People are really misreading these articles.
No Pluto is not officially a planet.
Yes, people are a Harvard debate voted that is was a planet. But it was a school debate, there isn't really anything more to it.
How does a university debate saying that Pluto is a planet equate to the entire scientific community of Astrology agreeing that Pluto is a planet? Gotta love misleading article titles.
Answer: It doesn't.
The organization may seem to count even less when you consider something Gingerich revealed during his arguments. He was there for the 2006 IAU vote, which came when most of the attendees had already gone home. Just 424 of the organization’s nearly 10,000 members were present, and when the organizers offered the gathering the chance to reconsider Pluto’s demotion, Gingerich said, “they voted not to vote again because they wanted to go to lunch, so that was the end of it.”
Don't misunderstand, I'm not trying discredit Harvard here, after all they're fucking Harvard. I'm discrediting the article which preys on the reader's assumption that "Harvard says Pluto is a planet=Every astrologist says Pluto is a planet", it's pathetic that people resort to masking the truth like this just get more views on their article.Mind you, this university debate isn't some undergrad physics class, this is doctorate level stuff. You don't just take classes at a university, some people do research and experiments there after they have achieved their PhD