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  THE PSEUDOSCIENCE WARS 
 IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY and the Birth of the Modern Fringe 
 By Michael D. Gordin 
 The University of Chicago Press 
  Copyright © 2012   The University of Chicago 
All right reserved.
 ISBN: 978-0-226-30442-7 
    Chapter One 
  The Grand Collision of  Spring 1950  
  
  During the first few months of 1950, it seemed that American scientists  had completely lost their heads. Were they apprehensive at the announcement  of President Harry S. Truman on January 31 that the United States  would undertake a crash program to develop a hydrogen bomb, launching  the thermonuclear age? Was it the shock of the arrest on February 2  in Great Britain of German-born physicist Klaus Fuchs for wartime espionage  at the Manhattan Project, whose secrets he had shared with the Soviet  Union? Or perhaps anxiety about the February 9 speech of the junior  senator from Wisconsin, Joseph McCarthy, in Wheeling, West Virginia, in  which he declared that he had a list of card-carrying members of the Communist  Party in the State Department, and some of those he named were  prominent scientists?  
  Not exactly. The uproar was over a book that had not even been published  yet. The initial agitation began in January and concerned the advance  press for a trade book due to appear in April from the Macmillan  Company, at the time the most distinguished publisher of scientific works  (especially textbooks) in the nation. It was entitled Worlds in Collision, by  a man named Immanuel Velikovsky. This text does not lend itself to being  summarized without a significant degree of distortion. Writing in  the 1980s, Velikovsky critic Henry Bauer noted that it was impossible to  condense the book "in a completely unbiased fashion; one selects what  seems most significant, and opinions about what that is will inevitably  differ." In a somewhat higher register, Velikovsky for the rest of his life  resisted all attempts to represent any of his books' arguments in brief, and  especially not that of Worlds in Collision. As he noted in his memoir of the  events discussed in this chapter (published posthumously in the 1980s): "I  cannot compress Worlds in Collision any more than it is in its present form  in a book—there I have not left a sentence that I deemed superfluous."  Indeed, the first fusillades were launched not by the book but by summaries,  serializations, and condensations. A few decades ago, a writer on Veli  kov sky could expect that almost everyone had read or heard of Worlds in  Collision—for then it seemed that everyone had. Now, as in 1950, we begin  with a précis.  
  "This book is written for the instructed and uninstructed alike," Velikovsky   declared on the first page of his preface. "No formula and no  hieroglyphic will stand in the way of those who set out to read it. If, occasionally,  historical evidence does not square with formulated laws, it  should be remembered that a law is but a deduction from experience and  experiment, and therefore laws must conform with historical facts, not  facts with laws." This was the central claim of Worlds in Collision: that if  one examined the global store of myths—Chinese, Mayan, South Asian,  Norse, Aztec, but principally those legends of the ancient Near East, and  especially those presented in the Hebrew Bible—one found repeated, and  disturbing, patterns. Over and over again, the chronicles referred to a rain  of fire, to battles in the heavens, to extended days or extended nights, catastrophic  floods, barrages of stones from above, earthquakes, and so on.  "The events were called miracles and were explained as subjective apperceptions  or as symbolic descriptions because they could not be otherwise  accounted for," but Velikovsky posed the hypothesis, and then claimed he  had demonstrated as fact, that something had indeed happened to Earth,  a series of global catastrophes that remained metaphorically veiled within  the collective literary heritage of humanity. If one finds a correlation  among many different peoples, there are several logical explanations: it  could just be coincidence, or perhaps a case of diffusion, the story spreading  from a single origin point. But Velikovsky opted for a third alternative:  "In more than this one instance it is possible to show that peoples,  separated even by broad oceans, have described some spectacle in similar  terms. These were pageants, projected against the celestial screen, that,  a few hours after they were seen in India, appeared over Nineveh, Jerusalem,  and Athens, shortly thereafter over Rome and Scandinavia, and a few  hours later over the lands of the Mayas and Incas."  
  What were these pageants, a light word to describe something represented  as horrifically destructive in these fragmentary reports (if indeed  they were reports)? Velikovsky presented his argument as three nested  claims, each more specific than the last: "(1) that there were physical upheavals  of a global character in historical times; (2) that these catastrophes  were caused by extraterrestrial agents; and (3) that these agents can be  identified." After presenting a fascinating montage of extracts of legends  from around the world, pointing to the common symptoms of this global  onslaught, he reached his first conclusion: sometime around 1500 B.C.,  at the moment of the Exodus of the Children of Israel from Egypt under  Moses's leadership, a massive comet was ejected from the body of Jupiter  and hurtled toward Earth. It became trapped in a gravitational but also  electromagnetic interaction with the planet, rupturing its crust, tilting  its axis, and showering meteors on the population. It then stayed in an  unstable interaction with Earth for several decades before finally settling  into an orbit around the sun. "Under the weight of many arguments," Velikovsky   wrote, "I came to the conclusion—about which I no longer have  any doubt—that it was the planet Venus, at the time still a comet, that  caused the catastrophe of the days of Exodus."  
  The ten plagues, the parting of the Red Sea, even manna from heaven,  all of these things were true—they just were not miracles. ("Of course,  there is no person who can [part the Red Sea], and no staff with which it  can be done.") They were natural phenomena, the results of this catastrophe  that nearly destroyed Earth. An event so terrifying, so cataclysmic,  would of course be remembered in the oral legends of the world's peoples,  and in the case of the ancient Hebrews became the central event of their  monotheistic religion. Venus was the goddess of rebirth in the ancient  world, the newcomer, Lucifer, the angel of destruction. (In Greek myth, Velikovsky   was careful to identify the planet Venus with Athena, who burst  fully formed from the head of her father, Zeus, instead of with Aphrodite,  goddess of love.) For almost four hundred pages, Velikovsky laid out his  evidence for this Venus catastrophe, as well as another near collision of  Venus with Earth, this time caused by a Mars displaced by the Venus-Earth  interaction, chronicled, according to Velikovsky, as the struggle between  Athena and Ares in Homer's Iliad and as a series of calamities in the book  of Isaiah. In its wake, due to a change in the length of the year, global calendrical  reforms ensued between 747 and 697 B.C. He begged only one indulgence  from the reader: he used an unconventional chronology when he  synchronized Egyptian history with the events of the Hebrew Bible, which  he promised he would defend in a subsequent work.  
  The book was, and remains, an enthralling read. It also required, to account  for the events described—near collisions of planets, comets the size  of Venus, the transformation of a hydrocarbon/petroleum tail of the comet  into carbohydrate manna for the Israelites—outright contraventions or  at least severe modifications of the conventional understandings of celestial  mechanics, physics, chemistry, geology, paleontology, and biology.  Astronomers could explain the solar system with astonishing precision  using a series of gravitational equations that could not accommodate the  shenanigans of planetary bodies, and many also claimed there was an unbroken  chain of eclipses going back to the third millennium B.C., which  excluded shifts in the poles or the orbital orientation of Earth. This was  a book that courted controversy—and controversy it found. Scientists  from numerous disciplines wrote both publicly and privately, excoriating  the content of Velikovsky's theory and, especially, the publisher who  lent to a man they perceived as delusional the imprimatur of Macmillan's  respected name. This was one of the greatest publishing scandals of the  postwar period, and it triggered the pseudo science wars. The tone and  volume—meaning both the mass of commentary and the loudness with  which it was delivered—of these rebukes was as unusual and idiosyncratic  as the Venus catastrophe related by Velikovsky. There was simply nothing  quite like it in postwar America.  
  Why so much outrage? An answer to this question must come in parts.  I will defer explanations of the motivation of the scientists' behavior—and   there are Velikovskian and non-Velikovskian variants—to the next  two chapters, but there is one consistent refrain in this anti-Velikovskian  discourse: publicity. As becomes clear from a dispassionate reading of all  the reviews and letters, the scientists objected to more than the content  of Velikovsky's theories. I do not want to be misunderstood here: these astronomers,  geologists, and other scientists despised those claims, insisted  they were deeply and utterly wrong, and minced no words in saying so.  But the main target of their fury was not Velikovsky—he was a secondary  target, to be sure—but Macmillan itself. The scientists objected to  the press's involvement with this book and took additional umbrage at its  vigorous (and effective) publicity campaign, which they unwittingly abetted  through their angry outpourings. The debate ranged across the professional  responsibility of the press and the authority to interpret science for  the general public. It was about science in the postwar public sphere.  
  
  THE DAY THE EARTH DIDN'T STAND STILL  
  The January 1950 issue of Harper's Magazine hit the newsstands in late December,  on the same cycle as every other month. A staple of American  public discourse, this magazine included a spectrum of articles on different  subjects, including a discussion of physicist Edward Condon's troubles  with the House Un-American Activities Committee. But this was not the  piece that struck readers of this particular issue. Harper's writer Eric Larrabee  had penned an article entitled "The Day the Sun Stood Still," a reference  to the battle on the plains of Gibeon when the biblical Joshua ordered  the sun to tarry in the sky so that the Israelites could be victorious—according   to Velikovsky, a consequence of Venus's violently shifting Earth's  axis—and echoed the following year in the popular science-fiction movie  The Day the Earth Stood Still. Larrabee's article was "an attempt," he wrote,  "necessarily condensed and incomplete, to offer a preview of Dr. Velikovsky's  findings." In a few pages, Larrabee rather accurately described the  book, the density of its footnotes (which struck many readers), and the  fact that Velikovsky questioned such fundamentals of contemporary science  as the predominance of gravity in the solar system. The basic point:  "Dr. Velikovsky presents historical evidence that these ancient records  were not incorrect at the time when they were made."  
  A feature article in Harper's is fairly high profile for an unknown author's  first English-language book, and it came about in a circuitous  fashion. As Larrabee recounted after Velikovsky's death, the initiative for  this report came from the editor in chief, Frederick Lewis Allen, who was  friends with Velikovsky's editor at Macmillan, James Putnam. Putnam had  related Velikovsky's account of the Joshua story while the book was still  in press—along with the surprising claim that Velikovsky believed that  Central American myths of an especially long night, halfway around the  world from the Middle East, were correlated with the Joshua story, thus  indicating a common event. Allen enjoyed relating the anecdote at cocktail  parties. When Macmillan began circulating materials about Worlds  in Collision in late 1949, another editor at Harper's, Merle Miller, recalled  the story, obtained the page proofs of the book, and assigned Larrabee to  serialize it. When Larrabee demurred at the difficulty, they opted to present  a summary instead. Macmillan had indeed planned an extensively  coordinated publicity campaign, but this first volley happened at Harper's  request. (Velikovsky would later claim that he was barely involved in the  advance publicity.)  
  This was only the first of several condensations to be reprinted across  the nation. Two (out of an advertised three) serializations appeared in  the broadly distributed weekly Collier's on February 25 and March 25, accompanied   by somewhat lurid illustrations of ancient Egyptians pelted  by meteorites. The entire packaging by Collier's, even more than Harper's,  attempted to inject Worlds in Collision into a debate about science and religion,  with the editorial foreword noting that Velikovsky's theory, "among  other things, challenges the Darwinian theory of evolution" by questioning  uniformitarian, gradualist assumptions about Earth's history. The text,  attributed to Velikovsky, declared that "the great Architect of nature sent  a celestial body—a comet almost as large as the earth itself—close to our  planet." Worlds in Collision itself studiously avoids this kind of religiously  laden language, yet historian James Gilbert notes that Velikovsky's "science  had little meaning or importance outside its religious context." This was  clearly a key set of references for Velikovsky's readers, and Collier's, as well  as a different adaptation by Fulton Oursler in Reader's Digest, promoted Velikovsky   as rescuing biblical literalism. To further the point, a text box  embedded in the first Collier's article entitled "The Greatness of the Bible"  by Norman Vincent Peale, the famous pastor of Marble Collegiate Church,  declared that "Dr. Velikovsky's work interestingly draws the attention of  thoughtful people to the substantial basis of fact upon which the Old Testament  was written."  
  Velikovsky was enraged by the treatment of his work in Collier's (although  not, at least according to his archives, by the Reader's Digest version).  The process of serialization was not smooth. Velikovsky, worried  about the way previews of his theory might prejudice its reception, wanted  complete control of the images and the writing. The process was the opposite  of the Harper's case in almost every way, leading to recriminations and  bad feeling on both sides. Over fifteen years later, one of the two excerpters  recalled the drafting sessions with horror:  
  He [Velikovsky] was infuriated by everything, by our introduction, by our  excerpting, by our footnoting. All because we did not present his stuff as  unquestioned truth supplanting all previous "erroneous" theories. He was  not only a supreme egomaniac, but he was evangelical about it. He was Mahomet,  John the Baptist, and St. Paul rolled into one. He had found the long-secret  truth and would proclaim it to the world, which should bow down and  thank him, but which instead doubted, questioned, and tried to silence. He  was a pretty good paranoiac, too.... [F]inally he leapt from the table, when  I was being insistent on one point, and came back with a pistol or revolver,  which he placed on the table beside him, saying something like, "Now we'll  see how this will be handled."  
  
  It is impossible to know what actually happened over that kitchen table  on New York City's Upper West Side as both sides labored to a deadline,  but Collier's certainly did not harm Velikovsky's sales, bringing him a vast  readership among sets less self-consciously intellectual than the Harper's  crowd.  
  That intellectual set, however, also included some readers less delighted  by Velikovsky's proposed innovations. One such reader was Harlow  Shapley, director of the Harvard College Observatory and, next to Albert  Einstein and J. Robert Oppenheimer, one of the most widely recognized  scientists in America. (He had been president of the American Association  for the Advancement of Science in 1947 and was a prominent advocate  of liberal causes in an America increasingly ensnared in anti-Communist  politicking.) In mid-January 1950, Shapley sent a letter to the Macmillan  Company, listed in the Harper's article as the prospective publisher of the  book, in which he stated that he had heard a happy rumor that Macmillan  would not in the end publish Worlds in Collision. He hoped this was true and  wanted to confirm with Macmillan. He mentioned that he had discussed  the argument presented by Larrabee with several scientists, including  the president of Harvard University, chemist and science administrator  James Bryant Conant, and all were "not a little astonished that the great  Macmillan Company, famous for its scientific publications, would venture  into the Black Arts without rather careful refereeing of the manuscript."  If they had not yet vetted the book and realized that it was nonsense, he  urged them to do so now. In conclusion, he called Velikovsky's theory  about the sun standing still "the most errant nonsense of my experience,  and I have met my share of crackpots."  
  In fact, as he surely recalled, he had met this one. On April 13, 1946,  Shapley was the speaker at a forum at the Commodore Hotel in New York,  discussing world government (one of his many political interests). Velikovsky,   wanting to consult with the great astronomer about his new theory  of the solar system, approached Shapley and began a conversation. We  only know the content of their discussion from letters written in spring  1950 in the aftermath of Shapley's démarche to Macmillan, so what follows  must be taken with a grain of salt on both sides. According to Velikovsky,  after outlining the basics of his theory, he said to Shapley: "I wish you  would agree to read the book manuscript; and if you will be satisfied at its  reading that my thesis is supported by sources to an extent that it deserves  some laboratory investigation, would it be possible to undertake one or  two rather not complicated spectroscopic analyses?" Shapley claimed that  he was busy, although if Velikovsky would have someone of stature recommend  the text to him, he would take a look at it, and that Velikovsky should  write about the tests to Fred Whipple (himself an astronomer of no mean  distinction), who was then in charge of experiments at the observatory,  and "if possible, we will do it for you." Velikovsky suggested Horace Kallen  as the referee (about whom more soon), and in parting Shapley said:  "And believe me, if you have proved in your book that in historical times  there occurred a change in the constitution of the solar system, there is  no thing in my power I would not do for you." Two days later Velikovsky  wrote to Shapley asking for spectroscopic tests for the presence of argon  and neon in the atmosphere of Mars, and two days after that letter, he proposed  a search for "gaseous hydrocarbons ... in the absorption spectrum  of Venus." (Velikovsky believed these gases should be present as a result  of contact of atmospheres during the near collisions chronicled in his  manuscript.) A month later Shapley, through his secretary, declined to do  any tests for Velikovsky. And there, apparently, the matter rested.  
  (Continues...)  
  
     
 
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