Carl Sagan — "We are like butterflies who flutter for a day and think it is forever."
We are like butterflies who flutter for a day and think it is forever.
We are like butterflies who flutter for a day and think it is forever.
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Human lifespans feel enormous from the inside but are vanishingly brief against cosmic timescales. Like a butterfly that lives one day yet experiences it as a full life, we mistake our narrow slice of time for something permanent. We build civilizations, develop philosophies, and assume our concerns are eternal — when in reality all of recorded human history occupies a blink against the universe's 13.8-billion-year timeline.
Sagan spent his career measuring cosmic time — stars billions of years old, species millions of years evolved. His famous Cosmic Calendar compressed the universe's history into one year, placing all of human civilization in the final 14 seconds of December 31. He genuinely believed human arrogance and conflict stemmed from this temporal myopia. Correcting it — through wonder rather than condescension — was the animating purpose of Cosmos and his public science work.
Sagan reached peak influence in the late 1970s and 1980s, when Cold War nuclear arsenals could end civilization in hours. Space exploration had just revealed Earth as a tiny dot in a vast universe. Sagan co-authored landmark research on nuclear winter in 1983, showing a brief nuclear exchange could collapse agriculture globally. The combination made humanity's fleetingness not an abstract philosophical point but an immediate survival concern demanding humility.
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