
The Michael Shermer Show The Original Alien Craze: When People Believed in Martians
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Dec 20, 2025 David Baron, an award-winning science journalist and author, delves into the astonishing Martian craze of the early 20th century, revealing how blurry telescopes and charismatic figures like Percival Lowell turned speculation into accepted facts. He explores the influence of early science fiction, Nikola Tesla's claims of extraterrestrial signals, and the media's pivotal role in shaping public belief in Martians. Baron connects this historical fascination to modern debates about UFOs and aliens, raising intriguing questions about how scientific ideas capture our imagination.
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How Science And Media Created The Mars Craze
- At the turn of the 20th century, Mars speculation blended science, media, and culture into a widely accepted idea.
- David Baron found that fuzzy telescopes, persuasive personalities, and newspapers turned conjecture into common belief.
Use Anomalies To Investigate, Not Proclaim
- Treat speculative claims as prompts to investigate, not proof; balance imagination with skepticism.
- Use anomalies to drive inquiry but avoid promoting them as established facts.
Schiaparelli, Lowell, And The Canals
- Giovanni Schiaparelli's 1877 maps showed 'canali' which the press turned into canals and sparked interest.
- Percival Lowell later popularized canals as irrigation, founding Lowell Observatory and claiming seasonal vegetation along canals.
