Wherefor the species?
A poem by John Kineman
There once was a species with unstable genes
   which could not reproduce no matter the means.
Now this, now that, through various form
   to a fit population none would conform.
Cloning as well was without success
   for once they were cloned they'd immediately regress.
There was nothing for it but to abandon the genes
  and resort instead to reproduction by memes.
Now if thoughts are things this notion appears
   for genes are things and memes are ideas.
Their reasoning was, that with form unreliable
   their thoughts themselves might instead be viable.
Each set about with due concentration
   to design their offspring from pure cogitation.
But the quality of thought bode ill for the species
   and their new mental life forms resembled, well....feces.
No luck with genes and with no form for their memes
   they decided now to put their minds in machines.
Which removed all concern about how to bed,
   but unpleasantly led to a much greater dread!
   were power removed -- they would all be dead!!
This condition required a quick resolution
   so they formed a committee to find a solution.
Their plan concluded in long written articles
   that salvation lie only as quantum particles.
Now this situation was much more acceptable
   reduced to quanta their status at least was respectable.
Though their fortunes might still occasionally reverse
   they were now, in fact, the foundation of the universe!
The universe, they reasoned was in the long run stable
   so to persist in the future they would surely be able.
But one poor buggar who was quite good at math
   proved their future might resemble an unpleasant past.
If, as he resoned, they began in a bang
   their end as well might similarly hang!
Alas, the end of the story cannot yet be known
   for WE are this species, confused of our home.
And if anything from this can at all be shown
  it is that our thoughts are uncertain and our future unknown.
-----------------------------------------------
John J. Kineman, Physical Scientist/Ecologist
National Geophysical Data Center
325 Broadway  E/GC1  (3100 Marine St. Rm: A-152)
Boulder, Colorado  80303  USA
(303) 497-6900 (phone)
(303) 497-6513 (fax)
jjk@ngdc.noaa.gov (email)