Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-cjp7w Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-19T15:14:39.886Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

History and Propaganda in Astronomy*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2016

Extract

‘History is Bunk’ said Henry Ford. He was exaggerating but it is well recognized that the connection between history and truth is tenuous. Even very recent history dependent on human memory is notoriously unreliable despite the intention of the historian to tell the truth.

In radio astronomy we are fortunate in having a dedicated historian-astronomer by the name of Woody Sullivan who has spent years in interviewing and reinterviewing astronomers to find out the real facts about the early years of the subject. Because of Sullivan’s work (e.g. Sullivan 1988) and because so many of my former colleagues have written histories of the period I felt very doubtful about adding my piece to the saga when asked to do so. However, I did accept the invitation to do so after I had read a statement about radio astronomy written by our usually very well informed Minister for Science, Barry Jones (Jones 1987). This statement which I shall quote later is an example of what we may call popular history.

Type
History of Australian Astronomy
Copyright
Copyright © Astronomical Society of Australia 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

From a lecture given at the ANZAAS Centenary Congress, 1988.

References

Bolton, J. G., 1948, Nature, 162, 141.Google Scholar
Bolton, J. G., Stanley, G. J. and Slee, O.B., 1949, Nature, 164, 101.Google Scholar
Christiansen, W. N., Yabsley, D. E. and Mills, B. Y., 1949, Nature, 164, 569.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christiansen, W. N. and Hindman, J. V., 1952a, Observatory, 72, 160.Google Scholar
Christiansen, W. N. and Hindman, J. V., 1952b, Aust. J. Sci. Res. A., 5, 437.Google Scholar
Christiansen, W. N., 1953, Nature, 171, 831 Google Scholar
Christiansen, W. N. and Warburton, J. A., 1955, Observatory., 75, 9.Google Scholar
Christiansen, W. N., Mathewson, D. S. and Pawsey, J. L., Nature, 180, 944.Google Scholar
Hey, J. S., 1946, Nature, 157, 47.Google Scholar
Jones, Barry O., 1987, Ascent, No. 14 p. 3.Google Scholar
McCready, L. L., Pawsey, J. L. and Payne-Scott, Ruby, 1947, Proc. Roy. Soc. A., 190, 357.Google Scholar
Mills, B. Y., 1952, Nature, 170, 1063.Google Scholar
Mills, B. Y. and Little, A. G., 1953. Aust. J. Phys., 6, 272.Google Scholar
Mills, B. Y., Little, A. G. and Sheridan, K. W., Nature, 177, 175.Google Scholar
Pawsey, J. L., 1946, Nature, 158, 633.Google Scholar
Pawsey, J. L., 1950, Proc. I. E. E., 97, 290.Google Scholar
Payne-Scott, Ruby, Yabsley, D. E. and Bolton, J. G., 1947, Nature, 160, 256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reber, G., 1958, Proc. I. R. E., 46, 16.Google Scholar
Sullivan, Woodruff T. III, ‘Early years of Australian radio astronomy’ p. 308 in Australian Science in the making ed Home, R. W., Cam. Univ. Press 1988.Google Scholar
Wild, J. P. and McCready, L. L., 1950, Aust. J. Sci. Res. A., 3, 387.Google Scholar