Lunar Bat-men, the Planet Vulcan and Martian Canals
Five of science history's most bizarre cosmic delusions
- By Erik Washam
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
In 1691, to explain variations in Earth's magnetic poles, royal astronomer Sir Edmond Halley, better known for recognizing the schedule of a brilliant comet, proposed a hollow Earth consisting of four concentric spheres. The interior must be lit and inhabited, he said; the idea of the Creator failing to populate the land and provide its populace with life-giving light seemed inconceivable. Halley proposed a luminous substance that filled the cavity, and he attributed the aurora borealis to its escape through the crust at the poles.
To make a weird idea even weirder, Cyrus Teed, a 19th-century physician, alchemist and experimenter with electricity, concluded that the world was not only hollow but also that human beings were living on its inner surface. He got the idea in 1869, when an angelic vision announced (after Teed had been shocked into unconsciousness by one of his experiments) that Teed was the messiah. According to the angel, the Sun and other celestial bodies rose and set within the hollow Earth due to an atmosphere that bent light in extreme arcs. The entire cosmos, he claimed, was contained inside the sphere, which was 8,000 miles in diameter. Teed changed his name to Koresh (the Hebrew form of "Cyrus"), founded his own cult (Koreshanity) and eventually built a compound for his followers, who numbered 250, in southwestern Florida. The compound is now preserved by the state of Florida as the Koreshan State Historic Site and draws tens of thousands of visitors every year.
Venus Attacks!
In 1950, Immanuel Velikovsky published Worlds in Collision, a book that claimed cataclysmic historical events were caused by an errant comet. A psychoanalyst by training, Velikovsky cited the Old Testament book of Joshua, which relates how God stopped the Sun from moving in the sky. Moses' parting of the Red Sea, Velikovsky claimed, could be explained by the comet's gravitational pull. He theorized that in 1500 B.C., Jupiter spewed out a mass of planetary material that took the form of a comet before becoming the planet Venus.
Velikovsky was one in a long line of catastrophists, adherents of the theory that sudden, often planet-wide cataclysms account for things like mass extinctions or the formation of geological features. His book is remarkable not so much for its theories—which are unexceptional by catastrophist standards—but for its popularity and longevity. A New York Times best seller for 11 weeks, it can be found on the science shelves of bookstores to this day and enjoys glowing reviews on some Web sites.
Worlds in Collision was met with derision from scientists. Among other problems, the composition of Venus and Jupiter are quite different, and the energy required for ejecting so much material would have vaporized the nascent planet. At a 1974 debate sponsored by the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Carl Sagan, the popular astronomer, was among the panelists opposing Velikovsky. But the attacks may have strengthened Velikovsky's standing; he struck some people as an underdog fighting the scientific establishment.
Velikovsky's ideas seemed radical a half century ago—most astronomers assumed that planetary change occurred at a slow, constant rate. His remaining adherents point to the asteroid impact that killed most of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago as evidence he was ahead of his time.
Erik Washam is the associate art director for Smithsonian.
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Comments (10)
Just shows how important careful writing must be. The reference to the closest planet to ours being Mars is a reference NOT to its proximity to Earth but its physical characteristics compared to Earth. DH
Posted by Don Haywood on April 1,2012 | 12:11 PM
no global warming or climate change if you prefer has not been accepted by the majoity.the so-called hockey stick graph,has been disproved.and in fact global warming is not new.margret thatcher,claimed tht the earth was warming and there was no need for the coal miners who were on strike at the time for better wages.the climate is constantly changing,and to assume that humans are to blame,simply shows the disdain these paticular scientists have for humankind.
Posted by thomas on February 10,2011 | 09:16 PM
And I thought the well known Piltdown Man would be on this list. If "scientific hoax" is mentioned in public, it usually tops the list. While this purposeful fossil forgery was later exposed, few other such deceptions have ever been created. More than a few anthropologists were duped by it, but there were doubters from the beginning. Delusion can be a part of human nature, especially by those who are uncritical. But Richard Dawkins got it right with his book, "The God Delusion" by stating so clearly mankind's biggest delusion of all time - religion! I would call supernatural belief the supreme cosmic error.
Posted by photojack53 on February 4,2011 | 12:31 AM
Very entertaining! But to answer the respondent who thought global warmaing would be added to the list:
This theory is very different from the previous ones that proved to be hoaxes. They were promoted by a one or a few imaginative folks and not taken seriously by the scientific community. In contrast, global climate change is accepted by an overwhelming majority of well-trained scientists in the field of climatology and is opposed by people in the general public with no understanding of how the Earth's energy exchange system actually works.
Posted by Janet Zehr on January 17,2011 | 02:28 PM
Gullibility is alive and well even now. Hence the belief in alien abductions, Bigfoot, Roswell, ghosts, etc. People will always believe what they want to believe,
Posted by Jim on January 7,2011 | 10:43 PM
It's funny to see what people came up with before all of the new technology and even since then, Can you imagine thinking there were these "Bat" like beings that lived on the moon. but they the general public had no way of disproving these things and just tended to believe what they were told.
Posted by D.G. on January 6,2011 | 04:07 PM
Thou art the man!
Posted by Jane Jump on December 21,2010 | 11:13 AM
Twenty years from now, Global Warming will be on this list.
Posted by Graham Ogilvie on December 21,2010 | 10:42 AM
Uwe:
Good point - Venus is indeed the closest planet to Earth. I think perhaps the author meant that Mars was the planet that most resembled ours. Its similarity prompted more than one astronomer to speculate on the existence of life there.
Of course, Isaac Asimov suggested that the Earth-Moon system could be classified as a double planet because of its unique size and gravity relationships. This would make our moon the closest planet. Certainly the bat-men would be pleased.
Posted by Erik Washam on December 16,2010 | 10:47 PM
Entertaining article, which I enjoyed reading. There's one slight lapse in fact though (in the "Martians Build Canals!"-section): the planet closest to our own is not Mars but Venus.
Posted by Uwe on December 16,2010 | 04:10 PM