1 / 10

Moon Landing Conspiracy Theories

Moon Landing Conspiracy Theories. Conspiracy Theories. Fenster discussion pp1-2 Two propositions about conspiracy theories Margins (believed only by extremists, about secret cabals) Centre (believed [“believed”] by almost everyone, about almost anything)

erickh
Télécharger la présentation

Moon Landing Conspiracy Theories

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Moon Landing Conspiracy Theories

  2. Conspiracy Theories • Fenster discussion pp1-2 • Two propositions about conspiracy theories • Margins (believed only by extremists, about secret cabals) • Centre (believed [“believed”] by almost everyone, about almost anything) • Argue that CTs are integral to modern life • Example of Da Vinci Code; examine Moon Landing.

  3. History of the theories • 1969 Some sceptical opinions were voiced at the time • 1974 Bill Kaysing, We Never Went to the Moon • 1978 Capricorn One movie (Mars) • 1992 Ralph Rene, NASA Mooned America • 1997 James Collier Was it Only a Paper Moon? • 1999 David Percy Dark Moon (and in Fortean Times) • 2000+ Marcus Allen in Nexus magazine • 2001 Bart Sibrel, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Moon (DVD) • 2001 Fox TV special Conspiracy Theory: Did We Land on the Moon? • And, of course, the web… (3.8m hits on 10/09)

  4. How many disbelieve? • 1970 Knight poll found 30% Americans were suspicious • 1999 Gallup poll found 6% doubtful, 5% don’t know • 2001 Fox TV claimed 20% disbelieved • 2002 Popularity from MSNBC News report • 2006 Ditmar poll found 26% of 18-26 yr old college educated Americans were doubtful & 10% rated it highly unlikely that Americans landed on the moon. Not what we might expect

  5. Details and Evidence • Scenarios: • Complete hoax, partial hoax, failed technology, impossible • Motives: • Cold War prestige or distraction, JFK’s promise • Evidence: • Photographs are the most popular evidence • See Mythbusters photo test • High quality imagesAldrin 1 Aldrin 2Aldrin 3 • 1/6 gravity: • wires vs Mythbusters moonwalk test • The web gives multiple expert vs expert

  6. Reasons for such belief? • Part of the general decline of trust in authority since 1990s (not just in government, also science – other examples?) As such is actually also a theory about the present • Reveals our era has profound doubts about technology (global warming?) • Probably also a result of the achievement itself (could we repeat it today?) • Is retro-active (has grown recently, looks backwards, “re-maps” history) • All that makes it more likely to come from young, educated and sceptical people

  7. Rebuttals • At first few, as the theory was not considered worth dignifying with a reply • NASA’s attitude was one of dismissal • 2002 cancelled book by James Oberg • Has been left to websites such as Bad Astronomy andand Clavius • 2006 Discovery Channel produced Moon Hoax Challenged • 2007 moonwalker Charlie Duke In the Shadow of the Moon coda said: • "We've been to the Moon nine times. Why would we fake it nine times, if we faked it?" • 2008 Mythbustersspecial – meaning?

  8. Wider and wider • Now part of the general mass of conspiracy theories about US government • And bigger theories about space such as Richard Hoagland and Dark Mission • Subject of Spoofs The Onion and the result • Complexity - hoaxed hoaxes. See Fact or Fake about Stanley Kubrick

  9. Final Answers? • Final answers? • NASA’s return to the Moon in 2020 (if the Chinese aren’t first), more than 50 years later • The relics still on the lunar surface • New images of the landers • But does that really close the book?

  10. Conclusions • What does the popularity of this conspiracy theory tell us? • About the actual subject (the moon landing) • About wider concerns (about technology, national self-confidence, achievement?) • About how evidence, belief and imagination work in CTs? • About how these relate not to the 1960s but to the 2000s?

More Related