I've always been interested in myths, you know, you'll learn a lot from myths, you learn a lot from, you know, many sources, because a myth is another way of explaining nature. It's not consistent with the testable model that we use in science, but certainly, it's very colorful, and very dramatic, and, you know, it tells you the whole story in very complicated ways, new ones, too. So, I got interested in...in Daedalus. Now Daedalus was a mythic figure, and he… he was, he did a lot of things; he was, he invented forms of sculpture — the lost wax method was attributed to him. He was a kind of engineer. He was a… he was a sort of problem-solver. And… and to my mind, he was a kind of model of contemporary technology and engineering science.
So the story is a rather long-winded one, but an interesting one. He was from Athens, but he got into trouble there because he defenestrated his nephew, threw him out a window, and he was accused of murder. It was a kind of complicated case; he said there had been incest involved. Typical kind of Greek myth. So he flees to Crete and he is, goes to work in the court of King Minos and his wife, Queen Pasiphae. So the king had a kind of problem, you know, so he turned to… to Daedalus, the big time problem-solver. And the problem was that his… that the guards had presented them with this white ox, and which they, in time, expected to have sacrificed to the gods. And, but she, his wife developed a hopeless love for the… for this bull, and so they appealed to Daedalus how to deal with this issue. So he constructed a model, a life size hollow, upholstered cow. And she gets into the cow and is put into a field; she's impregnated by the bull, and it satisfies her ardor. But there's another problem, because the offspring was the Minotaur, you know, this terrible half-beast, half-man. And it was going around causing, you know, killing people, causing destruction. So they call on… they call on Daedalus again to solve the problem. So he builds a labyrinth and — it's actually a sort of maze, you know, there’s a difference between a labyrinth and a maze; a labyrinth, if you… if you kind of follow it you eventually get to the centre, in a maze, there are blind alleys. So he actually built, I guess, a maze. And they put the… they put the Minotaur in it, and he's saved, I mean, the country. Now the problem arises, because the Cretans had had a war with the Athenians; they won them, and every year they had to send a tribute of young men and women, who are sacrificed to the Minotaur; they were put into the labyrinth, you know, to die there. So naturally, Daedalus - he was an Athenian himself - so he was very upset by that, and the… the Athenians sent a kind of undercover agent to kill the… kill the Minotaur, and that was Theseus, a born killer, if you ever want to see one. So he allies with the daughter of Midas and Pasiphae, who was Ariadne, and she falls for him, and she promises to help him with the Minotaur if he would take her away with him after that happens. And she was already married to somebody else. And... mind you, she's the half-sister of the Minotaur, right? Okay, so she gets this magic spool from Daedalus, and he... there's a little door and they can get inside, and they go and kill the… and kill the Minotaur, and they escape using this golden thread — a theme that comes up in the Daedalus myth quite often. And they flee, and they go to Naxos, where Theseus, not unexpectedly, abandons Ariadne, hence the opera, you know.
Okay, the story goes, I mean, that's not the end of the story, but I’m not going to spend… so there's… there's a constant theme, you know; you solve a problem and you create another one. Well, the next part, what happens is that Daedalus gets imprisoned in the maze with his son Icarus, the ill-fated Icarus, and so, okay, he solves that. He develops a vertical solution to the problem. He develops a theory of aerodynamics, invents wings, and makes them; cautions his son not to fly too low to the ground where the aerodynamics will be poor — too much moisture — or go too high and get it melted. The son, in his exuberance, flies too high, the wings fall off and he falls into the Ionian Sea, named after him — Icarian Sea, the Icarian Sea. And, but Daedalus escapes and he ends up in Naples, near Naples, in Cumea, or, he eventually ended up in Sicily. And it goes on. There are other parts of the story.
All right, so there's this notion that there are no perfect solutions. Every time you solve a problem, you cause another one. The other thing is you can never know everything, because every time you know something, you know more about what you don't know. You keep creating problems. And that's what science is good at. The big thing that drives science is not the answers to the questions, but generating the questions, because if you answer all the questions, there's no place to go. But fortunately, you always... you always generate more questions than… than answers. You know, everybody writes a paper, and they said, well there's more questions than answers — that's how you can tell you're doing a good job! It's not that that's surprising; that's what you expect. So that was a, we refer to that as the Daedalus, the Daedalus factor, or something like that.