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قراءة كتاب Are the Planets Inhabited?

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Are the Planets Inhabited?

Are the Planets Inhabited?

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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Harper’s Library of Living Thought

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ARE THE PLANETS
INHABITED?

 

BY
E. WALTER MAUNDER, F.R.A.S.
SUPERINTENDENT OF THE SOLAR DEPARTMENT, ROYAL OBSERVATORY
GREENWICH

AUTHOR OF “ASTRONOMY WITHOUT A TELESCOPE”
“THE ROYAL OBSERVATORY, GREENWICH, ITS HISTORY AND WORK”
“THE ASTRONOMY OF THE BIBLE,” “THE HEAVENS AND THEIR STORY”
ETC.

 

HARPER & BROTHERS
LONDON AND NEW YORK

45 ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
1913

 

 

Published March, 1913

 

 


CONTENTS

CHAPTER   PAGE
I. The Question Stated 1
II. The Living Organism 6
III. The Sun 20
IV. The Distribution of the Elements in Space 33
V. The Moon 43
VI. The Canals of Mars 57
VII. The Condition of Mars 71
VIII. The Illusions of Mars 96
IX. Venus, Mercury and the Asteroids 111
X. The Major Planets 122
XI. When the Major Planets Cool 133
XII. The Final Question 143
  Index 163

 

 


ARE THE PLANETS INHABITED?

 

CHAPTER I

THE QUESTION STATED

The first thought that men had concerning the heavenly bodies was an obvious one: they were lights. There was a greater light to rule the day; a lesser light to rule the night; and there were the stars also.

In those days there seemed an immense difference between the earth upon which men stood, and the bright objects that shone down upon it from the heavens above. The earth seemed to be vast, dark, and motionless; the celestial lights seemed to be small, and moved, and shone. The earth was then regarded as the fixed centre of the universe, but the Copernican theory has since deprived it of this pride of place. Yet from another point of view the new conception of its position involves a promotion, since the earth itself is now regarded as a heavenly body of the same order as some of those which shine down upon us. It is amongst them, and it too moves and shines—shines, as some of them do, by reflecting the light of the sun. Could we transport ourselves to a neighbouring world, the earth would seem a star, not distinguishable in kind from the rest.

But as men realized this,

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