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The Flat Earth Society (also known as the International Flat Earth Society or the International Flat Earth Research Society) is an organization that seeks to further the belief that the Earth is flat rather than a sphere. The modern organization was founded by Englishman Samuel Shenton in 1956,[1] and later led by Charles K. Johnson, who based the organization in his home in Lancaster, California. The formal society appears to have disbanded after Johnson’s death in 2001, while its name continues to be used by various web sites.
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The belief that the Earth was flat was almost universal until about the 4th century BC[2], when the Ancient Greek scientists and philosophers proposed the idea that the Earth was a sphere, or at least rounded in shape. Aristotle was one of the first thinkers to provide evidence of a spherical Earth in 330 BC.[3] By the early Middle Ages, it was widespread knowledge throughout Europe that the Earth was a sphere.[3]
However, throughout history, many continued to support the notion of a flat Earth. Modern hypotheses supporting a flat Earth originated with English inventor Samuel Rowbotham (1816-1884). Based on his interpretation of certain biblical passages, Rowbotham published a 16-page pamphlet, which he later expanded into a 430-page book, Earth Not a Globe, expounding his views. According to Rowbotham's system, which he called "Zetetic Astronomy", the earth is a flat disc centered at the North Pole and bounded along its southern edge by a wall of ice (Antarctica), with the sun and moon 3000 miles (4800 km) and the "cosmos" 3100 miles (5000 km) above earth.[4]
Rowbotham and his followers gained attention by engaging in public debates with leading scientists of the day. One such debate, involving the prominent naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace, concerned the Bedford Level experiment (and later led to several lawsuits for fraud and libel).[5][6][7]
After Rowbotham's death, his followers established the Universal Zetetic Society, published a magazine entitled The Earth Not a Globe Review, and remained active well into the early part of the 20th century. A flat Earth journal, Earth, was published between 1901-1904, edited by the explorer Lady Blount, wife of Sir Walter de Sodrington.[8] After World War I, the movement underwent a slow decline.
In 1956, Samuel Shenton, a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society and the Royal Geographic Society took over the Universal Zetetic Society and helped to found the International Flat Earth Society, which he ran, as "organizing secretary" from his home in Dover, in Britain.[8] The organization took a hit when satellite images taken from outer space showed the Earth as a sphere rather than flat, but they were not fazed. Shenton remarked: "It's easy to see how a photograph like that could fool the untrained eye."
The society also took the position that the Apollo Moon landings were a hoax, staged by Hollywood and based on a script by Arthur C. Clarke, a position also held by others not connected to the Flat Earth Society. On hearing this, Clarke sent a facetious letter to NASA's chief administrator:
"Dear Sir, on checking my records, I see that I have never received payment for this work. Could you please look into this matter with some urgency? Otherwise you will be hearing from my solicitors, Messrs Geldsnatch, Geldsnatch and Blubberclutch". [9]
In 1971, Shenton died and Charles K. Johnson, inheriting Shenton's library from Shenton's wife, became the new president of the Flat Earth Society which moved to California. Under his leadership, over the next three decades, the group grew in size from a few members to about 3,000. Johnson distributed newsletters, flyers, maps, and other promotional materials to anyone who asked for them, and he managed all membership applications together with his wife, Marjory, who was also a flat-earther. The most famous of these newsletters was Flat Earth News, which was a quarterly four page tabloid. Johnson paid for this tabloid through annual dues of members, which ranged from $6 to $10 over the course of his leadership.[10]
Some actual headlines from Flat Earth News during the '70s and early '80s:
The most recent world model propagated by the Flat Earth Society holds that humans live on a disc, with the North Pole at its center and a 150-foot (45 m) high wall of ice at the outer edge. The resulting map resembles the symbol of the United Nations, which Johnson used as evidence for his position. In this model, the sun and moon are each a mere 32 miles (52 km) in diameter.
A newsletter from the society gives some insight into Johnson's thinking:
The Flat Earth Society recruited members by attacking the United States government and all of its agencies, particularly NASA. Much of the society’s literature in its early days focused on interpreting the Bible literally to mean that the Earth is flat, although they did certainly attempt to offer scientific explanations and evidence.[10]
The group rose to about 3,000 members during its peak under Charles K. Johnson. It is questionable though how many of those members actively furthered the Flat Earth Theory, and how many of those members were even supportive of the theory.[11] Another large challenge facing the Flat Earth Society was public ridicule. The organization faced overwhelming scientific evidence and public opinion that maintained that the Earth is a sphere. The term flat-earther became commonly used to refer to an individual who stubbornly adheres to discredited or outmoded ideas.
The society began to decline in the 1990s, and was further affected by a fire at the house of Charles K. Johnson which destroyed all of the records and contacts of members of the Flat Earth Society. Johnson’s wife, who helped manage the database, died shortly thereafter.[11] Charles K. Johnson himself died on March 19, 2001. There is no evidence that the Flat Earth Society has survived him. However, proponents of the theory maintain various websites and forums.
In August 2008 the BBC reported on believers of the Flat Earth idea, describing one of the interviewees as ”moderator of a Flat Earth Society discussion website”, without providing a URL. This person stated his intentions to better connect members of the Flat Earth Society across the world.[12]
As of September 2009, two web-based discussion forums - theflatearthsociety.org/forum/, and www.theflatearthsociety.net/forum/ exist. The forums do not share the same content; they have different bulletin boards, users and postings.
Some of the postings appear to exhibit a genuine belief in the flat earth idea, and a FAQ is available.[13] At www.theflatearthsociety.net, the global moderator bears the user name James McIntyre,[14] just as the interviewee in the BBC report of August 2008.[12] In a posting of July 2007 2008, McIntyre calls for recreation of a flat earth believers organisation.[15]
One parody web site that claims to represent the Flat Earth Society states that it has existed as an organization since 1547.[16] They provide a mission statement and a form that interested individuals can fill out to join, however it is clearly a parody.
Current proponents of the Flat Earth Society do not have a central alternative theory; different members have unique ideas on how the Earth is constructed. Some advocate the idea that the Earth is utterly flat, while others advocate a disk construction.[3]
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This section is missing citations or needs footnotes. Please help add inline citations to guard against copyright violations and factual inaccuracies. (November 2008) |
The modern Flat Earth Society describes the Earth as being a disc with a diameter of about 40,000 km (24,900 miles) and a circumference of 126,000 km (78,225 miles)[citation needed]. The sun and moon are both described as discs about 52 km (32 miles) in diameter (although some such sources say they are spheres)[who?] following closed paths about 4,800 km (3,000 miles) above the Earth, and the stars about 160 km (100 miles) higher.[citation needed]
The Flat Earth Society also maintains that the Earth is accelerating upward at a rate of 9.8 m/s², thereby simulating gravity,[13] under the influence of a form of dark energy[citation needed]. Any flat Earth model that admitted that matter that is part of the Earth attracts all other matter making it up would have to account for such a disk failing to collapse on itself. In a few Flat Earth models, however, other planetary bodies such as the moon and sun are described as exerting gravitational forces, lessening the apparent weight of objects elevated above the earth; they also describe such forces as explaining the orbits of spacecraft.
In such accounts, the stars and planetary bodies above the Earth revolve (at least roughly horizontally)[citation needed] above it, thereby causing sunrise and sunset to occur[citation needed], and as the sun moves farther from an observer, its apparent size decreases to one too small for the eye to detect. This, however, fails to explain why Polaris, the stationary "North Star", appears to change position in the sky according to where on the Earth's surface an observer is standing, and eventually disappears below the horizon as the observer moves away from the "center" of the disc of a flat Earth and toward its "edge".
Advocates explain the sinking ship effect by a series of perspective laws, in which a ship on the horizon intersects with the vanishing point, causing it to appear as if it is sinking[citation needed]. The Flat Earth Society holds that there are multiple first-hand accounts of the hulls of ships reappearing after the image is viewed through a telescope or binoculars.[vague]
The exact explanation for lunar eclipses in the Flat Earth theory is vague. However, two commonly accepted[citation needed] hypotheses are the Shadow Object Theory (that an object undiscovered and undetectable by science obscures the moon causing moon phases and lunar eclipses) and the Reflection hypothesis (the sun's light reflects off the Earth and reflects back to the moon, with some areas of the Earth being less reflective than others, thus producing shadows). There is also a minority which believes moon phases are caused by weather patterns on the moon.[citation needed]
The Flat Earth theory maintains that as the sun orbits over the disc of the Earth, the sun's orbit radius changes, causing it to be directly overhead at different locations at different times of the year[citation needed].
Flat Earth Society also does not have an answer[citation needed] for the discrepancies that arise between the apparently curved shapes of direct, long-distance point-to-point routes that result from a round-Earth model, and those of the flat Earth equivalents.
The Flat Earth Society also has no explanation for the difference between the observable travel time between the most distant regions, consistent with a spherical earth, and the least distant regions, inconsistent with the greater apparent distances in a flat earth model. For instance, a traveler from Australia, in order to cover the shortest distance to South America on a flat Earth, would have to traverse the Eurasian continent, the arctic circle, and North America. However, the shortest distance between those two points on the spherical-earth model is significantly less and describes an entirely different route. This can apply for any traveler by plane, or sea, no matter what flat earth model is used.
The existence of the South Pole, especially the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station (continuously inhabited since 1956), also seems to contradict the Flat Earth Society's belief that Antarctica is the edge of the Earth, though the present use of McMurdo Station as the sole point of access to the Pole (both by air and over the McMurdo-South Pole highway) might be used by Flat-Earthers to support their claims. However, they offer no explanation as to how Antarctica can be circumnavigated in far less time and far less distance than the proposed 78,000 mile circumference of a flat Earth would suggest.
In a satirical piece published 1996, Albert A. Bartlett, an emeritus Professor of Physics at the University of Colorado at Boulder, uses arithmetics to show that sustainable growth on Earth is impossible in a spherical Earth since its resources are necessarily finite. He explains that only a model of a flat earth, stretching infinitely in the two horizontal dimensions and also in the vertical downward direction, would be able to accommodate the needs of a permanently growing population and economy.
The purpose of this piece is to demonstrate the impossibility of permanent growth rather than to advocate the idea of a flat earth, given that it does not present any evidence for a flat infinite earth but rather lists a number of reasons, which make this very unlikely, making the satirical character of this essay clear
If the “we can grow forever” people are right, then they will expect us, as scientists, to modify our science in ways that will permit perpetual growth. We will be called on to abandon the “spherical earth” concept and figure out the science of the flat earth. We can see some of the problems we will have to solve. We will be called on to explain the balance of forces that make it possible for astronauts to circle endlessly in orbit above a flat earth, and to explain why astronauts appear to be weightless. We will have to figure out why we have time zones; where do the sun, moon and stars go when they set in the west of an infinite flat earth, and during the night, how do they get back to their starting point in the east. We will have to figure out the nature of the gravitational lensing that makes an infinite flat earth appear from space to be a small circular flat disk. These and a host of other problems will face us as the “infinite earth” people gain more and more acceptance, power and authority. We need to identify these people as members of "The New Flat Earth Society" because a flat earth is the only earth that has the potential to allow the human population to grow forever.”[18]
The satiric nature of the piece is also made clear by a comparison to Barlett's other publications, which mainly advocate the necessity of curbing population growth.[19]
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
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