The papers of Russian-born American scientist and author Immanuel Velikovsky have a new home in the Princeton University Library. His daughter, Ruth Sharon of Princeton, has donated the papers for use ...
Immanuel Velikovsky at the 1974 American Association for the Advancement of Science Conference in San Francisco In the 1940s, a curiously enigmatic figure haunted New York City’s great libraries, his ...
The term “pseudoscience” gets thrown around quite a bit these days, most notably in debates about the dominant consensus on anthropogenic climate change. Say “pseudoscience,” and immediately a bunch ...
In 1950, Dr. Immanuel Velikovsky rewrote history. Or rather, he attempted to. A psychiatrist by training, the scholarly Velikovsky fashioned himself a historian, astronomer, chemist, geologist, ...
This article originally appeared in the June 2012 issue of Architectural Digest. Russian Dmitry Velikovsky has some decorating advice for his fellow countrymen: Tone it down. In a nation where sudden ...
This article originally appeared in the December 2006 issue of Architectural Digest. If it's true, as many Russians are fond of saying, that sprawling, tumultuous Moscow is nothing more than a ...
To the Editors of the CRIMSON: A copy of the Registration number of your publication came into my hands. It contains the following statement by Professor Shapley: "The claim that Dr. Velikovsky's book ...
The serenely beautiful evening star, the planet Venus, was not always a well-behaved heavenly body. According to “Universal Scholar” Dr. Immanuel Velikovsky, in his forthcoming book Worlds in ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results