Humanists to Honor Lead Imaging Scientist on the Cassini Saturn Project
AMERICAN HUMANIST ASSOCIATION, WASHINGTON, DC
Roy Speckhardt (202) 238-9088, or (703) 314-7008
rspeckhardt@americanhumanist.org
www.americanhumanist.org
January 17, 2008 - For Immediate Release
(Washington, D.C.) The American Humanist Association announced today
that planetary scientist Carolyn C. Porco, leader of the imaging
science
team for the Cassini space mission to Saturn and director of the
Cassini
Imaging Central Laboratory for Operations (CICLOPS), will be honored
with the Isaac Asimov Science Award in Washington, D.C., in June. "It
is
important to show the world how a humanist philosophy, inspiring and
nontheistic, can motivate significant achievements and major
contributions to society," declared American Humanist Association
Executive Director Roy Speckhardt. "We feel proud that humanism has
influenced and attracted people of Dr. Porco's caliber."
Upon announcement of the award, Porco said, "I think there is a deep
need today to spread the word, that science is a positive transforming
feature of human culture and has shown us, with great clarity, our
place
in the magnificent scheme of universal evolution. And that knowledge,
along with a secular moral guiding philosophy emphasizing goodness over
evil, can be empowering, spiritually fulfilling and form the foundation
of a meaningful life spent on this planet. That, in my mind, is what
humanism is all about, and I'm honored to be included, with this award,
in the ranks of its celebrated citizens."
Past recipients of the Isaac Asimov Science Award are Dr. Herbert A.
Hauptman, mathematician and Nobel laureate in chemistry; Dr. Eugenie
Scott, executive director of the National Center for Science Education;
and Dr. Joe Nickell, folklorist and investigator of paranormal claims.
Porco first rose to prominence during the 1980s as a planetary
scientist
on the Voyager Imaging Team. She was among the first to study Voyager's
results on the rings of Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, and made germinal
contributions to the understanding of the interactions between
planetary
rings and moons.
Her work as leader of the Cassini imaging team has led to many
discoveries at Saturn, including new structures and phenomena within
Saturn's rings and atmosphere, new Saturnian moons, uncovering the
surface of Saturn's largest haze-enshrouded moon Titan and imaging the
geysers of the small, icy, geologically active moon Enceladus.
Some of her imaging efforts have been directed at home. Along with Carl
Sagan she was co-originator of the idea to take a "Portrait of the
Planets" with the Voyager spacecraft and participated in the planning,
design and execution of those images in 1991, including the famous Pale
Blue Dot image of Earth. And in 2006 her team was responsible for the
breathtaking image of a dot-like Earth seen from Saturn during a total
solar eclipse, recently voted as the most spectacular Cassini image
taken thus far. (Cassini, and Voyager, images can be found at the
official Cassini imaging team website at http://ciclops.org.)
She is also an imaging scientist on the New Horizons mission on its way
to Pluto.
Porco was interviewed in the current January/February 2008 issue of The
Humanist magazine, published by the American Humanist Association, in
an
article entitled "Science and Spirituality."
The Isaac Asimov Science Award comes in the wake of other recognition.
In 1999 Porco was selected by the "London Sunday Times" as one of 18
scientific leaders of the 21st century and by "Industrial Week" as one
of "50 Stars to Watch." Also, her pioneering contributions and
leadership in the exploration of the outer solar system were recognized
with the naming of Asteroid 7231 Porco.
The World Humanist Congress at which she will be honored has as its
theme "E Pluribus Unum: Reclaiming Humanist Values" and will bring
humanists together from nearly every continent. Conducted jointly by
the
American Humanist Association and the International Humanist and
Ethical
Union, the event will take place June 5-8, 2008, and will also feature
"The Golden Compass" author Philip Pullman, Congressman Pete Stark,
Feminist Majority Foundation President Eleanor Smeal and Maryland State
Senator Jamie Raskin.
Other leading humanists are being lined up as speakers and will be
announced on the American Humanist Association Web site at
www.americanhumanist.org as they are confirmed. Porco will receive her
award and speak Saturday evening, June 7.
# # #
The American Humanist Association (www.americanhumanist.org) advocates
for the rights and viewpoints of humanists. Founded in 1941 and
headquartered in Washington, D.C., its work is extended through more
than 100 local chapters and affiliates across America.
Humanism is a progressive philosophy of life that, without theism,
affirms our responsibility to lead ethical lives of value to self and
humanity.
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