| Lowell Regains Reason to Live by Jeff Provine 
  
   Author 
    
    says: we're very pleased to present a new story from Jeff Provine's 
  
  excellent blog This 
    
    Day in Alternate History. Please note that the opinions expressed in 
  
  this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). 
     
      November 12th 1916,
     
      on this day businessman, author, mathematician, and astronomer Percival 
      Lowell regained reason to live. Percival Lowell had lived a life that few could not envy. A Harvard 
      graduate, he left the world of business for travel and spent much of the 
      1880s in the Far East. He served as a diplomat's aide and made a study of 
      Korean and, more specifically, Japanese culture. From his trips to the 
      region, he wrote three books: The Soul of the Far East (1888), Noto 
      (1891), and Occult Japan (1894). In 1893, he decided to dedicate himself 
      to astronomy, picking up where the Italian astronomer Giovanni 
      Schiaparelli had left off with a study of canals on the surface of Mars. 
      The next year, Lowell used his fortune to establish the observatory in 
      Arizona that bears his name.
 Please click
  to comment on Reddit.Through his study, Lowell determined sketches 
      of the canals on Mars and wrote three more books: Mars (1895), Mars and 
      Its Canals (1906), and Mars As the Abode of Life (1908). As the twentieth 
      century began, Lowell's ideas of the canals as symbols of an intelligent 
      Martian race led to less and less credit among the astronomical community. 
      The dispassion weighed on him, and he turned toward further research to 
      reestablish his name. Taking discrepancies in the orbit of Uranus, Lowell 
      calculated that some other body must exist beyond the orbit of Neptune, an 
      unfound planet he dubbed "Planet X". Despite laborious searches, nothing 
      from the photographs of the heavens could be determined to be such a 
      planet. 
 "Interesting! We might be farther along in space if 
      this had happened" - reader's commentIn 1916, Lowell's life seemed 
      to have run out. The World War weighed as heavily on him as the sneers 
      from fellow astronomers. He had believed so much in humanity and the drive 
      of human progress; reports of hundreds of thousands of young men slain on 
      battlefields seemed to disprove that. Stresses had built up into his 
      system, perhaps directing him to an early end of life. But, in the early 
      hours of November 12, an aide hurriedly approached Lowell with prints from 
      the photographic plates taken that March and April with a distant dot that 
      may have been his Planet X.
 
 Reinvigorated, Lowell threw himself into research. The planet looked too 
      small to genuinely affect the mass of Uranus and Neptune, which caused him 
      to recalculate the planetary masses. When this new mathematical 
      arrangement seemed to fit better than the standard model, Lowell published 
      his results in 1917. While some of the astronomical community became 
      persuaded, the overall opinion was against him. Rather than falling under 
      pressure as he had before, Lowell broke with standards and decided that 
      humanity as a whole was becoming corrupt. If progress were to be made, it 
      would be by smaller groups of like-minded, imaginative mini-cultures. He 
      decided that hope for the future lay not in the overpopulated nations of 
      the world but in individual creativity.
 
 "The New York Times article cited was not one of 
      the paper's prouder moment, not least because, had its writers bothered to 
      check with actual scientists or even a good encyclopedia, they would have 
      learned that a rocket doesn't push against a medium at all--basic physics, 
      even in 1920. And if Oberth had left Europe in the 1920s, Nazi Germany's 
      rocket program would have been slowed; perhaps there would have been no 
      V-2s in World War II" - reader's commentLowell began bringing 
      influential scientists and writers (including his sister, Amy) to his 
      observatory, creating a new community. Some whispered that he was building 
      a scientific cult, but Lowell had given up on impressing his fellows. 
      Instead, he gathered funding and built up the observatory into not only an 
      astronomical facility, but a place for research in numerous fields.
 
 "Sounds like the founding of "Eureka" (SyFy 
      Channel). And Lowell could bring in Tesla to supply power for his growing 
      community. What about Einstein and the Manhatten Project scientists? 
      Comment from Margo Barotta on Facebook: maybe he will help to discovered 
      new things in the universe in that time . " - reader's commentsIn 
      1920, Lowell came across a front page article in The New York Times about 
      a lecturer at Clark University believing he could reach the Moon by means 
      of rocketry. Dr. Robert Goddard proposed sending meteorological 
      instruments into the upper atmosphere and even flash powder to the dark 
      side of the Moon, illuminating it for astronomical study. The day after 
      the article, an editorial in The Times trounced Goddard's ideas and 
      concluded that he was a fool who had forgotten "the relation of action and 
      reaction, and of the need to have something better than a vacuum against 
      which to react-to say that would be absurd". Lowell contacted Goddard 
      through his connections at Clark University (where he had received an 
      honorary degree in 1909), the two bonded over Goddard's explanation of the 
      fallacy believed to be from Newton's laws of motion. When Lowell secured 
      funding for Goddard's experiments, the latter joined him at the 
      Observatory.
 
 "Maybe combined Observatory and Manhattan Project 
      gives the US ICBMs by the early '50s. Take that, Communism!" - author's 
      responseIn 1923, Lowell was informed of another controversial 
      thesis, this by a young German student, Hermann Oberth, entitled Die 
      Rakete zu den Planetenrumen ("By Rocket into Planetary Space"). Lowell 
      became enamored with traveling not only to the Moon, but Mars itself, and 
      invited him to join Goddard's research. Oberth, who also had been frowned 
      upon by the academic communities as "utopian", accepted Lowell's 
      invitation. Lowell would later invite Konstantin Tsiolkovsky after 
      widespread publications of the genius's earlier work, but the Russian 
      would decline to move to Arizona, instead maintaining a rigorous 
      correspondence until Lowell's death in 1930.
 
 Lowell died from a stroke February 18, 1930, many said caused by overwork. 
      Since the Crash of the stock market, funding had begun to dry up, and 
      Lowell worked continuously to keep his society running. While the '30s 
      would be lean times at the Observatory, the explosion of need for 
      technological development as the United States entered World War Two gave 
      them something of a blank check. It is believed that Lowell's efforts, 
      combined with yet another war, enabled mankind to achieve space flight in 
      1948, establish the Lowell Lunar Colony in 1961, and launch the Lowell 
      Ares Program, establishing a Martian outpost in 1983. By that time, 
      however, it had become obvious that Lowell's canals were only an optical 
      illusion.
 
 
     
     Author 
    says in reality Percival Lowell died of a stroke on November 12. His 
    research on Planet X would lead to the discovery of Pluto in 1930, its name 
    being given partially because of Lowell's initials PL forming the first two 
    letters. Lowell's observations of canals would be disproved in 1965 with the 
    Mariner 4 probe's images, and Pluto would be demoted from planetary status 
    in 2006. To view guest historian's comments on this post please visit the
    
    Today in Alternate History web site. 
 
     Jeff Provine, Guest Historian of
    
    Today in Alternate History, a Daily Updating Blog of Important Events In 
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    superpower, aliens influencing human history in the 18th century and Teddy 
    Roosevelt winning his 3rd term as president abound in this interesting 
    fictional blog. 
 
 
    
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