35 Who Made a Difference: John Dobson
Come one, come all. Share the sky with the father of sidewalk astronomy
- By Don Moser
- Smithsonian.com, November 01, 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
His telescopes have been replicated thousands of times, not only by amateur builders but by commercial manufacturers who advertise them as "Dobsonians." Dobson himself earns no royalties. What matters to him is getting big telescopes out there. He explains: "It was high time for somebody to show the amateurs that they could make bigger telescopes" than the little tiny ones they had been running.
Notes San Francisco sidewalk astronomer Kenneth Frank, "He makes you look at things in almost a childlike light." Dobson thinks of it in another way: "Most of the things I say are within everybody's grasp, but then I try to lead them out for a reach."
Leading people out for a reach is what bothers some astronomers. His attempted reconciliation of a religious view with a scientific one has made for critics. "It's not that he thinks outside the box," reflects filmmaker Jacobs. "He doesn't even see the box." Or, for that matter, believe in the Big Bang. "First of all, they have it coming out of nothing and that's impossible," he says. "And then they have it coming out of a black hole and that's just as impossible." Dobson believes in something bigger than the bang. "He thinks he's got the secret to the universe," complains one astronomer. Chortles Dobson, "Hundreds of years ago they would have already burned me at the stake."
Immolation aside, Dobson has left an enduring astronomical legacy. He is fond of quoting the New Zealand astronomer Graham Loftus: "What we need is a big telescope in every village and hamlet, and some bloke there with that fire in his eye who can show something of the glory the world sails in." He could, of course, have been talking about his friend John Dobson.
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Comments (1)
I met a man who looked like Santa Claus in 1980 on a sailboat in the WhitSunday Islands off Australias' eastern coast. While I snapped a photo of him, because of his white hair and beard he said to me "who are you shooting for Longeye?" I always remembered him saying that and used it as the name of my website in 1997.
After reading your article I now wonder if this man was John Dobson?
Best,
Wally Randall
p.s. longtime Smithsonian subscriber here in Canada
Posted by Wally Randall on March 15,2010 | 01:29 PM