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"He predicts the internet in the days before even radio was a mass medium. "It would have all seemed so far-fetched back in that time, when people weren't even used to telephones - and that makes it more relevant now than it was in his time - he was anticipating technology like the internet and Skype. "And he predicts, with astonishing accuracy, the effect the technology has on our relations with one another, with our bodies, with our philosophy and culture. "It's a warning for now for what we might be getting ourselves into."
Interesting story but I just think he was writing a book not trying to predict the future.
originally posted by: 3NL1GHT3N3D1
How many books have gotten the future wrong? A broken clock is right twice a day you know.
Interesting story but I just think he was writing a book not trying to predict the future.
originally posted by: DOCHOLIDAZE1
a reply to: alldaylong
Hopi prophecys
What a load of ..what'd the right word...horse sh*t those prophecies are
Oh and they were so wise they couldn't see their own demise and the arrival of white men. Yeah right.
originally posted by: boncho
a reply to: 3danimator2014
What a load of ..what'd the right word...horse sh*t those prophecies are
Oh and they were so wise they couldn't see their own demise and the arrival of white men. Yeah right.
Where does it say knowing the future ensures you can change it?
Imagine 1000 years from now if the planet is destroyed by carbon emissions. "Im sick of hearing that stupid science fairy tale magic, if they supposedly knew about global warming why didn't they do anything about it?"
And I realize that's a heavily contested issue by some, so insert whatever... "If they knew _____ would go extinct then why would they let it?"
The shape and size of the vehicle would closely resemble the Apollo command/service module spacecraft.
The number of men in the crew would be three.
A competition for the launch site would ensue between Florida and Texas which actually was resolved in Congress in the 1960s with KSC as the Flordia launch site and Houston, Texas as the Mission Control Center.
A telescope would be able to view the progress of the journey. When Apollo 13 exploded, a telescope at Johnson Space Center witnessed the event which happened more than 200,000 miles from Earth.
The Verne spacecraft would use retro-rockets which became a technology assisting Neil Armstrong and his crewmates in their journey to the Moon.
Verne predicted weightlessness although his concept was slightly flawed in thinking it only was experienced at the gravitational midpoint of the journey (when the Moon and Earth gravity balanced).
The first men to journey to the Moon would return to Earth and splash down in the Pacific Ocean just where Apollo 11 splashed down in July of 1969 one hundred and six years after the initial publishing of Jules Verne's FROM THE EARTH TO THE MOON.
My only brush with predictions are of Nostradamus and those are ridiculous.