
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAP. I WHAT THE EARTH TEACHES US
- CHAP. II WHAT WE LEARN FROM THE SUN
- CHAP. III THE INFERIOR PLANETS
- CHAP. IV MARS, THE MINIATURE OF OUR EARTH
- CHAP. V JUPITER, THE GIANT OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
- CHAP. VI SATURN, THE RINGED WORLD
- CHAP. VII URANUS AND NEPTUNE, THE ARCTIC PLANETS
- CHAP. VIII THE MOON AND OTHER SATELLITES
- CHAP. IX METEORS AND COMETS; THEIR OFFICE IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM
- CHAP. X OTHER SUNS THAN OURS
- CHAP. XI OF MINOR STARS, AND OF THE DISTRIBUTION OF STARS IN SPACE
- CHAP. XII THE NEBULÆ, ARE THEY EXTERNAL GALAXIES?
- CHAP. XIII SUPERVISION AND CONTROL
- Plate section
CHAP. V - JUPITER, THE GIANT OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAP. I WHAT THE EARTH TEACHES US
- CHAP. II WHAT WE LEARN FROM THE SUN
- CHAP. III THE INFERIOR PLANETS
- CHAP. IV MARS, THE MINIATURE OF OUR EARTH
- CHAP. V JUPITER, THE GIANT OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
- CHAP. VI SATURN, THE RINGED WORLD
- CHAP. VII URANUS AND NEPTUNE, THE ARCTIC PLANETS
- CHAP. VIII THE MOON AND OTHER SATELLITES
- CHAP. IX METEORS AND COMETS; THEIR OFFICE IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM
- CHAP. X OTHER SUNS THAN OURS
- CHAP. XI OF MINOR STARS, AND OF THE DISTRIBUTION OF STARS IN SPACE
- CHAP. XII THE NEBULÆ, ARE THEY EXTERNAL GALAXIES?
- CHAP. XIII SUPERVISION AND CONTROL
- Plate section
Summary
Passing over the zone of asteroids, we come now to the noblest of all the planets—the giant Jupiter. If bulk is to be the measure of a planet's fitness to be the abode of living creatures, then must Jupiter be inhabited by the most favoured races existing throughout the whole range of the solar system. Exceeding our earth some 1,230 times in volume, and more than 300 times in mass, this magnificent orb was rightly selected by Brewster as the crowning proof of the relative insignificance of the earth in the scale of creation—assuming only that we can indeed gauge the purposes of the Creator by the familiar tests of measure and weight.
Or if we estimate Jupiter rather by the forces inherent in his system, if we contemplate the enormous rapidity with which his vast bulk whirls round upon its axis, or trace the stately motion with which he sweeps onward on his orbit, or measure the influences by which he sways his noble family of satellites, we are equally impressed with the feeling that here we have the prince of all the planets, the orb which, of all others in the solar scheme, suggests to us conceptions of the noblest forms of life.
The very symmetry and perfection of the system which circles round Jupiter has led many to believe that he must be inhabited by races superior in intelligence to any which people our earth.
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- Other Worlds Than OursThe Plurality of Worlds Studied under the Light of Recent Scientific Researches, pp. 110 - 146Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1870