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Core Values of Carl Sagan — The Psychology of Moral Urgency, Intellectual Courage, and Compassionate Defiance
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Core Values of Carl Sagan — The Psychology of Moral Urgency, Intellectual Courage, and Compassionate Defiance
Carl Sagan was not driven by curiosity alone. Curiosity is cheap. Many people are curious.
Carl Sagan was driven by moral anxiety — the deep, persistent awareness that a technologically powerful but psychologically immature species is dangerous to itself.
When I re-enter his life through the corrected Natal (External) and Navamsha (Internal) placements, what emerges is not a gentle stargazer, but a man under inner pressure — someone who felt time running out, not metaphorically, but civilizationally.
This chart is not about fame.
It is about responsibility under foresight.
Carl Sagan was not optimistic because he was naïve.
He was optimistic because he knew despair would guarantee failure.
This chart reveals a man who:
Felt personally accountable for humanity’s beliefs
Experienced knowledge as moral weight, not prestige
Acted to protect Earth like a home, not a resource
Disciplined his mind to prevent emotional distortion
Chose hope as an ethical obligation, not a feeling
Carl Sagan did not merely explain the universe.
He tried to slow humanity down long enough to grow up.
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