Monday, 11 May 2009
Romantic Ruins
This painting is Monastery Graveyard in Snow, by the German Romantic artist Caspar David Friedrich. His subjects were often like this - images of abbeys, forests and so on against a romanticised landscape. In this picture, monks process through a graveyard to enter the ruins of their abbey. It is an apparently bleak vision but ultimately an uplifting one of faith and hope.
The painting was destroyed in the allied bombing of Berlin in 1945.
Sunday, 10 May 2009
The end............
This is a NASA artist's impression of a red dwarf star. Our Sun's fate is to turn from a main sequence yellow star into a red dwarf, having first swollen considerably and destroying all life on Earth. When that happens, unless we have managed to quit this place for elsewhere, the words of a past prime Minister of Great Britain, Arthur Balfour, will come to pass:
Man, so far as natural science by itself is able to teach us, is no longer the final cause of the universe, the Heaven-descended heir of all the ages. His very existence is an accident, his story a brief and transitory episode in the life of one of the meanest of the planets. Of the combination of causes which first converted a dead organic compound to the living progenitors of humanity, science, indeed, as yet knows nothing. It is enough that from such beginnings famine, disease, and mutual slaughter, fit nurses of the future lords of creation, have gradually evolved, after infinite travail, a race with conscience enough to feel that it is vile, and intelligence enough to know that it is insignificant. We survey the past, and see that its history is of blood and tears, of helpless blundering, of wild revolt, of stupid acquiescence, of empty aspirations. We sound the future, and learn that after a period, long compared with the individual life, but short indeed compared with the divisions of time open to our investigation, the energies of our system will decay, the glory of the sun will be dimmed, and the earth, tideless and inert, will no longer tolerate the race which has for a moment disturbed its solitude. Man will go down into the pit, and all his thoughts will perish. The uneasy consciousness, which in this obscure corner has for a brief space broken the contented silence of the universe, will be at rest. Matter will know itself no longer. 'Imperishable monuments' and 'immortal deeds', death itself, and love stronger than death will be as though they had never been. Nor will anything that is be better or worse for all that the labour, genius, devotion, and suffering of man have striven through countless generations to effect.
From Chapter I of The Foundations of Belief by Arthur Balfour