Charles Lane Poor
Charles Lane Poor | |
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Charles Lane Poor | |
Born | January 18, 1866 |
Died | September 27, 1951 |
Residence | New York, NY, United States |
Nationality | USA |
Known for | Relativity |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Professor Emeritus of Astronomy, Professor of Celestial Mechanics |
Charles Lane Poor was born in Hackensack, New Jersey, the son of Edward Erie Poor. He graduated from the City College of New York and received a Ph.D. in 1892 from Johns Hopkins University. He was a professor of astronomy and celestial mechanics at Columbia University from 1903 to 1944, when he was named Professor Emeritus. In the aftermath of the 1919 eclipse, which supposedly confirmation of Einstein's theories, Poor wrote arguably the first book to dispute Einsteinian relativity: Gravitation Versus Relativity (1922). In the years that followed, he wrote numerous articles and books cautioning against the blind acceptance of mathematical constructs lacking common sense. His crusade against the acceptance of Einsteinian relativity did not succeed, but attracted a minority support that has continued to this day. Charles Lane Poor, Journal of the Optical Society of America, V20, p. 173 (1930).
Obituary, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, V112, p. 279 (1952).
Obituary, Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, V64, p. 48 (1952).
Abstracts
- 1930 - "Relativity and the Law of Gravitation" (Read in full)
- 1924 - "Is Einstein Wrong" (Read in full)
- 1924 - "Professor Poor Replies" (Read in full)
Books
- 1930 - "What Einstein Really Did" (Read in full)
- 1927 - "The Relativity Deflection of Light" (Read in full)
- 1926 - "Gravitation, Time and Einstein" (Read in full)
- 1925 - "Relativity and the motion of Mercury (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences)" (Read in full)
- 1925 - "Time and Relativity" (Read in full)
- 1922 - "Gravitation Versus Relativity: A Non-Technical Explanation of the Fundamental Principles of Gravitational Astronomy and a Critical Examination of the Astronomical Evidence Cited as Proof of the Genera" (Read in full)