

- #MOONS OF MADNESS RESEARCH NOTES FULL#
- #MOONS OF MADNESS RESEARCH NOTES TRIAL#
- #MOONS OF MADNESS RESEARCH NOTES SERIES#
Several science fiction books of the early 20th century, including H.G. Recent studies have turned up little statistical evidence for moon-induced baby booms, however, and most experts think any lunar effect on procreation is imagined.
#MOONS OF MADNESS RESEARCH NOTES FULL#
He based an entire family planning method on this hypothesis, telling his patients they ovulated when the moon was in the same position as when they were born.Īccording to another theory that persists to this day, full moons cause an uptick in births, flooding maternity wards with mothers-to-be in labor. In the 1950s, the Czech doctor Eugene Jonas stumbled across an ancient Assyrian astrological text stating that women are fertile during certain phases of the moon. This could explain why female moon deities-from the Chinese goddess Chang’e to Mama Quilla of the Incas-figure so prominently in mythologies from around the world. Perhaps because the menstrual and lunar cycles are similar in length, many early civilizations believed that the moon determined when women could become pregnant.
#MOONS OF MADNESS RESEARCH NOTES SERIES#
In 1835, when the New York Sun published a series of fraudulent articles about the supposed existence of life on the moon (pulling off the so-called “Great Moon Hoax”), it falsely credited Herschel’s son John, a famous astronomer in his own right, with the shocking discovery. Sir William Herschel, a prominent British astronomer and composer, also thought aliens lived on the moon and made regular observations about the progress of their construction projects. Most of his colleagues scoffed at his assertion, but he eventually got a small lunar crater named after him. He wrote that the “lunarians” who lived there had built sophisticated buildings, roads and forts.

In the 1820s, the Bavarian astronomer Franz von Paula Gruithuisen claimed to have glimpsed entire cities on the moon with his telescope. Even today, despite studies discrediting the hypothesis, some people think full moons make everyone a little loony.
#MOONS OF MADNESS RESEARCH NOTES TRIAL#
In 18th-century England, people on trial for murder could campaign for a lighter sentence on grounds of lunacy if the crime occurred under a full moon meanwhile, psychiatric patients at London’s Bethlehem Hospital were shackled and flogged as a preventive measure during certain lunar phases. that “one who is seized with terror, fright and madness during the night is being visited by the goddess of the moon.” Hippocrates, considered the father of modern medicine, wrote in the fifth century B.C. Indeed, the words “lunacy” and “lunatic” come from the Roman goddess of the moon, Luna, who was said to ride her silver chariot across the dark sky each night.įor thousands of years, doctors and mental health professionals believed in a strong connection between mania and the moon. Since ancient times, full moons have been associated with odd or insane behavior, including sleepwalking, suicide, illegal activity, fits of violence and, of course, transforming into werewolves.
