The
History of The World in 200 Words Or Less
by
Eric Schulman
formerly with the National Radio
Astronomy Observatory
Charlottesville, Virginia
Quantum fluctuation. Inflation. Expansion. Strong nuclear interaction.
Particle-antiparticle annihilation. Deuterium and helium production. Density
perturbations. Recombination. Blackbody radiation. Local contraction.
Cluster formation. Reionization? Violent relaxation. Virialization. Biased
galaxy formation? Turbulent fragmentation. Contraction. Ionization. Compression.
Opaque hydrogen. Massive star formation. Deuterium ignition. Hydrogen
fusion. Hydrogen depletion. Core contraction. Envelope expansion. Helium
fusion. Carbon, oxygen, and silicon fusion. Iron production. Implosion.
Supernova explosion. Metals injection. Star formation. Supernova explosions.
Star formation. Condensation. Planetesimal accretion. Planetary differentiation.
Crust solidification. Volatile gas expulsion. Water condensation. Water
dissociation. Ozone production. Ultraviolet absorption. Photosynthetic
unicellular organisms. Oxidation. Mutation. Natural selection and evolution.
Respiration. Cell differentiation. Sexual reproduction. Fossilization.
Land exploration. Dinosaur extinction. Mammal expansion. Glaciation. Homo
sapiens manifestation. Animal domestication. Food surplus production.
Civilization! Innovation. Exploration. Religion. Warring nations. Empire
creation and destruction. Exploration. Colonization. Taxation without
representation. Revolution. Constitution. Election. Expansion. Industrialization.
Rebellion. Emancipation Proclamation. Invention. Mass production. Urbanization.
Immigration. World conflagration. League of Nations. Suffrage extension.
Depression. World conflagration. Fission explosions. United Nations. Space
exploration. Assassinations. Lunar excursions. Resignation. Computerization.
World Trade Organization. Terrorism. Internet expansion. Reunification.
Dissolution. World-Wide Web creation. Composition. Extrapolation?
Copyright 1996-1997
by Eric Schulman. Used with permission.
This piece was the inspiration
for the book A
Briefer History of Time and led to the Annals of Improbable Research
Universal
History Translation Project. Reprinted from AIR,
Volume III, Number 1, January/February 1997, page 27.
|