The Infinities
By: John Banville
Alfred A. Knopf, 2009
273 Pages
The ancient poet, Hesiod, claimed that before time began there
was (and when all else is swept away there will remain) the eternal
conflict of Desire and Necessity, an annoying itch in non-space-non-time from
which are descended the generations of gods, with all their works. Or to put it
in terms we understand, there is an instability in ‘nothingness’ that triggers
Big Bangs, and all the ‘thingness’ that flows therefrom. (You do understand
that, don’t you? O.K. Me too. Let’s move on.)
When you have ‘things’ you have interactions—things bounce
off other things. There are consequences—causes have effects, effects create
more causes. Was it necessary? Was it random? Or have the gods been interfering
with cause and effect?
In a truly deterministic universe not only would larger
fleas have smaller fleas upon their backs to bite ‘em, but these lesser fleas
(who have smaller fleas, etc. etc.) would not act at random (much less by
choice) but strictly in accordance with their individual destinies. Each flea
would have its particular nemesis whose note in the grand symphony of cause and
effect was determined at the beginning of time in accordance with the
inscrutable will of the Composer.
Or maybe some other way. Who knows?
We can’t know, really. Mortal understanding, celebrated for
encompassing ‘everything’ from quarks to Big Bangs, is marvelous only relative
to the comprehension of garden slugs, or domestic cats—both of which species
know exactly what they need to know to be what they are. And we know just
enough to be human beings, a species that craves understanding, but must make
do with explanation.
Some explanations are more satisfying than others. The
jittery motion of a particle in a fluid, is said to be ‘random’—but
‘randomness’ (as an explanation) is just a way of throwing up our hands—an
admission that there are too many causes and too many effects. Something can be
said in statistical terms—about the jittery motion of all the particles—but
that’s a different explanation of a different question.
We can only perceive, comprehend and retain, so much—and
lacking critical facts, which may be entirely outside our purview (or, if
noticed, may have been misinterpreted—or perhaps judged ‘irrelevant’) we are
likely to miss the point entirely.
And worse, just when we get a handle on the data, Galileo
looks at Jupiter’s moons with his new telescope. Whoops! The whole explanation
changes. That’s embarrassing. But although the explanation has changed, the
truth remains the same—and remains slightly beyond reach. There’s a lot of
‘Dark Matter’ out there. Could it be Necessity? And all that Dark Energy?
Is it Desire?
All of which is prologue to confronting The Infinities.
Not the actual infinities, which mortal man may not usefully consider, but the
peculiar subset of infinities in John Banville’s book. The book has been
extensively reviewed and universally approved. I agree. It is a wonderful book,
full of lovely English sentences. (English is often improved by Irish writers.)
Better still, it deals with two of my favorite themes: modern cosmology (Hugh
Everett’s thesis, and its eleven dimensional offspring—as thrilling to modern
physicists as angels on pins were to their predecessors) and: the Olympian gods,
whose lusts, whimsies and spiteful tricks are another (perhaps ‘the real’)
explanation for why things go wrong.
Adam Godley, mathematician, lies dying in his isolated
farmhouse in Ireland, an Ireland similar
to ours, but not quite the same. The shabby, ill-smelling house, its dank rooms
connected by unexpected corridors, is the ‘universe’ of his final days. It lies
ominously adjacent to a train track that doesn’t go anywhere in particular. His
family (wife, son, daughter-in-law and daughter) all variously damaged by life,
are in attendance. His retainers (a maid, and a ‘cowman’) are in and out. The
god, Hermes, orchestrates the action and serves as narrator. Zeus is there,
seducing Adam’s daughter-in-law, and Pan will be along later to upset the inevitabilities.
Oh, and let’s not overlook Rex, Adam’s faithful dog, who shares some of the
attributes of the gods.
As Hugh Everett tried to solve the quantum riddle by arguing
that each choice we make creates a new universe, so Godley has, literally,
created this world. His equations have solved the riddle of Time, opening the
door to that infinity of universes, where everything imaginable becomes
possible, and everything possible becomes inevitable. But, no matter that
access to the Infinities is similar to entering heaven (or joining the gods on
Olympus) nobody is anxious to pass through the door.
Instead of increasing our satisfaction, the certainty that
everything will happen, and all will be understood, has diminished the human
world. It was a mistake, Banville suggests, to envy the immortality and
omniscience of the gods. They’re bored. They’ve been bored for aeons. They’re
petty. They play cruel tricks and practice deceitful seductions. We resemble
the gods, but it’s not necessarily a good thing. In fact, the more godlike we
become, the worse we are.
And beneath it all, they envy our mortality and limitations,
for it is only in worlds that can be snatched away by death, that the poignancy
of love, the intensity of regret, the glory of light and the immanence of dark
can be experienced. Life is not life without its looming opposite—that creepy shadow
lurking in the corridors, that only Rex can see. We wanted to be them, but they
(who know better) want to be us.
There are lots of ‘references’ in the story—fun for the
literary minded. For example: the daughter-in-law is an actress, currently
playing the role of Alcmene. Zeus makes love to her disguised as her
husband—the same trick he played on the ‘real’ Alcmene, who became the mother
of Heracles. Why? Zeus hopes, by seducing women, to learn something about human
love, one of two things that the gods cannot experience. He is convinced that
there is a relationship between love and death, that ‘…one conduces to the
other…” But why the disguise? He’s a god—his seductions are bound to succeed.
Wouldn’t they succeed just as well without the trick? Who knows? Banville, it
seems, likes the story of Amphitryon and Alcmene—and it’s his book.
And, it’s a fine book—only the length of a midsummer’s day,
but frequent flashbacks make it a full round day—and if I have made it sound a
bit gloomy, remember that the gods also bring comic relief. The earthy Pan,
Adam’s frequent companion in life, visits him at his deathbed to arrange a
cheerful postponement for all concerned (for happy endings are only
possible sometime prior to the actual end.)
The final pages remind us of the last scene of A Midsummer’s
Night’s Dream—everyone as happy as the Bard’s lovers, celebrating an
ingeniously contrived ending.
“The trees tremble talking of night. The birds, the clouds,
the far pale sky. This is the mortal world. It is a world where nothing is
lost, where all is accounted for while yet the mystery of things is preserved;
a world where they may live, however briefly, however tenuously, in the failing
evening of the self, solitary and at the same time together somehow here in this
place, dying as they may be and yet fixed forever in a luminous, unending
instant.”
Like Adam Godley, we don’t appreciate it sufficiently.
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