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:{{cite|Despite its aberrant and oppositional spirit, FES appeared within an identifiable cultural context and participated in a countercultural tradition that continues to this day. The Society’s surface lampoon embeds potent social critique and creative meaning. In other words, FES was not merely playful, nor merely serious, but interweaved these modes in a compelling way; the Society looks by turns intelligent and unintelligible, stupid and sophisticated. Further, it invited contributions from members and applicants: seldom-seen interpretations of “Planoterrestrialism” by individuals from many walks of life and now housed in archives at the University of New Brunswick and University of Calgary. The participatory, humorous, and poetic nature of FES means that its unusual brand of Flat Earthism cannot be tied to any singular ideology, place, or literary tradition. It operates as an enigmatic, errant, itinerant, and underground non-ideology. Planoterrestrial thought is reflected in the playful poetic styles of Nowlan, Ferrari, and MacEwen: three Society members who were nonetheless serious authors and sincere in their role as cultural workers, their Flat Earth antics not excepted.}}
 
:{{cite|Despite its aberrant and oppositional spirit, FES appeared within an identifiable cultural context and participated in a countercultural tradition that continues to this day. The Society’s surface lampoon embeds potent social critique and creative meaning. In other words, FES was not merely playful, nor merely serious, but interweaved these modes in a compelling way; the Society looks by turns intelligent and unintelligible, stupid and sophisticated. Further, it invited contributions from members and applicants: seldom-seen interpretations of “Planoterrestrialism” by individuals from many walks of life and now housed in archives at the University of New Brunswick and University of Calgary. The participatory, humorous, and poetic nature of FES means that its unusual brand of Flat Earthism cannot be tied to any singular ideology, place, or literary tradition. It operates as an enigmatic, errant, itinerant, and underground non-ideology. Planoterrestrial thought is reflected in the playful poetic styles of Nowlan, Ferrari, and MacEwen: three Society members who were nonetheless serious authors and sincere in their role as cultural workers, their Flat Earth antics not excepted.}}
  
It should be noted that Flat Earth's advocates were not always serious, and have used humor as a tool to add character. The 2007 FAQ from theflatearthsociety.org [https://web.archive.org/web/20070319184424/https://www.theflatearthsociety.org/forum/index.php?topic=11211.0 originally had some satirical content] ("Q. What's underneath the Earth? A. This is unknown. Some believe it to be just rocks, others believe the Earth rests on the back of four elephants and a turtle."), which was updated and erased over time. The tfes.org Flat Earth Society also employs [https://www.cafepress.com/theflatearthsociety/15800355 elements of humor] in its store posters. Samuel Shelton and Charles K. Johnson likewise had some satirical content in their Flat Earth Societies as well (Flat Earth Membership Cards, "Galileo was a liar" Flat Earth News headlines). It is also possible that the very name Flat Earth Society was originally meant to be a satirical name in 1956, possibly used as a tool to draw attention and publicity to the concept and research and ideas they were advocating.
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It should be noted that Flat Earth's advocates were not always serious, and have used humor as a tool to add character. The 2007 FAQ from theflatearthsociety.org [https://web.archive.org/web/20070319184424/https://www.theflatearthsociety.org/forum/index.php?topic=11211.0 originally had some satirical content] ("Q. What's underneath the Earth? A. This is unknown. Some believe it to be just rocks, others believe the Earth rests on the back of four elephants and a turtle."), which was updated and erased over time. The tfes.org Flat Earth Society also employs [https://www.cafepress.com/theflatearthsociety/15800355 elements of humor] in its store posters. Samuel Shelton and Charles K. Johnson likewise had some satirical content in their Flat Earth Societies as well (Flat Earth Membership Cards, "Galileo was a liar" Flat Earth News headlines). It is also possible that the very name Flat Earth Society was originally meant to be a satirical name in its 1956 founding, possibly used as a tool to draw attention and publicity to the concept and research and ideas they were advocating.
  
 
==Membership Certificate==
 
==Membership Certificate==

Revision as of 00:41, 27 November 2022

"Leo Ferrari"
Leo Ferrari frequently described himself and his kin as planoterrestrialists.

Dr. Leo Charles Ferrari (8th December 1927 - 7th October 2010[1]), a professor in Philosophy at St. Thomas University[2], was a co-founder, president, and active member of the satirical group known as the Flat Earth Society of Canada[2][3]. Ferarri founded his Flat Earth Society in Fredericton, New Brunswick in November, 1970.

Ferrari and Flat Earth

Dr. Ferrari took a very post-modern approach to the Flat Earth Theory, proposing to overturn the authority of scientists and instead rely on one's own perception of the Earth's shape. He argued that no authority can deterministically claim what is and isn't true, and hoped to restore the sense of validity of personal inquiry and perception. This was largely in response to "science's insistence on the things unseen". Ferrari worried that society was being blinded by science and technology, and that they had lost touch with their own bodies and rational conclusions.

His promotional brochure, subtitled "We're on the level", stated the following postulates[4]:

  • We believe in terra firma, and the more firmer the less terror.
  • All science, like all philosophy and all religion is ultimately metaphorical and... reality is essentially mystical and poetical.
  • Our aim is to restore man's faith in Common Sense... Seeing is believing. ...Man has been blinded by metaphysics, brainwashed by popular fallacies and bullied into denying the evidence of his very own eyes!

Leo also wrote poetry, a lot of which had to do with the Flat Earth.

Historical Overview

"Over the Edge"
"Over the Edge", one of many collections of Leo Ferrari's poems, largely themed around the Flat Earth Theory

A PhD dissertation by David Eso (bio), titled Serious play: Alden Nowlan, Leo Ferrari, Gwendolyn MacEwen, and their Flat Earth Society provides a historical research and overview of Leo Ferarri's Flat Earth Society. One of the key points of interest in the research is whether it was a serious or satirical organization. The author claims that it was a mix of the two. The dissertation author goes to lengths to argue that the points Dr. Ferrari was making had a serious basis, and should be merited as scholarly works that contributed to his work as a philosopher. The humor may have distracted from this, and his contributions have remained unsung.

In the dissertation David Ero remarks:

  “ Despite its aberrant and oppositional spirit, FES appeared within an identifiable cultural context and participated in a countercultural tradition that continues to this day. The Society’s surface lampoon embeds potent social critique and creative meaning. In other words, FES was not merely playful, nor merely serious, but interweaved these modes in a compelling way; the Society looks by turns intelligent and unintelligible, stupid and sophisticated. Further, it invited contributions from members and applicants: seldom-seen interpretations of “Planoterrestrialism” by individuals from many walks of life and now housed in archives at the University of New Brunswick and University of Calgary. The participatory, humorous, and poetic nature of FES means that its unusual brand of Flat Earthism cannot be tied to any singular ideology, place, or literary tradition. It operates as an enigmatic, errant, itinerant, and underground non-ideology. Planoterrestrial thought is reflected in the playful poetic styles of Nowlan, Ferrari, and MacEwen: three Society members who were nonetheless serious authors and sincere in their role as cultural workers, their Flat Earth antics not excepted. ”

It should be noted that Flat Earth's advocates were not always serious, and have used humor as a tool to add character. The 2007 FAQ from theflatearthsociety.org originally had some satirical content ("Q. What's underneath the Earth? A. This is unknown. Some believe it to be just rocks, others believe the Earth rests on the back of four elephants and a turtle."), which was updated and erased over time. The tfes.org Flat Earth Society also employs elements of humor in its store posters. Samuel Shelton and Charles K. Johnson likewise had some satirical content in their Flat Earth Societies as well (Flat Earth Membership Cards, "Galileo was a liar" Flat Earth News headlines). It is also possible that the very name Flat Earth Society was originally meant to be a satirical name in its 1956 founding, possibly used as a tool to draw attention and publicity to the concept and research and ideas they were advocating.

Membership Certificate

George Bernard Shaw Membership Certificate

Leo Ferrari issued Flat Earth Society membership certificates to those who would inquire. He also issued a post-humous membership certificate to George Bernard Shaw for his Flat Earth work and an unsolicited certificate to Yuri Gagarin, which are currently held at the University of New Brunswick.

The text of the certificate reads as follows:

The Flat Earth Society

By the Authority of the Board of Governors
and with the Approval of the Senate

Be it known on by these present that

_______________________________

Being of Sound Mind and Moral Character,
Having fulfilled all the Society's Requirements
And having Sworn Solemnly to Combat
the Globularist Heresy and all its Dupes and Hirelings
Has this day been admitted Full Membership in

The Flat Earth Society

With all the Rights and Privileges that attach thereto

External links

"The average man can’t advance a single reason for believing that the world is round. He accepts that theory on blind faith and rejects the evidence of his own senses. We of the Flat Earth Society have elected to dispute the one premise that our scientific Western civilization regards as indisputable. Nowadays if you say that God is dead, the general reaction is 'so what?' but if you say that the earth is flat, then God help you."

References