Originally posted by brum
... (ie why, when we first measure the distance of a star, do we "walk through a door" and such?)
my perspective on this is just one person's narrow point of view
I tend to think of things in terms of the Earth getting ready to spread its life to other stars
it is a very long process (in human lifetimes) and an important step along the way is the first time we realize how far away those potential destinations are
Timothy Ferris (a good science journalist) has this book called
"Coming of Age in the Milky Way".
Maybe this is one of the things you go thru in adolesence---beginning to realize how big the world is and what your place in it is
this 1838 first accurate measurement of distance to a star came right about the same time as Darwin was figuring out how Earth life has evolved and how new species of life arise. The key quotes from Darwin's notebooks are dated around that year, if I remember correctly.
I think of this as a moment of growing consciousness where we realize more exactly who we are and what our job is.
But that is just one person's take on it---a way I personally have of seeing events in history.
My favorite person is Aristarchus who around 250 BC got an estimate (or anyway a crude lowerbound) on how far the sun is, and after that Kepler (because of what he had to go thru to get the Aristarchus sun-centered system to fit the data---it was almost funny how stubborn he had to be to finally get it---in the meantime Copernicus had re-promoted the heliocentric model first glimpsed by Aristarchus, so it was being called Copernican).
It is like living on the shore of an ocean and seeing islands out along the horizon.
Eventually, someone asks how far they are.