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Carl Sagan's last interview with Charlie Rose (Full Interview)

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    - Carl Sagan is one of the preeminent
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    astronomers of our time.
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    He is known for bringing the heavens
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    to our living rooms with
    his PBS series Cosmos.
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    His latest work is The
    Demon-Haunted World,
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    Science as a Candle in the Dark.
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    It explores the country's
    growing fascination
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    with pseudo-science,
    astrology, faith healers,
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    the supernatural and the
    like, all superstitions
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    that he says threaten to
    undermine true science.
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    I am pleased to have him here
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    and I also take note of the fact
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    that he is a David Duncan
    professor of astronomy
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    and space sciences and
    director of the Laboratory
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    for Planetary Studies
    at Cornell University,
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    distinguished visiting scientist
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    of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
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    California Institute of Technology
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    and co-planner and president
    of The Planetary Society,
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    the largest space interest
    group in the world,
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    and a former Pulitzer Prize winner.
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    Welcome back today.
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    - Thank you Charlie.
    - It's great to see you.
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    Listen to this, I hate to
    read too much, but this is,
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    it's almost like they've
    been reading your book.
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    This is from the New York
    Times for Friday, May 24.
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    Americans flaunt science, a study finds.
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    Less than half of all
    American adults understand
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    that the Earth orbits the sun yearly,
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    according to a basic science survey.
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    Nevertheless, there's
    enthusiasm for research
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    except in some fields
    like genetic engineering
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    and nuclear power that
    are viewed with suspicion.
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    Only about 25% of American
    adults get passing grades
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    in a National Science Foundation Survey
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    of what people know about
    basic science and economics.
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    I mean, this is singing
    your song, isn't it?
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    - Well, it's certainly
    what I'm talking about
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    in The Demon-Haunted World.
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    My feeling, Charlie, is
    that it's not pseudo-science
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    and superstition and New
    Age, so-called, beliefs
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    and fundamentalist
    zealotry are something new.
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    They've been with us for as
    long as we've been human.
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    But we live in an age based
    on science and technology
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    with formidable technological powers.
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    - Science and technology are propelling us
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    forward at accelerating rates.
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    - That's right. And if
    we don't understand it
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    and by we I mean the general public
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    if it's something that
    "oh, I'm not good at that.
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    "I don't anything about it,"
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    then who is making all the
    decisions about science
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    and technology that are going to determine
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    what kind of future our children live in?
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    Just some members of Congress?
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    But there's no more than a
    handful of members of Congress
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    with any background in science at all.
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    And the Republican
    Congress has just abolished
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    its own office of technology assessment,
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    the organization that
    gave them bipartisan,
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    competent advice on
    science and technology.
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    They say "we don't want to know.
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    "Don't tell us about
    science and technology."
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    - Surprising, because Gingrich
    is genuinely interested,
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    I think--
    - He is, no question.
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    - Out of his own intellectual curiosity.
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    Does the president still
    have a science adviser
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    at the White House?
    - He does,
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    he does, John Gibbons
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    and the vice president is
    scientifically literate.
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    - He's well known for being
    scientifically a science maven.
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    I mean, you blast them all,
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    creationists, Christian Scientists
    who you say would rather
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    allow their children to suffer
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    than give them insulin or antibiotics.
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    Astrologers come in for
    particular scorn on your part.
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    (laughing)
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    - Well, I wouldn't say
    scorn, just derision.
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    - Derision.
    (laughing)
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    A more generous version of scorn.
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    But what's the danger of all this?
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    I mean, you know, this
    is not the thing that--
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    - There's two kinds of dangers.
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    One is what I just talked about,
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    that we've arranged this
    society based on science
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    and technology in which
    nobody understands anything
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    about science and technology,
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    and this combustible mixture
    of ignorance and power,
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    sooner or later, is going
    to blow up in our faces.
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    I mean who is running the science
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    and technology in a democracy,
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    if the people don't
    know anything about it?
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    And the second reason that
    I'm worried about this
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    is that science is more
    than a body of knowledge.
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    It's a way of thinking, a way
    of skeptically interrogating
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    the universe with a fine
    understanding of human fallibility.
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    If we are not able to
    ask skeptical questions,
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    to interrogate those who tell
    us that something is true,
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    to be skeptical of those in authority,
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    then we're up for grabs
    for the next charlatan,
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    political or religious,
    who comes ambling along.
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    It's a thing that Jefferson
    laid great stress on.
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    It wasn't enough, he said,
    to enshrine some rights
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    in a Constitution or a Bill of Rights.
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    The people had to be educated
    and they had to practice
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    their skepticism and their education.
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    Otherwise we don't run the government,
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    the government runs us.
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    - Jefferson was amazing in
    his devotion to science.
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    - Absolutely.
    - We think of Jefferson
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    as this man who was literate
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    and who was a passionate
    articulator of freedom,
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    but if you go to Monticello--
    - Exactly.
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    - What you appreciate is he
    was at heart a scientist,
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    a botanist, an architect, geologist.
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    And if you, Meriwether Lewis,
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    as we now know from Steven Ambrose,
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    he wanted him to go out
    and do experimentations
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    and explore and be skeptical
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    and find answers to passages
    and explore the West.
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    - Exactly right.
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    And there was also an economic grail
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    there if the northwest passage was found.
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    Jefferson said that he
    was at heart a scientist,
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    that he would have loved
    to have been a scientist.
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    But there were certain
    events happening in America
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    that called to him, and
    so he devoted his life
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    to that kind of politics.
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    - A revolution.
    - Indeed.
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    So that generations later
    people could be scientists.
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    - Yeah.
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    Have we, the point is made,
    and maybe by you, you know,
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    is that when's the last
    time we had a president
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    who made a speech about science?
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    - I say that.
    - Yeah.
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    It is this notion that science
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    is not of great interest
    to us in some sense,
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    that somehow we don't want to learn.
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    - You see, people read the
    stock market quotations
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    and financial pages.
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    Look how complex that is and--
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    - [Charlie] Because they
    know the direct connection
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    to their own--
    - There's a motivation.
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    But they're capable of it,
    large numbers of people.
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    People are able to look
    at sports statistics.
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    Look how many people can do that.
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    Understanding science is not
    more difficult than that.
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    It does not involve greater
    intellectual activities.
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    But the thing about
    science is first of all,
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    it's after the way the universe really is
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    and not what makes us feel good.
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    And a lot of the competing doctrines
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    are after what feels
    good and not what's true.
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    - Okay, but you've got to make,
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    I'm not sure you'll go this far with me,
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    but I mean there's, a lot of
    that is about feeling good
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    and there's a lot of that
    that's about hocus pocus.
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    But at the same time, there
    are millions of people
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    who understand science
    does not prove religion
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    because religion is faith-based.
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    Therefore, you should
    not deny the value of it
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    because it is faith-based
    and not science based.
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    - But let's look a little
    more deeply into that.
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    What is faith?
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    It is belief in the absence of evidence.
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    Now, I don't propose to tell
    anybody what to believe,
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    but for me, believing when
    there's no compelling evidence
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    is a mistake.
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    The idea is to withhold belief
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    until there is compelling evidence.
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    And if the universe does not
    comply with our predisposition,
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    okay, then we have the
    wrenching obligation
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    to accommodate to the way
    the universe really is.
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    - But I think you, but I
    mean, so you step forward
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    to say "I deny all religion
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    "because I can't see it
    proved scientifically?"
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    - No, no, no, no no no.
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    - You see the value of
    religious experience
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    and the value of reaching
    for higher experiences?
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    - Let me say, religion deals
    with history, with poetry,
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    with great literature,
    with ethics, with morals,
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    including the morality of
    treating compassionately
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    the least fortunate among us.
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    All of these are things that
    I endorse whole heartedly.
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    Where religion gets into
    trouble is in those cases
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    that it pretends to know
    something about science.
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    The science in the Bible, for example,
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    was acquired by the Jews
    from the Babylonians
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    during the Babylonian captivity of 600 BC.
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    That was the best science
    on the planet then.
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    But we've learned something since then.
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    Roman Catholicism, Reform Judaism,
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    most of the mainstream
    Protestant denominations
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    have no difficulty with the idea
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    that humans have evolved
    from other creatures,
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    that the Earth is 4.6 billion
    years old, the Big Bang.
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    They don't have any trouble with that.
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    The trouble comes with people
    who are Biblical literalists
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    who believe that the Bible is dictated
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    by the Creator of the Universe
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    to an unerring stenographer.
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    - [Charlie] And so therefore they--
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    - And has no metaphor or allegory in it.
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    - And from there, they
    make their political
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    and economic choices, and social choices.
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    - And scientific.
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    - And scientific choices and scientific.
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    And that's part of your
    problem with that idea.
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    - [Carl] Exactly.
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    - It is that because
    for the wrong reasons,
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    we make the wrong choices about science.
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    - That's right.
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    So who is more humble?
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    The scientist who looks at the universe
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    with an open mind and accepts
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    whatever the universe has to teach us,
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    or somebody who says
    everything in this book
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    must be considered the literal truth
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    and nevermind the fallibility
    of all the human beings
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    involved in the writing of this book.
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    - Okay, I mean, I accept that, but I also,
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    the argument that would be
    made by many is that, you know,
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    you don't have to, whether
    a specific scientific act
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    took place as described by
    some Biblical writer is not,
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    is not at the heart of the religious faith
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    and the religious experience.
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    - Some people agree with
    you and some people don't.
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    Some people think that every jot
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    and tittle in the Bible is essential.
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    You throw one thing away
    to allegory or metaphor,
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    then it's up to everybody
    to make their own decisions.
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    - Then are we, this,
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    a lot of this has to do with
    science in the United States.
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    Are we different than other nations?
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    - No, absolutely not.
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    You can see this worldwide.
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    In India, there's a
    madness about astrology,
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    in Britain, it's ghosts,
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    in Germany, it's rays
    coming up from the Earth
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    that can only be detected by dousers.
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    Every country has its own specialties.
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    We seem to be fascinated
    by UFOs right now.
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    But one thing.
    - What is that,
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    before you leave UFOs.
    (laughing)
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    Tell me about you and Professor Mack.
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    - John Mack is a professor
    of psychiatry at Harvard
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    who I've known for many years.
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    We were arrested together at
    the Nevada Nuclear Test Site
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    protesting US testing in the face
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    of a Soviet moratorium on testing.
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    And many years ago, he asked me
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    "what is there in this UFO business?
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    "Is there anything to it?"
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    And I said "absolutely nothing, except,
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    "of course, for a psychiatrist."
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    He is a psychiatrist.
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    Well, he looked into it
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    and decided that there was
    so much emotional energy
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    in the reports of people
    who claimed to be abducted
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    that it couldn't possibly be
    some psychological aberration,
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    that it had to be true.
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    He believed his patients.
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    I do not believe his patients.
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    Many of these stories are about
    waking up from a deep sleep
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    and finding your bed surrounded
    by three or four short,
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    dour, gray and sexually obsessed
    beings who then take you
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    to their spaceship after they
    slither you through your wall,
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    and perform a variety of objectionable,
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    sexual experiments on you.
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    - But here we have Dr.
    Carl Sagan, astronomer,
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    versus Dr. John, I mean
    Doctor, what's his first name?
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    - John Mack.
    - John Mack, MD.
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    - No question.
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    So what's the problem?
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    - He's a scientist.
    - How can scientists disagree?
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    - He's a scientist.
    - Is that what you're asking?
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    - Well, no. I'm asking how could,
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    I mean what do you think of this man
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    coming to these conclusions?
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    - I think he is not using
    the scientific method
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    in approaching his issue.
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    - And were you constantly, I mean,
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    I assume you come at him with
    both barrels in conversations.
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    - And in The Demon-Haunted World.
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    - [Charlie] And he says?
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    - He says I don't appreciate
    the emotional force--
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    - You don't?
    - Of these reports.
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    But many people awaken from a nightmare
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    with profound emotional force.
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    That doesn't mean that
    the nightmare is true,
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    it means something went
    on inside our heads.
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    - You were making a point
    before I jumped the gun, Mack.
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    - Oh, yeah.
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    What I wanted to say is going back
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    to the question of adequate evidence
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    on something that's
    emotionally really pulling you.
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    I lost both my parents
    about 12 or 15 years ago
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    and I had a great relationship with them.
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    I really miss them.
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    I would love to believe that their spirits
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    were around somewhere.
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    And I'd give almost anything
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    to spend five minutes a year with them.
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    - Do you hear their voices ever?
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    - Sometimes.
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    About six or eight times since
    their death I've heard it.
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    - "Carl," just in the voice
    of my father or my mother.
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    Now, I don't think that means
    that they're in the next room.
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    I think it means that--
    - They're in your head.
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    - I've had an auditory hallucination.
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    I was with them so long, I
    heard their voices so often.
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    Why shouldn't I be able to make
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    a vivid recollection of them?
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    - Here's what's interesting
    about this for me,
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    I mean, you won't see this, but
    I'll throw it at you anyway.
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    You convinced me a long time
    ago that it was arrogant
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    for me or for anyone else to believe
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    that there wasn't some
    life outside of our,
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    - To exclude the possibility.
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    - To exclude the
    possibility was an arrogance
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    of intellect that we should not assume.
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    - [Carl] I still believe so.
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    - You couldn't prove it, you
    didn't know it was there,
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    but the arrogance--
    - Right.
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    We don't know if it's there,
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    we don't know if it's not there.
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    Let's look.
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    - And if you take that, why can't you say
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    "there's a lot we don't know.
  • 15:09 - 15:12
    "There's a lot of power
    there that we don't know."
  • 15:12 - 15:15
    - It's what I believe,
    but that doesn't mean
  • 15:15 - 15:19
    that every fraudulent
    claim has to be accepted.
  • 15:23 - 15:27
    We demand the most rigorous
    standards of evidence,
  • 15:27 - 15:29
    especially on what's important to us.
  • 15:29 - 15:33
    So if some guy comes up to me
    and, a channeler or a medium
  • 15:33 - 15:36
    "I can put you in touch
    with your parents."
  • 15:36 - 15:40
    Well, because I want so
    terribly to believe that,
  • 15:40 - 15:44
    I know I have to reach in for
    added reserves of skepticism
  • 15:45 - 15:49
    because I'm likely to be
    fooled, and much more minor,
  • 15:49 - 15:50
    to have my money taken.
  • 15:50 - 15:52
    - [Charlie] Well, is it JZ Knight was it?.
  • 15:52 - 15:53
    - Yeah, exactly.
  • 15:53 - 15:55
    She has a guy named Ramtha
  • 15:55 - 15:57
    who's 10,000 years old or something.
  • 15:57 - 15:59
    - 35.
    - 35, yes.
  • 16:01 - 16:03
    And he tells you lots of things
  • 16:03 - 16:06
    but nothing about what life
    was like 35,000 years ago.
  • 16:06 - 16:08
    - [Charlie] Shirley Maclaine believes.
  • 16:08 - 16:12
    - Shirley Maclaine believes
    that Ramtha was her brother.
  • 16:12 - 16:14
    (laughing)
  • 16:15 - 16:19
    - Things like the Loch Ness
    monster and all of that.
  • 16:19 - 16:20
    - Again--
    - Photographs.
  • 16:20 - 16:22
    - All fakes.
  • 16:22 - 16:24
    I mean the most famous photograph
  • 16:26 - 16:27
    has now been shown to be a fake,
  • 16:27 - 16:30
    but could there be a unknown mammal
  • 16:31 - 16:35
    or even reptile of large
    dimension swimming in an Irish,
  • 16:36 - 16:38
    in a Scottish lake?
  • 16:38 - 16:38
    Sure there could.
  • 16:38 - 16:39
    That we don't know about?
  • 16:39 - 16:41
    Sure there could, who says no?
  • 16:41 - 16:41
    - [Charlie] But nobody--
  • 16:41 - 16:44
    - But the evidence does not support it,
  • 16:44 - 16:46
    does not demonstrate it.
  • 16:46 - 16:48
    So do we say, "oh, ridiculous,"
  • 16:48 - 16:49
    no we don't do that.
  • 16:49 - 16:53
    We say unproved, which
    is a Scottish verdict.
  • 16:54 - 16:58
    - Some reviewers differ with
    your conclusions on this point
  • 16:59 - 17:01
    that you seem to say it's growing,
  • 17:01 - 17:03
    this kind of pseudo science and--
  • 17:03 - 17:04
    - No.
  • 17:04 - 17:05
    Sorry to interrupt.
  • 17:05 - 17:07
    I don't, this is part of being human.
  • 17:07 - 17:10
    Humans have had this
    way of magical thinking
  • 17:10 - 17:11
    through all of our history.
  • 17:11 - 17:15
    The problem is that today the technology
  • 17:15 - 17:19
    has reached formidable, maybe
    even awesome proportions,
  • 17:19 - 17:24
    and so the dangers of
    thinking this way are larger.
  • 17:24 - 17:26
    Not that this is a new kind of thinking.
  • 17:26 - 17:29
    - You are living with myelo displasia.
  • 17:29 - 17:32
    - Or I have been.
    - You have been.
  • 17:32 - 17:34
    It's in remission.
  • 17:34 - 17:35
    Are you--
  • 17:35 - 17:39
    - Well, you know, with
    diseases of this sort
  • 17:39 - 17:43
    and in all cancers--
    - Cancer of the bone marrow?
  • 17:43 - 17:46
    - Myelo displasia is not exactly
    cancer of the bone marrow,
  • 17:46 - 17:50
    but if untreated, it
    inevitably leads to leukemia.
  • 17:51 - 17:53
    And the trouble with all these diseases
  • 17:53 - 17:57
    is you never know that
    you've got every last cell.
  • 17:57 - 18:00
    You can only detect
    down to a certain level.
  • 18:00 - 18:02
    But down to the level
    that anybody can detect
  • 18:02 - 18:06
    in terms of how I feel and
    my stamina and all that,
  • 18:06 - 18:08
    it seems to be gone.
  • 18:08 - 18:12
    I'm very lucky.
    - Because you had a sister
  • 18:12 - 18:16
    who enabled you to have
    a bone marrow transplant.
  • 18:16 - 18:16
    - That's one.
  • 18:16 - 18:20
    And also the enormous
    advances in scientific,
  • 18:20 - 18:23
    in medical science in
    just the last few years.
  • 18:23 - 18:26
    If I had had this thing
    five or 10 years ago,
  • 18:26 - 18:28
    I would be dead, sure as shooting.
  • 18:28 - 18:31
    And then, finally, the love
    and support of my family.
  • 18:31 - 18:34
    All of those played a central role.
  • 18:34 - 18:35
    - So you're optimistic?
  • 18:35 - 18:39
    - I'm very optimistic,
    or at least very hopeful.
  • 18:40 - 18:44
    - And just share with us,
    because of your sense of language
  • 18:44 - 18:48
    and your sense of understand
    and being reflective
  • 18:48 - 18:51
    and introspective, what
    does, what do you think about
  • 18:51 - 18:53
    and what does it do for you to--
  • 18:53 - 18:57
    - I didn't have any
    near death experiences,
  • 18:57 - 18:58
    I didn't have a religious conversion but--
  • 18:58 - 18:59
    - [Charlie] But you thought about
  • 18:59 - 19:01
    what it would be like to die?
  • 19:01 - 19:04
    - Certainly and what it
    would be like for my family.
  • 19:04 - 19:08
    And, I didn't much think about
    what it would be like for me,
  • 19:09 - 19:12
    because I don't think it's
    likely there's anything
  • 19:12 - 19:14
    that you think about after you're dead.
  • 19:14 - 19:15
    - That's it?
    (laughing)
  • 19:15 - 19:17
    - Yeah a long, dreamless sleep.
  • 19:17 - 19:18
    I'd love to believe the opposite,
  • 19:18 - 19:20
    but I don't know of any evidence.
  • 19:20 - 19:22
    But one thing.
    - Faith, Carl, faith.
  • 19:22 - 19:26
    - One thing that it has
    done is to enhance my sense
  • 19:28 - 19:32
    of appreciation for the beauty
    of life and of the universe
  • 19:35 - 19:38
    and the sheer joy of being alive.
  • 19:38 - 19:42
    - You had a healthy portion
    of that before this,
  • 19:42 - 19:45
    but even you it happened to.
  • 19:45 - 19:47
    - Oh, there's no question.
    - An appreciation--
  • 19:47 - 19:50
    - Every moment, every inanimate object,
  • 19:52 - 19:56
    to say nothing of the exquisite
    complexity of living beings.
  • 19:59 - 20:01
    Yeah, you imagine missing it all
  • 20:01 - 20:04
    and suddenly it's so much more precious.
  • 20:04 - 20:06
    - [Charlie] May you live a long time.
  • 20:06 - 20:07
    Thank you very much.
    - Thank you Charlie.
  • 20:07 - 20:08
    - It's a pleasure.
    - Same here.
  • 20:08 - 20:09
    - Carl Sagan.
  • 20:09 - 20:11
    Science as a candle in the dark.
  • 20:11 - 20:15
    The title of the book is
    A Demon-Haunted World.
  • 20:16 - 20:20
    Thank you for joining us
    we'll see you next time.
Title:
Carl Sagan's last interview with Charlie Rose (Full Interview)
Description:

Last interview with Charlie Rose

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
20:28

English subtitles

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