American Decades
The Evolution of Worlds
Nonfiction work
By: Percival Lowell
Date: 1909
Source: Lowell, Percival. The Evolution of Worlds. New York: Macmillan, 1909, 1–3.
About the Author: Percival Lowell (1855–1916) was born in Boston. He published four novels on Asian culture before turning to astronomy. He built an observatory at Flagstaff, Arizona, through which he scanned Mars, popularizing the notion that intelligent life once inhabited it. Lowell predicted the existence of Pluto twenty-five years before its discovery.
Introduction
The question of the origin and end of the universe fascinated the ancients, all of whom had creation myths, such as the Hebrew story of creation in Genesis, to account for its origin. For Christian scholars Christ's Parousia, or Second Coming, described the universe's end. Yet the twelfth-century Muslim philosopher Averroes warned that no evidence supported...
[The entire page is 1359 words long]
1900's Science and Technology Primary Sources
- The Velocity of Light
- Elementary Principles in Statistical Mechanics
- Diary Entry of December 17, 1903
- Experiments with Alternate Currents of High Potential and High Frequency
- Adolescence: Its Psychology
- Adams Act
- Pragmatism
- Plant-Breeding: Being Six Lectures upon the Amelioration of Domestic Plants
- Comparative Physiology of the Brain and Comparative Psychology
- Genetics and the Debate Over Acquired Traits
- General Lectures on Electrical Engineering
- "Mutation"
- "The Cell in Relation to Heredity and Evolution"
- The Evolution of Worlds
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
