Art The Noosphere
Art The Noosphere
Art The Noosphere
1
The Noösphere
by Vladimir I. Vernadsky
W
e are approaching the climax in the Second
World War. In Europe war was resumed in 1939
after an intermission of twenty-one years; it has
lasted five years in Western Europe, and is in its third year
in our parts, in Eastern Europe. As for the Far East, the war
was resumed there, much earlier, in 1931, and is already in
its 12th year. A war of such power, duration, and strength is
a phenomenon unparalleled in the history of mankind and
of the biosphere at large. Moreover, it was preceded by the
First World War which, although of lesser power, has a
causal connection with the present war.
In our country that First World War resulted in a new, his-
torically unprecedented, form of statehood, not only in the
realm of economics, but likewise in that of the aspirations of
nationalities. From the point of view of the naturalist (and, I
think, likewise from that of the historian), an historical phe-
nomenon of such power may and should be examined as a
part of a single great terrestrial geological process, and not
merely as a historical process.
In my own scientific work, the First World War was reflect-
ed in a most decisive way. It radically changed my geological
conception of the world. It is in the atmosphere of that war
that I have approached a conception of nature, at that time for- sion, of which I was elected president, played a noticeable
gotten and thus new for myself and for others, a geochemical role in the critical period of the First World War. Entirely unex-
and biogeochemical conception embracing both nonliving pectedly, in the midst of the war, it became clear to the
and living nature from the same point of view.2 I spent the Academy of Sciences that in Tsarist Russia there were no pre-
years of the First World War in my uninterrupted scientific cre- cise data concerning the now so-called strategic raw materi-
ative work, which I have so far continued steadily in the same als, and we had to collect and digest dispersed data rapidly to
direction. make up for the lacunae in our knowledge.3 Unfortunately by
Twenty-eight years ago, in 1915, a “Commission for the the time of the beginning of the Second World War, only the
Study of the Productive Forces” of our country, the so-called most bureaucratic part of that commission, the so-called
KEPS, was formed at the Academy of Sciences. That commis- Council of the Productive Forces, was preserved, and it
Series, 1942, p. 251. Cf. H. Spenser Jones, Life on Other Worlds, New
At present we cannot afford not to realize that, in the great Izvestiia of the Academy of Sciences. Geographical and Geophysical
historical tragedy through which we live, we have elemental- York, 1940; R. Wildt in Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc. 81 (1939), p. 135. A
Russian translation of Wildt’s study, regrettably not in full (which is not
indicated in the paper) appeared in the Astronomicheskii Zhurnal, Vol.
ly chosen the right path leading into the noösphere. I say ele-
XVII (1940), No. 5, p. 81ff. By now, a new study by Wildt has appeared,
mentally, as the whole history of mankind is proceeding in this
direction. The historians and political leaders only begin to Geochemistry and the Atmosphere of Planets (1941), but, to our regret,
approach a comprehension of the phenomena of nature from no copy of it has so far reached us.
8. It would deserve a new edition in modern Russian, with commentaries.
9. See Ocherki geokhimii, pp. 9, 288, and my book Problemy biogeokhimii
this point of view. The approach of Winston Churchill (1932)
(The Problems of Biogeochemistry) III (in press).
to the problem, from the angle of a historian and political
leader, is very interesting.21 10. Problemy biogeokhimii, III.
The noösphere is the last of many stages in the evolution of 11. In accordance with modern American geologists as, for example,
Charles Schuchert (Schuchert and Dunbar, A Textbook of Geology, II,
New York, 1941, p. 88ff.), I call the Cryptozoic era that period which for-
the biosphere in geological history. The course of this evolution
only begins to become clear to us through a study of some of merly had been called the Azoic, or the Arcaeozoic, era. In the
the aspects of the biosphere’s geological past. Let me cite a few Cryptozoic era the morphological preservation of the remnants of
organisms dwindles almost to nothing, but the existence of life is
revealed in the organogenic rocks, the origins of which arouse no
examples, Five hundred million years ago, in the Cambrian geo-
logical era, skeletal formations of animals, rich in calcium, doubts.
appeared for the first time in the biosphere; those of plants 12. On the bio-inert bodies see W.I. Vernadsky, Problems of Biogeochemistry,
II, Trans. Conn. Acad. Arts Sci., Vol. 35 (1944), pp. 493-494. Such are, for
example, the soil, the ocean, the overwhelming majority of terrestrial
appeared over 2 billion years ago. That calcium function of liv-
ing matter, now powerfully developed, was one of the most waters, the troposphere, and so on.
important evolutionary factors in the geological change of the 13. See my basic work referred to in Note 1.
biosphere.22 A no less important change in the biosphere 14. See D. Gilman. The Life of J. D. Dana, New York, 1899. The chapter on
the oceanic expedition in this book was written by Le Conte. Le Conte’s
book, Evolution (1888), has not been accessible to me. His autobiography
occurred from 70 to 110 million years ago, at the time of the
Cretaceous system, and especially during the Tertiary. It was in was published in 1903: W. Armes, Editor, The Autobiography of Joseph
Le Conte. For his biography and bibliography see H. Fairchild in Bull.
Geol. Soc. Amer. 26 (1915), p. 53.
that epoch that our green forests, which we cherish so much,
15. On Reynolds, see the Index in “Centenary Celebration: Wilkes
were formed for the first time. This is another great evolutionary
stadium, analogous to the noösphere. It was probably in these Exploring Expedition of the U.S. Navy, 1838-1842,” Proc. Amer.
forests that man appeared around 15 or 20 million years ago. Philos. Soc., 82, No. 5 (1940). It is to be regretted that our expeditions
in the Pacific, so active in the first half of the 19th Century, were later
discontinued for a long time (almost until the Revolution), following the
Now we live in the period of a new geological evolutionary
change in the biosphere. We are entering the noösphere. This death of both Emperor Alexander I (1777-1825) and Count N. P.
Rumiantsov (1754-1826)—that remarkable leader of Russian culture
who equipped the “Riurik” expedition (1815-1818) out of his private
new elemental geological process is taking place at a stormy
funds.
time, in the epoch of a destructive world war. But the impor-
tant fact is that our democratic ideals are in tune with the ele- In the Soviet period K. M. Deriugin’s (1878-1936) expedition should be
mentioned; its precious and scientifically important materials have been
so far only partly studied and remain unpublished. Such an attitude toward
mental geological processes, with the law of nature, and with
the noösphere. Therefore we may face the future with confi- scientific work is inadmissible. The Zoological Museum of the Academy of
dence. It is in our hands. We will not let it go. Sciences must fulfill this scientific and civic duty.
16. D. Gilman, op.cit., p. 255.
17. I and my contemporaries have imperceptibly lived through a drastic
Notes _____________________________________________________________
1. The word “noösphere” is composed from the Greek terms noos, mind, and
sphere, the last used in the sense of an envelope of the Earth. I treat the change in the comprehension of the circumambient world. In the time of
problem of the noösphere in more detail in the third part of my book, now my youth it seemed both to me and to others that man had lived through
being prepared for publication, on The Chemical Structure of the a historical time only, within the span of a few thousand years, at best a
few tens of thousands of years. Now we know that man has been con-
sciously living through tens of millions of years. He consciously lived
Biosphere of the Earth As a Planet, and Its Surroundings.
2. It should be noted that in this connection I came upon the forgotten
through the glacial period in both Eurasia and North America, through the
thoughts of that original Bavarian chemist, C. Schoenbein (1799-
formation of Eastern Himalaya, and so on. The division of historical and
1868) and of his friend, the English physicist of genius, M. Faraday
geological time is levelled out for us.
(1791-1867). As early as the beginning of the 1840s, Schoenbein
attempted to prove that a new division should be created in geology— 18. The last revised edition of my Ocherki Geokhimii (Problems of
geochemistry, as he called it. See W. Vernadsky, Ocherki geokhimii Geochemistry) appeared in 1934. In 1926, the Russian edition of
(Studies in Geochemistry), 4th edition, Moscow-Leningrad, 1934, pp. Biosfera (The Biosphere) came out, and in 1929 its French edition. My
14, 290. Biogeokhimicheskie Ocherki (Biogeochemical Studies) was published in
1940. The publication of Problemy biogeokhimii (Problems of
3. On the significance of KEPS see A. E. Fersman, Voina i strategich-
Biogeochemistry) was begun in 1940. (A condensed English translation of
eskoe syrie (The War and Strategic Raw Materials), Krasnoufimsk,
Part II appeared, under the editorship of G. E. Hutchinson, in Trans. Conn.
1941, p. 48.
Acad Arts Sci., Vol. 35, in 1944.) Part III is in press. Ocherki geokhimii was
4. See my article, “Out of my Recollections: The First Year of the translated into German and Japanese.
Ukrainian Academy of Sciences,” to appear in the Jubilee volume of 19. Le Roy’s lectures were at once published in French: L’exigence idealiste
the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences in commemoration of its 25th et le fait d’evolution, Paris, 1927, p. 196.
anniversary.
20. A. Lotka, Elements of Physical Biology, Baltimore, 1925, p. 405 ff.
5. It is to be regretted that the manuscripts left after Wolf’s death have been,
as yet, neither studied nor published. In 1927, the Commission on the 21. W.S. Churchill, Amid These Storms: Thoughts and Adventures, New York,
History of Knowledge at the Academy of Sciences decided to do this work, 1932, p. 274 ff. I plan to return to this problem elsewhere.
but it could not be accomplished because of the constant changes in the 22. I deal with the problem of the biogeochemical functions of organisms in
Academy’s approach toward the study of the history of science. Now that the second part of my book, The Chemical Structure of the Biosphere.
work at the Academy has been reduced to a minimum, which is harmful (see Note 1).