Moons Are Planets: Scientific Usefulness Versus Cultural Teleology in the Taxonomy of Planetary Science
Philip T. Metzger, William M. Grundy, Mark Sykes, S. Alan Stern, James, F. Bell III, Charlene E. Detelich, Kirby D. Runyon, Michael Summers

TL;DR
This paper examines the historical development of planetary taxonomy, contrasting scientific and folk concepts, and advocates for a taxonomy based on geological complexity as most scientifically useful.
Contribution
It clarifies the historical evolution of planet classification and proposes a geology-based taxonomy as the most effective for scientific purposes.
Findings
Historical folk and scientific taxonomies differ significantly.
Modern astronomy has largely forgotten the original scientific concept of planets.
Geological complexity provides a more meaningful basis for planetary classification.
Abstract
We argue that taxonomical concept development is vital for planetary science as in all branches of science, but its importance has been obscured by unique historical developments. The literature shows that the concept of planet developed by scientists during the Copernican Revolution was theory-laden and pragmatic for science. It included both primaries and satellites as planets due to their common intrinsic, geological characteristics. About two centuries later the non-scientific public had just adopted heliocentrism and was motivated to preserve elements of geocentrism including teleology and the assumptions of astrology. This motivated development of a folk concept of planet that contradicted the scientific view. The folk taxonomy was based on what an object orbits, making satellites out to be non-planets and ignoring most asteroids. Astronomers continued to keep primaries and moons…
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