Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Self Destruction

0 comments
To anticipate and dissuade any worries, I just want to mention that while this is in the first person, it is not, nor based on, me. I share some of his thoughts, that is inevitable, but mostly it is just a character study, of sorts. Ok, carry on.

While I'm here actually, do comment on what you read into him. I think it would be helpful and certainly pretty interesting.
___________

There was always something magical about the night. I imagine that were I freed of everyday responsibilities I would spend most of my waking hours there. That we should live in daylight I imagine to be a human construct, more suited to convienience of labour than the laughably named human "nature". As if there were anything to be called natural among humans. Ask a man from the past whether those walking the streets today are natural; what do you suppose his answer would be? In such a vain why should it be any more natural to live in day than to live in night?

This is an old argument, but one I have frequently with myself. Often this is followed by an urge to display my "new"found philosophy by throwing open the doors and walking into the night, and wouldn't you know it, this is one of those nights. I pull on my jacket and prepare myself for a stroll.

The air is brisk, as evidenced by my breath appearing before me. I play with it for a bit, make believe I'm smoking and the like. I never could resist that one. I keep in touch with my inner child to an appropriate extent, though usually only when no one is around to judge me as being childish. Usually only on these walks. I move on.

I wonder if anyone else has joined me in this place. I mentioned that the night is magical. I cannot be the only one who realises this. It touches ones muse in a way that daylight does not, cannot. It breeds a form of excitement, no doubt stemming from an instinctive fear of the dark. In the orange twilight of the city night we are brought to face that fear, but at a safe distance. Streetlights hold our fear at bay like the glass standing between you and the lions in the zoo. We are safe to look at it, study it. In my case this means pressing myself up against the glass in the conflicting hopes that it will both hold and that it will break and I will fall through, forced to face that which I would normally keep at a safe distance. I hear a noise in a dark alley.

A mental masochist, that is the phrase I use, most often in jest, to describe myself. I put myself in dangerous or difficult situations not because I'm foolish, or because I'm some sort of adrenalin junkie. Not because I wish to die but because I wish to find out how close I can get to the flame without being burnt. It's a purely scientific thing. A study of the self, in preperation of the event that I am put into a tricky situation not of my own design. The noise in the alley calls me. Not by name, or even on purpose. There is just a noise there that I feel requires my presence.

We are different at night. There is us in the day and us at night. It is a sad fact that most try to combine the two if not ignore one altogether. Our day selves, this is the one we show everyone else, because this is when we are on constant display. This may be a facade, or it may be one's actual self. But it is almost always responsible. The night however...The nightside is more primal. Our eyes look around franticly for...something. We are impulsive and rash, passionate and furious, and as my eyes grow used to the dark, I see a drunk playing with a cat in the same sense that that same cat probably played with a rodent earlier today, in the waking hours. I feel the impulse, the fury. I cry out and he stops.

There is music at night. Sure, the clubs and pubs. But I talk of the city itself. In the day it's noise. Cars, people, everyday goings on. But at night it becomes art, the beating heart of the city slowed to a relaxed throbing. Badum. Badum. Badum. My own heart mimics this heartbeat as the man walks towards me. He shouts some curses and, I imagine insults. He is in front of me now. I cannot hear him, so drunk am I on the night. I will him to hit me.

There is blood. Most of it is mine. The man runs away as I crawl to the cat. I spit bloody phlem on the ground and curl up with the cat. Did I start the fight? I cannot remember. Did I need it? Did I gain anything from this? Maybe. I pick up the cat and limp home. Maybe he'll be gone in the morning. But what did I gain? Well. There's a thought for my next walk.
Read more

Thursday, August 4, 2011

On Why I Do Physics

0 comments


It is almost judgement day for me and many like me. Yes, soon we shall be receiving our A Level results and for those of us who have applied whether or not we have gotten in to our desired universities. This year I suspect is an even more tense time than before as it is when we find out whether we will get in somewhere, anywhere, this year, or have to reapply next year and suffer the drastic increase in university fees that is to come. But that is not what I am here now to talk about.

This post is a much more personal one, and the result of a number of thoughts I have had over the last few weeks regarding what I'm going to do if my grades are...sub-standard, and that is the subject of why it is I want to go into physics. Certainly it has been a long time since I have considered anything else (other than writing, but I've worked out how that fits nicely into the physics thing, so no worried there) as a career path and life goal.

My personal statement, if I remember correctly (I daren't read it again. It was such a constrained piece of writing that I feel mildly suffocated just thinking about it) talked about how I have always loved physics, I have a telescope, blah blah blah, and superficially it is true. Of course it is, or I wouldn't have put it in my personal statement. I was that quiet kid throughout primary school, and that quiet nerd throughout secondary school, until eventually I was that slightly more outspoken science geek going into Churchill 6th Form. I was still unsure what exactly what I wanted from life, but I was fairly sure it lay in a sciency direction. Then it came time to apply for uni, and I went for physics because looking back, I recognised that that is simply what I wanted. Music was always a big part of my life, and for a short time, so was art, but they didn't strike me as valid career choices. The other sciences I viewed as being less interesting and slightly derivative of what I recognised as being a kind of source code for the universe. Tell me, when I put it like that, doesn't physics seem sheer magnitudes more interesting? My other choice was something Englishy, and that was tempting but physics proved the stronger pull. At any rate I had spent the last couple of years proclaiming it to be my destiny, so it would have been kind of odd to back out now.

Then it turned out my A Levels sucked. I can lay blame in a number of places but that is irrelevant to the story I am telling. To cut a getting increasingly long story short, I went to City of Bristol college, and knew throughout that physics is what I wanted to do, and so here I am waiting for the results that will at least let me get into a foundation course through clearing. Hopefully more, but what can I say? I'm good at thinking about contingency. Let's take a quick break to explore a few of the senarios I have developed contingency plans for. (Absolutely not just an excuse to share a Cracked video)


Which Apocalypse Would Be the Most Fun? -- powered by Cracked.com

Anyway, I have continued my remarkable talent for making huge introductions, because yes, here is where we get to the main body of my thoughts. Now this is going to be some stream of consciousness stuff, so it might be kind of incoherent. I'll try to tidy it up a bit after, but you have been warned.

Actually, ok, before we continue we need to establish some assumptions. 1. The universe is real, not some simulation, I'm not in a coma, whatever. Yes, this is a genuine and constant fear of mine that I probably will explore here another time. For now however, it is irrelevant.
2. The universe is finite, has a beginning, and will likely have an end when it collapses on it's own gravity or heat death or whatever. It will end.

Anti-Depression aid.




Ok, so that last bit is a fairly large concern of mine. Humanity can keep spreading out into the stars. Maybe whatever we evolve into will meet extra-homo (as in the genus) life (I am being pretentious and avoiding extra terrestrial because it is likely by then that most of our species and its offshoots will have spread far beyond earth, and our sun will likely have red gianted long before anyway) and we will either befriend, exploit, kill or some combination them. Alternatively we may die off. I am under no illusions of the ability for a race to persist. For all the HFY stories, it is equally likely that we could be wiped out without warning. Either way it is easy to go on if we can still hope that some sign of us will remain of us forever, be it physical things, or knowledge, culture or something that we have passed on to other life. Then eventually the universe ends and everything is gone.


Not just destroyed. It is gone. Time ends, universe collapses, and it is like it never even existed. Maybe it will expand again, but that new universe might not bear any resemblance to ours. It might even have a completely different set of physics or maths.

So it's easy to think, with that idea, what is the point? Everything we achieve, what is the point if it eventually won't exist? I too felt that way for a short while. But, contrary to the beliefs of  your average misunderstood teen, Nihilism is stupid. I thought to myself there are some fairly profound choices I have to make here. I can accept that life in the universe is pointless, ultimately fruitless, and kill myself, but that seemed rather unproductive. Productivity cannot exist if all is to be reduced to nothing and everything, but whatever. Second, I could go for the old "Enjoy life while I exist to enjoy it" thing, but that seems hedonistic and again, unproductive. Or I could accept that I am scared.

I am scared, and that is why I do physics. I am scared of what I don't know. I am scared of facing oblivion unprepared, and fuck it all I refuse to submit. I do physics because I refuse to run away from my fear. I may not achieve much in my academic life. I may even achieve greatness. Either way I shall die with the knowledge that I did my damnedest to progress humanity towards the point where we can take the universe by the throat and scream "Fuck you! We will not just end!". I can accept that my work might be the spin of a particle in a drop of water in the ocean, but the accumulation of all those drops over millions and billions of years will make that damned ocean.

I do physics because I refuse to accept the limits of our own universe. I do physics because otherwise I will have to resign myself to being thrown to it's whims.

I do physics because I am terrified, and that is fucking exhilarating.

Read more