Alfred Lawson
|
Alfred William Lawson (1869-1954) was a professional baseball player from 1887 through 1908 and went on to play a pioneering role in the US aircraft industry. He is frequently cited as the inventor of the airliner.
He later propounded his own philosophy Lawsonomy, and the Lawsonian religion. He also developed during the Great Depression the populist economic theory of direct credits, according to which banks are the cause of all economic woe, the oppressors of both capital and labour. Lawson believed that the government should replace banks as the provider of loans to business and workers. He founded the so-called University of Lawsonomy to spread his teachings.
He has been described as the "Leonardo da Vinci of kooks".
Quotation
- "When I look into the vastness of space and see the marvelous workings of its contents... I sometimes think I was born ten or twenty thousand years ahead of time." -- Alfred Lawson
External links
- Lawson's Progress (http://www.rcls.org/lawson/intro.htm) an elaborate web tribute
- The three volumes of Lasonomy (http://www.lawsonomy.org/Lawsonomy11.html), written by Lawson