Recently there have been several stories about recent space activities and our thoughts have naturally turned towards the possibility of space colonization. My view has been that not only will that happen, but some day there will be more people living off of Earth than on it.
When that happens, their mere existence will skew what is perceived as the greatest and most influential works of literature on Earth. For it won't be the great religious works of the major religions by which our descendants in space will be able to trace their mere existence. The Bible, Koran, I Ching, or the Vedas won't get us there. It won't be the great works of philosophy from Plato's many works through to modern times. Or almost anything we consider great literature today. One doesn't get into space by the unsteady hand of Hamlet, for example.
Works of economics are similarly disfranchised. This future might be enabled by Das Kapital or Wealth of Nations, but it's not going to be able to trace its lineage to these. Nor most great works of science such as Origin of Species (though Newton's PhilosophiƦ Naturalis Principia Mathematica will have a prominent role in the foundation leading up to this great work).
There is a peculiar aspect to early space engineering (basically everything before the Second World War). Namely, that it was very insular, even from its closest neighbor, astronomy which would reasonably be thought to share common interests. There are very few notable researchers in the field until one gets to the late 1920s. There was little official interest in space development until the Nazis got involved in the mid-30s. But they all share common inspiration. And everything that involves putting anything in space or doing anything in space comes from this inspiration.
So when humanity has gone beyond Earth, there will be one work of literature which will stand out from all the rest. I, of course, speak of From the Earth to the Moon, by Jules Verne, published in 1865.
Reply to: Re:A Sound of Thunder
(Score: 1) by khallow on Sunday October 09 2016, @03:57AM
My point though is that there's a clear chain of inspiration from "From the Earth to the Moon" to modern day space activities that doesn't exist for the Epic of Gilgamesh. For example, two of the three researchers (Konstantin Tsiolkovsky and Hermann Oberth) who are the "fathers" of rocketry (and modern space engineering) were directly inspired by the book. The third, Robert Goddard was inspired by War of the Worlds (by H. G. Wells) which starts with the evil Martians launching its invasion forces at Earth via a giant projectile gun, a classic homage to From the Earth to the Moon.
These in turn directly inspired others, such as Wernher Von Braun (who was originally inspired by reading Oberth) who ran the V-2 rocketry program for Nazi Germany as well as developing rockets for NASA. Two links goes from a guy writing 19th Century adventure stories with a scientific twist to a key manager of the Apollo program. Similarly, Tsiolkovsky was influential to Soviet rocketry and their space program with several of the pre-Second World War pioneers known [russianspaceweb.com] to have direct communications with him.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Sunday October 09 2016, @03:57AM
These in turn directly inspired others, such as Wernher Von Braun (who was originally inspired by reading Oberth) who ran the V-2 rocketry program for Nazi Germany as well as developing rockets for NASA. Two links goes from a guy writing 19th Century adventure stories with a scientific twist to a key manager of the Apollo program. Similarly, Tsiolkovsky was influential to Soviet rocketry and their space program with several of the pre-Second World War pioneers known [russianspaceweb.com] to have direct communications with him.