Our Founders
The Planetary Society Founders’ Statement
The Founders of The Planetary Society
Bruce Murray, Carl Sagan, and Louis Friedman, the founders of The Planetary Society, in 1989. Created: 1989.
Credit: The Planetary Society
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by Bruce Murray
and Louis D. Friedman
In 1980, the United States, which had so boldly sent human emissaries to
walk on the Moon, was on the verge of pulling back from the new frontier of
space. NASA and the U.S. political leadership were content to limit space
missions to operations as a “trucking company” to and from low
Earth orbit. Planetary exploration, so enthusiastically begun in the wake
of Sputnik and Explorer, was to be eliminated from NASA’s
charge, even as Voyager was in the midst of its triumphant mission
to the outer planets.
We were sitting there watching the coffin being nailed shut, and what was
inside was imagination and vision. With Carl Sagan, we determined to change
that.
We believed that many members of the public—inside the United States
and outside—passionately wanted the great adventure of space to continue.
The trick would be to convince the politicians that this was true. We chose
to do this by forming a grass-roots organization for those who cared about
space exploration, so together we formed The Planetary Society.
We set as the mission of our new organization “to promote planetary
exploration and the search for extraterrestrial life.” Over 25 years,
that mission has grown with The Planetary Society, so that our mission statement
now reads, “to inspire the people of Earth—through research, education,
private ventures, and public participation—to explore other worlds and
seek other life.”
In 1980, we knew of nine planets to explore. Today, our solar system family
has expanded, with planet-sized bodies being discovered in the outer reaches
of our Sun’s influence. Around other stars in our galaxy, more than
100 new planets have been discovered in just the past decade. There are now
many more worlds for The Planetary Society to dream of exploring.
Even so, it has become more difficult over the past 25 years for us to achieve
those dreams. The political landscape of Earth has altered drastically. The
first wave of space explorers was driven by the tensions of the Cold War,
and that impetus has vanished. Despite our steady activism encouraging international
cooperation, nationalistic thinking still dominates space exploration. There
is less talk of cooperation for missions planned to explore the Moon and Mars
in the next decade than there was for missions to comet Halley in the 1980s.
Sadly, despite our hopes and expectations, human explorers set foot on the
Moon more than 35 years ago but have gone no further. The dream of seeing
footprints on Mars remains too many years from achievement. The future needs
us more than ever!
So this, our 25th year, has been a time to reflect not only on our past but
especially on the future of The Planetary Society; the world is changing,
and so have the motivations for exploring space. We begin our second quarter-century
by embarking on a new age of exploration.
You have seen this most dramatically in our attempt to launch the first solar
sail spacecraft. The launch failed, but we are already working toward our
next mission, and we have no doubt that our private nonprofit membership organization
will again push back the limits of what is deemed possible.
The Planetary Society has taken as its motto “We make it happen.” Twenty-five
years ago, we thought that simply reversing the downward slide of planetary
exploration. We see now how much more is possible, even for a grass-roots public
interest group founded by three idealistic and impassioned friends who believed
the people of Earth can, must, and will explore other worlds. On to our future!
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