<blockquote style="background-color: white; color: black; border:1px solid black; padding: 1em;">
:''This article is about the baseball and aviation promoter. For the Florida State Senator, see [[Alfred Lawson, Jr.]].''
</blockquote>
{{Refimprove|date=November 2006}}
'''Alfred William Lawson''' ([[1869]]-[[1954]]) was a professional [[baseball]] player, manager and league promoter from 1887 through 1916 and went on to play a pioneering role in the US aircraft industry, publishing two early aviation trade journals. In 1904, he also wrote a novel, ''Born Again'', clearly inspired by the popular Utopian fantasy ''[[Looking Backward]]'' by [[Edward Bellamy]], an early harbinger of the metaphysical turn his career would take. He is frequently cited as the inventor of the [[airliner]]<ref>His wasn't the first, but only by a few months. http://www.koolhoven.com/history/fk26/#statement</ref> and was awarded several of the first air mail contracts, which he ultimately could not fulfill. The crash of his ambitious "Midnight Liner" during its trial flight takeoff on May 8, 1921 ended his best chance for commercial aviation success.
In the 1920s, he promoted health practices including [[vegetarianism]] and claimed to have found the secret of living to 200. He also developed his own highly unusual theories of physics, according to which such concepts as "penetrability", "suction and pressure" and "zig-zag-and-swirl" were discoveries on par with [[Albert Einstein|Einstein]]'s [[Theory of Relativity]].{{Fact|date=October 2007}} He published numerous books on these concepts, all set in a distinctive typography. Lawson repeatedly predicted the worldwide adoption of Lawsonian principles by the year 2000.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
He later propounded his own philosophy—Lawsonomy—and the [[Lawsonian religion]]. He also developed, during the [[Great Depression]], the [[populist]] economic theory of "[[Direct Credit]]s", 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. His rallies and lectures attracted thousands of listeners in the early 30s, mainly in the upper Midwest, but by the late 30s the crowds had dwindled.
In 1943, he founded the so-called [[University of Lawsonomy]] in [[Des Moines, Iowa|Des Moines]] to spread his teachings and offer the degree of "Knowledgian," but after various IRS and other investigations it was closed and finally sold in 1954, the year of Lawson's death. Lawson's financial arrangements remain mysterious to this day and in later years he seems to have owned little property, moving from city to city as a guest of his farflung acolytes. A 1952 attempt to haul him before a [[U.S. Senate|Senate]] investigative committee and get to the bottom of his operation ended with the cagey old gentleman leaving the senators outwitted and baffled.<ref>http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,816203,00.html</ref>
A farm near [[Racine, Wisconsin]] is the only remaining university facility, although a tiny handful of churches may yet survive in places such as [[Wichita, Kansas]]. The large sign, formerly reading "University of Lawsonomy", was a familiar landmark for motorists in the region for many years and was visible from I-94 about 13 miles north of the Illinois state line. Although the sign still exists, the "of" has now been replaced by the [[Uniform Resource Locator|URL]] of their website.
==Quotation==
{{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}}
== References ==
<references/>
==External links==
* {{cite web | work = OnMilwaukee.com | author = Gregg Hoffmann | date = [[2002-12-15]] | url = http://www.onmilwaukee.com/sports/articles/lawson.html | title = What in the heck is the University of Lawsonomy?}} (''an article about Lawson in a Milwaukee-area magazine'')
*[http://www.lawsonsprogress.com Lawson's Progress] an elaborate web tribute
*[http://www.lawsonomy.org/Lawsonomy11.html The three volumes of Lawsonomy], written by Lawson
*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSOyOEbdQDI A short video] of a visit to the University of Lawsonomy campus.
*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxcHbFtcEPU Campus tour by Larry,] a University alumnus
[[Category:1869 births|Lawson, Alfred]]
[[Category:1954 deaths|Lawson, Alfred]]
[[Category:Pseudophysics|Lawsonomy]]