The word planet now applies to only eight bodies, even though the solar system is packed with thousands of round, icy, rock‑like worlds. The constraint is not sentiment but orbital dynamics and the need for a stable naming system once telescopes began revealing an unexpected swarm of objects.
Early textbooks promoted every major discovery, from Ceres to Pluto, to the status of planet. As better surveys mapped the Kuiper belt and the asteroid belt, astronomers detected populations of bodies with comparable mass and composition. If each one joined the list, the number of planets would climb without a natural ceiling, turning what should be a clear classification into an exercise in entropy increase.
To halt that escalation, the International Astronomical Union introduced a definition based on hydrostatic equilibrium and orbital clearing. A planet must be nearly round under its own gravity and must dominate its orbital zone by gravitational scattering or accretion. Objects that are round but do not clear their neighborhoods, such as Pluto, became dwarf planets, preserving a coherent taxonomy while acknowledging the physics that links all of these worlds.