteroid 13123 Tyson was named in his honor.
Tyson examines a large number of topics, including astrology, gender identification, safety and violence, race and ethnicity, religion, political orientation, eating habits, disabilities, our views on life and death, and many other controversial subjects. His views on all the them challenge our traditional stands and are easily digested by a special mixture of humor and sarcasm. The book has a comprehensive source of information, mainly available on the Internet.
For many of his selected topics, he visualizes how aliens visiting the planet would see us. Those aliens, he says, have none of our biases, our preferences, or our preconceived notions. Probably, those aliens have noticed that the very concept of truth on Earth is fraught with conflicting ideologies and habits. In one of the most sarcastic passages, Tyson deals with vegans and meat eaters and says that aliens would be incensed by vegetarians for slaughtering their plant brethren and by their special interest in reproductive organs (flowers, seeds, nuts, berries); by eating then, humans disrupt the life cycle of the planet. And he concludes that the barbaric behavior includes eating the younger versions of plants and infanticidal practices like eating baby carrots, baby spinach, baby arugula, baby artichokes, baby squash, bean sprouts.
Brilliantly, Tyson summarizes the enormous impact of space exploration on our view of the planet. In a short period of five years, just after Apollo 11 (the first walk on the Moon), in spite of the virulent Cold War, the Vietnam fighting, and numerous Campus unrests, the US took a significant number of unprecedented actions: “Comprehensive Clean Air Act” 1970), “First National Earth Day” (1970), “National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration” (NOOA- 1970), “Environmental Protection Agency” (1970), DDT banned (1972), “Clean Water Act” (1972), first unleaded gasoline emission standards (1973), and the “Endangered Species Act” (1973). During those five years, “Physicians Without Borders” was founded (1971), the first catalytic converted for cars was invented and adopted, and the “Whole Earth Catalog” became a hit publication (1968-1972). We began to see our planet with different eyes!
The author (born in 1958) has been the director of the Hayden Planetarium at the Museum of Natural History in New York City since 1996. He attended Bronx High School of Science in NYC (source of eight Nobel Prizes), studied at Harvard, University of Texas, Columbia, and Princeton. He began his interest in astronomy at age nine when he visited the Planetarium. He has received 21 honorary doctorates, the Public Welfare Medal from the National Academy of Sciences, and Asteroid 13123 Tyson was named in his honor.
Tyson examines a large number of topics, including astrology, gender identification, safety and violence, race and ethnicity, religion, political orientation, eating habits, disabilities, our views on life and death, and many other controversial subjects. His views on all the them challenge our traditional stands and are easily digested by a special mixture of humor and sarcasm. The book has a comprehensive source of information, mainly available on the Internet.
For many of his selected topics, he visualizes how aliens visiting the planet would see us. Those aliens, he says, have none of our biases, our preferences, or our preconceived notions. Probably, those aliens have noticed that the very concept of truth on Earth is fraught with conflicting ideologies and habits. In one of the most sarcastic passages, Tyson deals with vegans and meat eaters and says that aliens would be incensed by vegetarians for slaughtering their plant brethren and by their special interest in reproductive organs (flowers, seeds, nuts, berries); by eating then, humans disrupt the life cycle of the planet. And he concludes that the barbaric behavior includes eating the younger versions of plants and infanticidal practices like eating baby carrots, baby spinach, baby arugula, baby artichokes, baby squash, bean sprouts.
Brilliantly, Tyson summarizes the enormous impact of space exploration on our view of the planet. In a short period of five years, just after Apollo 11 (the first walk on the Moon), in spite of the virulent Cold War, the Vietnam fighting, and numerous Campus unrests, the US took a significant number of unprecedented actions: “Comprehensive Clean Air Act” 1970), “First National Earth Day” (1970), “National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration” (NOOA- 1970), “Environmental Protection Agency” (1970), DDT banned (1972), “Clean Water Act” (1972), first unleaded gasoline emission standards (1973), and the “Endangered Species Act” (1973). During those five years, “Physicians Without Borders” was founded (1971), the first catalytic converted for cars was invented and adopted, and the “Whole Earth Catalog” became a hit publication (1968-1972). We began to see our planet with different eyes!
Antonio Olivieri
5.0 out of 5 stars
All educated people must read!
Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2024
This Neil DeGrass Tyson book is a very deep, eclectic and interesting reflection on what Humanity knows about the Universe so far.
Considering that in the middle term future we need to start conquering other livable words in the Cosmos, human beings need to overcome the animal behavior of agression and violence, the root causes of disunity and war.
All Physicians, Engineers, Educators, Lawyers, Scientists, Politicians, Leaders and college educated professionals in general must to penetrate in this logic and needed "spatial mentality" to prepare our next generation to conquer and inhabit other livable places in the outer space, before living in our Earth may become difficult or even impossible due the environmental and overpopulation problems.
I recommend the reading of this essay, and think seriously about the subject of our Universe and its misteries and possibilities.
Considering that in the middle term future we need to start conquering other livable words in the Cosmos, human beings need to overcome the animal behavior of agression and violence, the root causes of disunity and war.
All Physicians, Engineers, Educators, Lawyers, Scientists, Politicians, Leaders and college educated professionals in general must to penetrate in this logic and needed "spatial mentality" to prepare our next generation to conquer and inhabit other livable places in the outer space, before living in our Earth may become difficult or even impossible due the environmental and overpopulation problems.
I recommend the reading of this essay, and think seriously about the subject of our Universe and its misteries and possibilities.
Billy, Rachel & Fam…
4.0 out of 5 stars
Non-Fiction & Philosophy conquered…
Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2023
As a fan of Neil deGrasse Tyson, I enjoy his unique and quirkily written scholarly works. In this somewhat objective, but educatedly subjective philosophical offering I enjoyed reading his rationalizations, opinions and musings on life from the point of a view of an astrophysicist, a scholar, an educator, but also a member of society. I find his quirkiness, which some find off-putting, to be fun, clever, and unabashedly self deprecating. He doesn’t take himself too seriously and he is genuine in what he offers.
Herein, Mr. Tyson waxes eloquent on life’s biggest issues, from birth to life to death, from taxes to leadership to politics, from sexism to racism to ageism, from law to religion to morality, from hot-topic issues of today to absurdities of yesteryear to long forgotten issues of antiquity. In so doing, what is offered is not necessarily a universal truth free of prejudice or discrimination, but from his experience as a surveyor of the universe. Starry Messenger is a view of this world, our planet Earth, our only home, as seen by one who looks at the cosmos and shares the view of Earth from a higher, further, out-of this world context.
As is in any collection of ideas there will be plenty who disagree or seek to find errors in judgment, but what is here supplied is straightforward and simple, facts that require individual, independent analysis to arrive at a place of one’s personal understanding, though Mr. Tyson takes the time to suggest what he believes, why he believes, and with whom he knows there will be disagreement. But the crux of this book strikes a chord, dissonant or in tune, with the realities of a world view, or better yet, an out of this world view.
I most enjoyed the chapters concerning, 1) universal and worldly aesthetics, 2) exploration and discovery, 3) battle and peace, 4) the foundations of civilization based in morals and values, and 5) the -isms of race, color and so on; that last is most solidly presented, significantly argued, and powerfully driven down.
I closed this book feeling better having read it, even if not necessarily in agreement with all of the cosmic perspectives presented.
Herein, Mr. Tyson waxes eloquent on life’s biggest issues, from birth to life to death, from taxes to leadership to politics, from sexism to racism to ageism, from law to religion to morality, from hot-topic issues of today to absurdities of yesteryear to long forgotten issues of antiquity. In so doing, what is offered is not necessarily a universal truth free of prejudice or discrimination, but from his experience as a surveyor of the universe. Starry Messenger is a view of this world, our planet Earth, our only home, as seen by one who looks at the cosmos and shares the view of Earth from a higher, further, out-of this world context.
As is in any collection of ideas there will be plenty who disagree or seek to find errors in judgment, but what is here supplied is straightforward and simple, facts that require individual, independent analysis to arrive at a place of one’s personal understanding, though Mr. Tyson takes the time to suggest what he believes, why he believes, and with whom he knows there will be disagreement. But the crux of this book strikes a chord, dissonant or in tune, with the realities of a world view, or better yet, an out of this world view.
I most enjoyed the chapters concerning, 1) universal and worldly aesthetics, 2) exploration and discovery, 3) battle and peace, 4) the foundations of civilization based in morals and values, and 5) the -isms of race, color and so on; that last is most solidly presented, significantly argued, and powerfully driven down.
I closed this book feeling better having read it, even if not necessarily in agreement with all of the cosmic perspectives presented.
Jacob Stein
5.0 out of 5 stars
Every paragraph is mind blowing
Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2024
It's taking me so long to get through this book, because every paragraph I read, completely blows open my mind to a new perspective I never would’ve thought about before.
If you were a fan of "Cosmos", it feels like every chapter is an episode, and it will definitely change the way you think and also give you fun topics of conversation when meeting new people or at parties.
Highly highly suggest everyone in the country to read this book! If only....
If you were a fan of "Cosmos", it feels like every chapter is an episode, and it will definitely change the way you think and also give you fun topics of conversation when meeting new people or at parties.
Highly highly suggest everyone in the country to read this book! If only....