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Stephen Hawking Developed An Odd Penchant For Doomsday Fearmongering Late In His Life
The Federalist ^ | 03/25/2018 | By Alex Berezow and Ethan Siegel

Posted on 03/25/2018 2:54:50 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

He spoke with the religious fervor of a modern-day Jonathan Edwards, but instead of sinners in the hands of an angry God, we were humans in the hands of an angry universe.

Stephen Hawking lost his longtime battle with ALS on March 14, 2018 — what would have been Albert Einstein’s 139th birthday. While Hawking’s scientific achievements led the field of astrophysics forward in a number of important ways, his impact on the general public was much more of a mixed bag.

Hawking took us to the limits of space and time. In the 1960s, his doctoral work helped us better understand the nature of singularities — which were not mere mathematical curiosities, as some had conjectured — but real objects with particular properties, capable of potentially birthing not only our Big Bang, but of baby universes inside of black holes. In the 1970s, this led him to investigate the event horizons (the “point of no return”) of black holes, leading to his most remarkable discovery: that black holes aren’t entirely black. They radiate energy away, eventually decaying entirely with a cataclysmic explosion at the end.

Hawking’s later career focused on some of the greatest paradoxes of our time, including the origin of space and time, the question of what preceded the Big Bang, and whether black holes conserve (or lose) information. His contributions still resonate throughout the field today, having given rise to hundreds of scientific papers.

As a high-profile science communicator, he popularized astrophysics and theoretical physics. His book, “A Brief History of Time,” sold more than 10 million copies.

But later in life, he used his platform to push a macabre worldview. For instance, echoing the plot of “Independence Day,” he believed that if aliens visited Earth, they would plunder our resources and kill everybody. He said, “I imagine they might exist in massive ships … having used up all the resources from their home planet. Such advanced aliens would perhaps become nomads, looking to conquer and colonize whatever planets they can reach.”

Why exactly a civilization that has mastered interstellar travel would need to come to Earth to pilfer our steel and laptop computers remained unanswered.

Worse, Hawking was convinced that humanity was facing extinction. He once claimed that humans would have to abandon Earth in a century if the species wished to survive: “In a world that is in chaos politically, socially and environmentally, how can the human race sustain another 100 years?”

He spoke with the religious fervor of a modern-day Jonathan Edwards — but instead of sinners in the hands of an angry God, we were humans in the hands of an angry universe.

And the universe was very angry. Hawking worried that too many humans would consume too much energy and the Earth literally would burn up: “But the present exponential growth can not continue for the next millennium. By the year 2600 the world’s population would be standing shoulder to shoulder and the electricity consumption would make the Earth glow red hot.”

He was equally fearful of artificial intelligence, which he described as possibly the “worst event in the history of our civilization.” If humans or their machines weren’t the agents of our civilization’s demise, then Mother Nature would intervene, perhaps through an epidemic or asteroid strike. There were far too many rapacious humans on this planet, and celestial retribution would thin out the herd.

The trouble with his predictions is that none of them were rooted in scientific reality. Demographers reject the notion of overpopulation; epidemics, climate change, and artificial intelligence are potential challenges, but not a threat to the species; and Earth isn’t predicted to face an apocalyptic asteroid strike for at least millions of years.

It is a shame that Hawking spent his later years playing on people’s worst science-fiction fears. Despite this lamentable worldview, however, Hawking’s contribution to science and science communication will be remembered as among the greatest of all time. Few people can turn black holes into objects of fascination for children and adults alike.

As Hawking himself once put it, “We are just an advanced breed of monkeys on a minor planet of a very average star. But we can understand the universe. That makes us something very special.” Let that be his lasting legacy.

Ethan Siegel, PhD, is an astrophysicist and author of Treknology: The Science of Star Trek from Tricorders to Warp Drive. Alex Berezow, PhD, is a microbiologist and senior fellow of biomedical science at the American Council on Science and Health.


TOPICS: Science; Society
KEYWORDS: 2018; 201803; 20180314; abriefhistoryoftime; blackholes; cambridgeuniversity; crisis; doom; doomsday; eventhorizon; hopelessness; stephenhawking
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To: AustinBill

Agreed. I once took a literature class that forbade any essay papers on Christianity.

Yet he assigned multiple reading essays by Albert Einstein misinterpreting theism and Christianity. Einsten was relatively (pun) overrated as a philosdopher.

I took that as rank hypocrisy. I defied the teacher, and wrote rebuttals every time we were assigned such propaganda.

I know the Bible, I know hard science, and I ain’t stupid. The teacher gave me A’s on each one. (I actually ended up with the highest grade in the class.)

I doubt there is such a fair-minded leftist, atheist professor in today’s academic morass.


21 posted on 03/25/2018 4:48:10 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: broken_arrow1
<>"But we can understand the universe."<>

Poppycock.

22 posted on 03/25/2018 4:55:56 PM PDT by Aevery_Freeman (Truth comes in few words; lies require more.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Sheldon is deeply saddened.


23 posted on 03/25/2018 4:56:11 PM PDT by DAC21
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To: SeekAndFind
He said, “I imagine they might exist in massive ships

Have you seen the saucers?

24 posted on 03/25/2018 5:03:55 PM PDT by MUDDOG
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To: SeekAndFind
Stephen Hawking Developed An Odd Penchant For Doomsday Fearmongering Late In His Life

Well he was one of the smartest persons in history, but not in any practical sense that would enhance the life of Average Man.

As for fearmongering, the first law in the official Handbook of Effective Fearmongering is to make any forecast, estimate or extrapolation as far into the future as possible.
E.G., don't ever say the sun will go supernova and explode in ten thousand billion years; be modest and simply say 997,000.52877 billion years.

Successful fearmongring demands that there is never the remotes possibility that anyone who is alive will never be able to confirm or deny the claim.

Just make sure that the claim is in the future a minimum of 200% of the oldest confirmed human in existence.

25 posted on 03/25/2018 5:46:49 PM PDT by publius911 (Am I pissed? You have NO idea...)
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To: SeekAndFind

Doomsday is what he was facing if he did not come to know Jesus and God which I fear he did not.


26 posted on 03/25/2018 5:48:33 PM PDT by Midwesterner53
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To: Eddie01

I have a hunch that despite his protestations Hawking greatly feared death. I also have a hunch that he went to his death screaming.


27 posted on 03/25/2018 6:01:05 PM PDT by Bookshelf (AND)
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To: SeekAndFind

I don’t think Stevie was running with all of his oars in the water for the last decade.


28 posted on 03/25/2018 6:42:13 PM PDT by GingisK
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To: publius911

“Well he was one of the smartest persons in history,

And yet failed to know God, proving mental intelligence isn’t the totality of wisdom.


29 posted on 03/25/2018 6:50:44 PM PDT by aMorePerfectUnion (Q is Barron Trump, time-traveling back from the future, to help his dad fight the deep state.)
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To: libertylover

The Media already lampooned Jerry Fallwell when, as they characterized it, he prayed to divert a hurricane. They don’t get the irony in treating Fallwell one way, and Hawkins the opposite.


30 posted on 03/25/2018 7:27:21 PM PDT by Tallguy
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To: YogicCowboy
I doubt there is such a fair-minded leftist, atheist professor in today’s academic morass.

How long ago was your literature class?

31 posted on 03/25/2018 7:31:33 PM PDT by nwrep
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To: SeekAndFind

Forgive my total ignorance on Hawking, but I know what Einstein did. I know what Oppenheimer did. I even know what Heller and Feinman did. But other than black hole theory’s and becoming a media whore like Neil deGrasse Tyson has become, what in the hell did he contribute of substance? I here nothing but liberal bullish!t with no backing


32 posted on 03/25/2018 9:16:38 PM PDT by Bommer ( F the NFL!)
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To: Bommer

Hawking was a very ironically telegenic science celebrity who did some seminal work on black holes, some important bits of which have been superseded over the last couple of decades. I admire him for his fight against his disease, not for being an oracular scientist, which he was not.


33 posted on 03/25/2018 9:22:46 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: SeekAndFind
Not uncommon in the late stages of progressive disease to became delusional and/or paranoid. Has nothing to do with intelligence per se.
34 posted on 03/25/2018 10:11:41 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: robel
It’s funny how people who think it’s absurd that there could be a God who created everything, have no problem believing everything created itself.

My favorite "scientific" version of "creation..."

"First there was nothing...
Then it exploded."

The end.

35 posted on 03/25/2018 11:43:25 PM PDT by publius911 (Am I pissed? You have NO idea...)
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To: nwrep

Sorry for delayed response:

Fall 1975.


36 posted on 03/26/2018 12:27:36 AM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: Eddie01
Hawking’s last words should be - “I AM just land fill”. ...and he is. Sad.

The soul is eternal....he may wish he was just land fill....

37 posted on 03/26/2018 4:04:40 AM PDT by trebb (I stopped picking on the mentally ill hypocrites who pose as conservatives...mostly ;-})
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To: SeekAndFind

Look out the window as you fly across the USA on an airplane and becomes evident that there is plenty of room for more people.


38 posted on 03/26/2018 8:04:51 AM PDT by Stingray51
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To: SeekAndFind

I discounted all later statements under Hawking’s name because there is no way to verify they are actually his. His unnamed handlers issue statements and the press blithely prints them without any verification.


39 posted on 03/26/2018 1:25:57 PM PDT by Cruising Speed
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To: SeekAndFind

Without meaning to toot my own horn, I picked up on this years ago and watched as he became the scientist darling of all leftists. And it also was evident, to me anyway, that he reveled in that leftist limelight.


40 posted on 03/26/2018 1:56:18 PM PDT by fortes fortuna juvat ( Who are the idiots who elected this dreadful Pope? They need to unelect him. He is a disgrace.)
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