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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsPhil Plait, of Bad Astronomy fame, comments on Neil Armstrong's life and passing:
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2012/08/25/neil-armstrong-1930-2012/There is so much that can be said about this man, from his incredible career to his notorious shying away from the spotlight. He had history thrust upon him, and performed in a way that will be an inspiration to generations of explorers.
Ive said many times that we can divide all of history into two parts: before humans landed on the Moon, and after. It was not just an important moment, it was the moment, a defining, crystallizing slice of time that confirmed that we humans had become a space faring race. One world could not and would not contain us, and the sky itself was no longer the limit.
We have had our missteps since that one small step, and we can argue about the directions we are or should be taking. But given what weve done, and what we are capable of, I have the spark of hope that the future will look back at July 1969 and recognize it for what it was: the dawn of a new era. The end of homo sapiens terrestrialis and the birth of homo sapiens cosmos.
Neil Armstrong was the human who literally stood at that dividing line.
And I wonder will there someday be a holiday in his honor? In my minds eye I can see people lining the streets, watching parades, talking about that day, smiling and laughing and all the while, through a quartz window in the dome, the crescent Earth will be hanging in the black sky above them.
And I wonder will there someday be a holiday in his honor? In my minds eye I can see people lining the streets, watching parades, talking about that day, smiling and laughing and all the while, through a quartz window in the dome, the crescent Earth will be hanging in the black sky above them.
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Phil Plait, of Bad Astronomy fame, comments on Neil Armstrong's life and passing: (Original Post)
LongTomH
Aug 2012
OP
bananas
(27,509 posts)1. Neil Armstrong Day!
Sounds good to me!
Every year, at the same time that Neil stepped on the moon, everyone on earth could take a small step, then a giant leap.
longship
(40,416 posts)2. Beautifully written.
R&K for Neil Armstrong and for the BadAstronomer's moving tribute.
ThoughtCriminal
(14,047 posts)3. The Moon always looked different to me after that day
It wasn't just a pretty light in the sky, it was a place. A place we could visit.
I still dream of going there (and Mars).