Starborn How the stars made us (and who we would be without them)

Roberto Trotta

Book - 2023

"Here's what it is about: For tens of thousands of years, the stars were our constant companions. In the glow of today's artificial lighting, when even professional astronomers study the universe by staring at screens rather than through eyepieces, we have forgotten this intimacy with the cosmos. Roberto Trotta is here to remind us: one of our species' most enduring and (literally) universal relationships has been with the night sky itself. In Starborn, cosmologist Trotta shows how stargazing has shaped the entire course of human civilization. The rhythm of our ancestors' lives revolved around the stars, from their cycles of agriculture to their patterns of birth. Our origin myths made the Sun into a life-giving cre...ator and the Milky Way a gateway for departed souls. The motion of celestial bodies sustained the illusion that the Earth was at the center of the cosmos-until looking at them more closely sparked the Scientific Revolution. Across the ages stars have served as clocks, maps, compasses, muses, and gods, defining both our laws of reality and our dreams of the sublime. How radically different would humanity be, Trotta also asks, if our ancestors had looked up to the night sky and seen... nothing? In lyrical yet evidence-grounded meditations he imagines a world without stars, a dramatic alternate history in which we wouldn't understand gravity, where we couldn't navigate or have much sense of time, and where our sense of the profound--of art and of the divine--was altered beyond recognition. Revealing the hidden connections between astronomy and the story of civilization, Starborn summons us to the marvelous sight that awaits us on a dark, clear night--to lose ourselves in the immeasurable vastness above"--

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Subjects
Genres
History
Popular works
Published
New York, NY : Basic Books, Hachette Book Group 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Roberto Trotta (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 336 pages ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781541674776
9781529346084
  • Prologue
  • The Night That Changed My Life
  • Shaped by the Stars
  • The Midwife of Science
  • Chapter 1. A Pale Blue Dot
  • A Postcard from Outer Space
  • Down the Pit of History
  • The Secret Ingredient
  • The Caligo Tales: Remembering
  • Chapter 2. The Lost Sky
  • Looking for Totality
  • The Harbinger of Doom
  • The Principle of Life
  • Broom Stars and Newton's Kites
  • A Jolt of Awe
  • The Forgotten Sky
  • A Hank of Light
  • The Caligo Tales: Cloud-Watcher's Tale
  • Chapter 3. Life under a Cloud
  • Among the Standing Stones
  • The Sun-Starved City
  • Love and Sulfuric Acid
  • When a Cloud Won't Do
  • Where Clouds Never Part
  • The Caligo Tales: Freshwater's Tale
  • Chapter 4. The Weight of Starlight
  • A Palaeolithic Face-Off
  • Meat from the Moon
  • Lunar Tallies
  • Songlines and Peepholes
  • The Lost Sister
  • The Sky-Savvy Sapiens
  • The Caligo Tales: Once-Upon-A-Glow's Tale
  • Chapter 5. Celestial Clocks
  • On a Clock Face
  • Twelve Diamonds in the Sky
  • The Heavenly Clock
  • Fallen Angels
  • The Heavens in a Shoebox
  • Ping! A Star Goes By
  • The Caligo Tales: Shepherd's Tale
  • Chapter 6. Triple Bronze and Oak
  • Navigating by the Stars
  • Fifteen Hundred Years of Fame
  • The Polynesian Masters
  • A Moonshot Prize
  • For the Pride of the Empire
  • The Lord of the Lunars
  • A Clash of Cultures
  • Our Trusty Friend, the Watch
  • Time for a Change of Time
  • The Caligo Tales: Way-Finder's Tale
  • Chapter 7. From Beauty, Order
  • A Golden Flower in Space
  • From Humble Beginnings
  • A Four-Pronged Assault
  • The Castle of Urania
  • The Measure of All Things
  • The Shapes of Cynthia and Other Wonders
  • Isaac's Dials
  • A Fiery Return
  • The Trackless Abysses of Space
  • The Clockwork Universe
  • The Caligo Tales: Bison-Seeker's Tale
  • Chapter 8. The Demon Unleashed
  • The Mathematics of Uncertainty
  • The Birth of Average Man
  • Laplace's Demon Goes Places
  • Feeding the Demon
  • Unexpected Connections
  • The Human Machine
  • The Immensity of Time
  • The Demon Reborn
  • The Caligo Tales: Fire-Keeper's Tale
  • Chapter 9. A Mirror to Ourselves
  • The Sun Worshippers
  • Sol Invictus
  • Swear Not by the Moon
  • The Great Memory
  • Led by One's Stars
  • The Estranged Mother
  • The Last Ripple
  • To Every Man His Star
  • The Caligo Tales: Mist-Catcher's Tale
  • Chapter 10. To Rebehold the Stars
  • The Broom Star Encounter
  • A Black Canvas
  • The Last Global Commons
  • Beam Me Up, Scotty!
  • A Loss of Happiness
  • The Price We'll Pay
  • Becoming Good Ancestors
  • The Caligo Tales: The Skeleton's Dance
  • Epilogue: So Spoke the Silent Stars
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Trotta (The Edge of the Sky), a physics professor at the International School for Advanced Study in Italy, offers a stellar survey of the "remarkable but often unrecognized" role played by stars and other cosmic bodies in human history. Covering the sky's importance to timekeeping and navigation, Trotta notes that Egyptians as far back as the 13th century BCE divided the day into 12 hours on primitive sundials and that Polynesian mariners followed the stars to explore and settle "almost all habitable Pacific islands" between 2000 BCE and 1100 CE. Astronomy served as "the midwife to all Earth's sciences," Trotta contends, discussing how Galileo's and Nicolaus Copernicus's studies of the night sky contributed to the development of a scientific method "focused on regularities, measurement, and prediction." The prose is evocative ("The artifacts and scant remains that do exist... cannot tell us of a hand raised to shield one's eyes against the glare of the setting Sun, looking for the first slice of the crescent Moon"), and the history fascinates, even if the earliest material is largely reliant on speculation (Trotta suggests women may have kept the first lunar calendars to track their fertility and menstrual cycles). Still, it's a stimulating take on how the heavens have shaped life on Earth. (Nov.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Looking for an original focus among the many books describing the universe, a theoretical physicist looks to the stars. "Stars and planets spurred the invention of mathematics; the Moon, that of the calendar," writes Trotta, author of The Edge of the Sky. "And could it be that paying attention to the heavens was the secret weapon that gave Homo sapiens supremacy over the Neanderthals fifty thousand years ago?" For millennia, the movements of the constellations, the five "wandering stars" (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn), the Moon, the Sun, and occasional comets and meteors have held deep significance. They have governed clocks, calendars, seasons, planting, harvests, and holidays and have been the basis of myth and religion. While minor gods inhabited forests and caves, the big ones lived in the sky. All cultures have wondered at the stars. Trotta passes quickly over the big bang and follows no strict chronology, but he pauses regularly to recount events in a fictional culture on a planet where clouds permanently hide the sky. The result is a scattershot collection of chapters describing milestones in the study of stars, from the origin of calendars lost in prehistory to the mysteries of dark energy in this century. Astronomy buffs will find few pearls, but most readers will enjoy expert accounts of clocks throughout history; Newton's spectacular work; the history of navigation (still entirely dependent on the stars); telescopes, from Galileo's in 1611 to last year's James Webb; the dazzling 19th-century discoveries of the enormous quantities and distances of stars; the dawn of computers; and the amazing appeal of astrology. In a grim conclusion, Trotta warns that the stars have long since disappeared from our light-poisoned cities and are imperiled everywhere, as we fill the air with pollution and Earth's vicinity with space junk, spending billions on sending humans into orbit while billions suffer on Earth. A largely satisfying miscellany about stars. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.