Hallo, enlightened viewers 
and welcome to 
Science and Spirituality. 
This year marks 
the 40th anniversary of 
the first steps on the Moon 
which were taken 
on July 20, 1969 
by American astronaut 
Neil Armstrong.
Humankind 
has celebrated the Moon 
throughout history. 
The Mid-Autumn 
or Moon Festival 
is a colorful tradition 
observed in 
many Asian countries.
This popular festival 
takes place on the 
15th of the eighth month 
of the lunar calendar. 
This year,the festival 
occurs on October 3. 
At night,
when the brightest and 
fullest moon of the year 
showers its glorious light 
upon the Earth,
family members 
and friends gather 
to admire the moon,
enjoy moon cakes,
and attend 
various performances. 
On today’s episode, 
we will explore 
both scientific aspects 
of the Moon 
and humankind’s 
historical relationship 
with this heavenly body. 
Joining us will be 
Ivan Semeniuk, a science 
Journalist-in-Residence 
at the Dunlap Institute 
for Astronomy 
and Astrophysics at 
the University of Toronto, 
Canada and 
Dr. Alan Binder, 
a renowned lunar 
and planetary scientist 
with over 40 years of 
experience working with 
the National Aeronautics 
and Space Administration 
(NASA) and 
European Space programs. 
He is the founder 
and director of the 
Lunar Research Institute 
and was the principal 
investigator for the 
Lunar Prospector Mission 
which mapped the Moon 
using a small, 
unmanned spacecraft 
from a low, polar orbit. 
We still have 
many questions about 
how the Moon formed. 
But at the moment 
the current thinking is 
that a very large object, 
perhaps as large as Mars 
collided with Earth 
very early in its history, 
just as Earth itself 
was forming; a collision 
with another proto-planet 
occurred. 
That collision was so vast 
that it liquefied 
the planet’s surface, 
splattered lots and lots of
material out into space. 
Some of it 
was lost forever,
but enough to form
this large object 
orbiting around the Earth 
and that’s where we think 
the Moon came from.
The Earth is evolving 
all the time, 
the continents 
are still growing 
and moving around 
and so on and so forth. 
The Moon 
being a smaller body 
had less internal energy 
in the beginning; 
it was very active 
the first half a billion years.
Have you ever wondered 
about the other 
or “far side” of the Moon 
and what it looks like? 
Why is it that 
we are not able to view it 
from Earth?
If you imagine this 
as the Earth 
and this is the Moon, 
so with the face 
facing the Earth. 
If the Moon 
didn’t spin at all then 
by the time it got around 
to the other side, 
the face will be 
facing the other way. 
So in order to have 
the situation we have, 
the Moon actually does 
have to spin on its axis, 
very slowly and 
that spin has to be exactly 
in tune with its orbit, 
so as its spinning 
it is also orbiting 
and the same face 
keeps facing us.
Now that’s 
not a coincidence.
It would seem 
an incredible coincidence 
that the Moon’s rotation 
would be exactly timed 
to its orbit. 
There is a
gravitational connection 
between Earth and Moon 
that keeps it this way, 
and in fact it would
take more energy 
for the Moon 
to spin faster or slower.
 
The interaction between 
the Moon and the Earth 
is very subtle. 
The Moon is 
in locked rotation 
and that’s simply because 
the Moon raises tides 
on the water; it also
raises tides on Earth. 
You don’t know it but 
you and I 
go up and down
about a meter twice a day 
because of Earth tides. 
The gravity of the Moon 
makes the Earth deform too. 
And so the Moon 
is slightly egg-shaped 
because of 
the tidal effects of Earth. 
That slows down 
the rotation of the Moon 
and it didn’t take very long, 
a few thousand years 
when the Moon was formed, 
and it was locked. 
Now the Earth is 
continuingly slowing down. 
The day is getting longer 
because of the lunar tides. 
And so every 
once in a while they say
there’s a leap second.
Because the Earth 
is slowing down. 
Back when, 
multi-cellular life 
got going nearly 
six hundred million years 
ago, the day was 
about 20 hours
and even before that 
it was even much shorter. 
 
There are many 
dark regions that are visible 
on the Moon’s surface, 
and from ancient times 
these mysterious places 
fueled 
the human imagination 
as to what secrets they held.
When you look up 
at the Moon 
you see the dark areas, 
those are lava planes that 
have filled deep impacts.
They’re called “maria.” 
“Maria” means “sea” 
in Latin, 
so in the old days
people thought it might be 
the oceans or seas. 
Later on, with the telescope 
it was obvious 
that they weren’t oceans, 
but some kind of 
low-lying plains 
that were smoother, 
and the other areas were
rougher and brighter. 
There was 
a lot of curiosity about 
what would be seen 
on the far side. 
It wasn’t until Lunar 3, 
a Soviet (Union) spacecraft, 
did an orbit around 
the back of the Moon 
and started sending 
those pictures back that 
we had the first glimpse 
of the Moon’s far side, 
and it was a surprise. 
It’s not exactly 
like the near side. 
It doesn’t have 
all those big “maria”.
 
There are many 
stories and legends 
regarding the Moon. 
In some cultural traditions, 
the Moon is known 
as our mother. 
In recent decades, 
scientists have gradually 
realized the extent of 
the influence of the Moon 
upon life on Earth. 
When we return, 
we will feature more 
from our interviews 
with Ivan Semeniuk 
and Dr. Alan Binder 
regarding the Moon. 
Please stay tuned to 
Supreme Master 
Television.
People have
the misconception that 
(as) we went to the Moon 
we (therefore) 
must know all about it. 
But the Moon surface area 
is equal to North and 
South America combined 
and so there is 
a lot of exploring to do.
 
Welcome back to 
Science and Spirituality. 
In commemoration 
of this year 
being the 40th anniversary 
of humankind’s first visit 
to the Moon and 
the upcoming observance 
of the Moon Festival 
on October 3, today 
we are exploring both 
the scientific aspects of, 
and humankind’s 
historical relationship 
with this heavenly body. 
The American Indians 
didn't talk about the year; 
they talked about 
“many Moons ago.”
“Month” the word is 
a derivation of the Moon. 
Clearly 
our biological cycles, 
the female cycle is
based on the month and 
the reason is very simple. 
It goes back to the tides 
and the fact that, 
since multi-cellular life 
got going the number 
of days in a month 
has been almost always 
about 30. 
Now, the day has gotten 
a little bit longer 
and the month has gotten 
a little bit longer, 
but the days per month 
has been about the same.
The earliest calendars 
that we’re aware of, 
some of them which could 
go back to the Stone Age 
seem to be calendars 
that keep track of 
the Moon’s phases, 
and we know that 
every culture in the world 
at every time 
has had some way of 
keeping track of the Moon. 
So clearly the Moon
is very important. 
And many religions 
base their calendars 
more on the Moon 
than on the sun. 
The Chinese calendar 
is based on the Moon.
 
The Moon has been called 
the mother of life on Earth. 
Scientists say 
the heavenly body 
played a critical role 
in the emergence 
and development of life 
on our planet. 
The obvious way in which 
the Moon affects the Earth 
is through the tides, 
because of 
the Moon’s gravity. 
It causes the oceans 
to rise and fall, 
and that actually creates 
some remarkably 
suitable environments 
for certain kinds of life 
on Earth, all the life 
that lives in the 
tidal boundaries
between land and ocean. 
And of course 
these are crucial areas 
in the history of life 
on Earth because this is 
where animals first, 
emerged from the sea and 
came to colonize land, 
and it could be that 
it’s in the tidal regions 
where life first began, 
although 
it’s not quite clear
how life began on Earth. 
So it’s hard to imagine 
what the story of life 
on Earth would be 
without the Moon 
simply because of the tides. 
Probably there would be 
some kind of life on Earth 
but it might be 
very different.
When primitive life 
in the Cambrian 
began, to evolve 
and get more complex 
and form trilobites
 
and all that, 
every rhythm of the sea, 
the tides was 
this monthly cycle. 
And so as you know, 
all the sea animals, 
are tuned to the tides. 
Life began 
to leave the oceans 
and go on to dry land.
 
 
Scientists have also found 
that the Moon 
plays a vital role in 
maintaining the stability 
of Earth’s climate.
There is another 
more subtle way in which 
the Moon affects Earth. 
It helps stabilize 
the tilt of Earth’s axis. 
Earth’s axis is tipped 
a little bit towards the Sun 
and Earth’s orbit 
around the Sun 
gives us our seasons, 
winter and summer, and 
back and forth each year.
The tilt of the Earth axis 
is quite stable 
and the Moon 
helps keep it that way.
The Moon’s position 
makes it harder 
for the Earth's axis to 
kind of tip all over the place 
and change over time. 
If the Moon were not there, 
it’s been speculated 
that the Earth's climate 
would be much more 
volatile because 
there would be times
when the North Pole 
would be pointing 
almost down 
where the equator is 
and there are other times 
where it would be 
quite different. 
So the climate on Earth 
over billions of years 
would’ve potentially 
been more extreme 
without the Moon 
and maybe it would not 
have been easy for life, 
maybe it would’ve been 
impossible for life. 
 
Even today, 
scientists’ knowledge of 
many aspects of the Moon 
is by no means complete. 
There is still so much 
about this heavenly body 
waiting to be discovered. 
The Moon is a big place, 
and it has 
a complex history,
not as complex as Earth, 
of course, 
but nevertheless
it's a very complex history. 
And so 
it will take decades, 
if not centuries, 
to unravel everything 
about the Moon. 
As you know 
geologists have been 
running around Earth 
for 200, 300 years 
and we're still at it. 
So there’s a lot of work 
to be done. 
For more about
Ivan Semeniuk 
or Dr. Alan Binder 
please visit
www.di.utoronto.ca or
Lunar-Research-Institute.org
respectively.
 
Thank you 
for your company today 
on this episode of 
Science and Spirituality. 
Please join us next week, 
for Part 2 of our program 
where we will continue 
our discussion 
of the Moon with
Dr. Alan Binder 
and Ivan Semeniuk. 
Up next is 
Words of Wisdom, 
following Noteworthy News. 
May we all find 
everlasting inner peace 
and tranquility.
On Moon Festival night, 
five mischievous children 
are off on a secret quest.
 
Head down, look below, 
to find where 
the Moon Fairy has gone.
But they encounter more 
adventure than expected!
 
The kids do not know 
they have made trouble.
They need discipline 
to learn a lesson, 
please help with this.
Watch “The Quest 
for the Moon Fairy – 
A Cantonese Opera” 
this Tuesday, 
September 29, 
on Enlightening 
Entertainment.