Wyn Wachhorst

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The Case for Wonder: A Meditation

March 27, 2015 By Wyn Wachhorst 1 Comment

Perhaps it had no beginning.  Perhaps, being spacetime itself, it is neither where nor when.  Like the scarlet ribbons of song, it came “I will never know from where.”  Yet here I am, awake in this vast improbability for a nanosecond of cosmic time, a mote of life on a fleck of rock afloat in the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Articles & Essays, Blog, religion, science and wonder Tagged With: Ann Dryan, astronomy, autism, Carl Sagan, climate change, Cosmos, Hubble, religion, science, science education, scientific illiteracy, wonder

The Launch of Apollo 11 (from The Dream of spaceflight)

November 22, 2013 By Wyn Wachhorst Leave a Comment

Poised on the launch pad and towering thirty-six stories against the stars, the Apollo-Saturn rocket seemed unearthly in the wash of floodlight, glowing icy silver-white, like the moon above it.  A half-million pilgrims had made their way to the mosquitoed marshlands of Florida's Merritt Island, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Articles & Essays, invention and discovery, postwar America, science and wonder, spaceflight Tagged With: Apollo 11, Apollo 17, Apollo-Saturn, astronauts, Carl Sagan, moon landing, Pad39A, Saturn-Five rocket, spaceflight

The Inner Reaches of Outer Space

September 23, 2013 By Wyn Wachhorst Leave a Comment

It had been a dark and bitter year.  The war languished in Vietnam, students rioted around the globe, the Soviets invaded Czechoslovakia, North Korea seized the USS Pueblo, a B-52 crashed carrying four hydrogen bombs, Chicago police battered demonstrators at the Democratic convention, Robert Kennedy … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Articles & Essays, memoir, Nostalgia, politics, postwar America, science and wonder, spaceflight Tagged With: 1968, Apollo 8, Apollo flights, astronauts, Carl Sagan, end of Apollo, Joseph Campbell, space exploration, spaceflight, wonder

Carl Sagan: Visionary

April 18, 2013 By Wyn Wachhorst 1 Comment

Originally written as a memorial speech delivered by Buzz Aldrin, this was subsequently published in the Planetary Society’s Planetary Report, May/June 1997. I can’t think of Carl without seeing that windblown figure strolling on the beach, telling us, over the roar of the breakers, in his emphatic … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Articles & Essays, science and wonder, spaceflight Tagged With: candle in the dark, Carl Sagan, Cosmos, Europa, John Carter, Mars, other worlds, space exploration, Titan, Voyager

Recent Posts

  • Nothing
  • Facebook as Spandrel
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  • Goodbye to Gramma Watchie
  • The Launch of Apollo 11 (from The Dream of spaceflight)

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