One of his last moments embracing the death of his grandfather Karl Marx, he was asked, "What are you going to say to this world at last? Shut up, you idiot.
Marx had told his dream in his lifetime. Through his books, he had to work for 17 years to create Marx's dream book, Capital. History came to a standstill with a leader named Lenin to make his continental dream come true.
The only weapon man had was the weapon of labor to face nature. It was through that hard work that he made his dream come true.
Dreaming is the passion of every human being. The dream is the mother of inventions. Sigmund Freud, a world-renowned psychologist, says that "dreaming is an indirect expression of oppressed desires." Man's dreams and fantasies are the foundation of today's great discoveries.
Well .. let's look at the fantasies of those who discovered a few modern inventions today.
Arthur Clark, a British author, wrote in the 1945 journal Wireless Wolrd that the idea was to create satellites that could orbit the Earth and send messages to Earth. nasa) took up the challenge and built his first satellite.
In 1958, the satellite "Score" orbited parallel to the earth to broadcast the Christmas greetings of US President Isona (on television) ..! The world sighed with a finger on the tip of the nose. Arthur Clark's fantasy is the satellite that orbits the sky today.
In 1863, the French writer Jiels Verne wrote in his diary his idea that letters could be exchanged between computers. Based on this idea, correspondence between computers began in the 1960s. Today's e - mail is the fantasy of Giles Vern.
Next, in 1945, Vannavar Bush, the head of US military research, wrote an article in Atlantic Weekly. The title of the article is "If We Think".
In that article he says that man can access and control all the knowledge the world has ever gained if he uses the tools we have right now. It is also possible to connect information like a chain between computers. This system is called "memex". That Vannavar Bush dream is the Internet that is spreading all over the world today.
Similarly, in 1864, Cambridge scientist James Clark Maxwell proposed a theory that could combine electricity and magnetism to create new waves. He said it was radio waves and valid at the speed of light.
Hertz, a German scientist who saw this, practically developed radio waves in 1888. He showed electromagnetic waves being transmitted from one place to another without any wire connection. Following this, in 1890, Professor Francie converted radio waves into electric current and sounded an electric bell.
He was followed in 1895 by Marconi transmitting radio waves as wireless telegraph signals. He sent his message across the English Channel. In 1901 he sent a message from England to the United States across the continent.
He created radio based on this. In 1906 the world's first radio broadcast was made. Do you know the first news broadcast on the radio ..? News of US President Warren Harding's election victory. Marconi received the Nobel Prize for this great achievement.
If this is the case, after World War II, are you great? Am I big? Russia and the United States wrestled. During this time, Russia designed an intercontinental ballistic missile.
Not only this, Russia did another thing. That was when the world's first satellite, Sputnik, was launched on October 4, 1957. The United States was shocked to see this.
The United States, eager to try to launch a rocket, exploded on the ground in a mechanical malfunction.
As part of the man's attempt to land on the moon, Soviet Russia sent a dog named "Laika" into space.
The United States sent a monkey named "Sam" into space in response. After all, Soviet Russia could not keep pace with the United States in space travel. Once again Soviet Russia orbited a scientist named Urikakarin in space for 2-hours.
This became a major issue for the United States. The United States, for its part, sent a scientist named Alan Shepherd into space. Thus, the rivalry between Russia and the United States in space travel was ongoing.
It was a long-held dream for both countries to set foot on the moon on the one hand and on the other. At this time, it was believed that the moon would be dusty to the size of a coconut tree and would have large craters.
It was also believed that if the spacecraft left the Earth at astounding speed and landed on the moon at the same speed, it would crash into the moon's surface and crash into dust.
Before the United States could think seriously about what to do about it, Soviet Russia had already discovered a method called soft lunar landing and launched its first spacecraft, the Luna-9.
During this time, the Lunar-9 radio signal sent many facts about the moon to Soviet Russia. These radio signals were stolen by the United States through the United Kingdom.
In 1969 US President John F. Kennedy vowed that man would die in American space, which is not only our dream, but the dream of mankind. Five days after the Columbia rocket left Earth on July 16 of the same year, the spacecraft Eagle landed on the moon from the Columbia rocket on July 21. Armstrong and Aldring, who were traveling in it, made their first landing on the back of the moon.
All mankind rejoiced in the joy of conquering the moon. If Soviet Russia's dream was to land a spacecraft on the moon, America's dream was to land a man.
And last but not least, the haiku series "Studying Science Fiction in the Light of the Lamp" does not apply to anyone. But it fits exactly with Thomas Alva Edison. Yes, Edison, who had been selling paper at the train station for three months with the partial education he had received, learned about science whenever he had time.
He used only carbon arc lamps at the time. He scratched his skull, saying that if he applied electricity, it would give light.
Edison burned metal rods, bamboo sticks, fibers, tree strips, and hair into this majestic puzzle. But, nothing seems to be happening.
To find the light bulb, day and night without even knowing it, he was immersed in sorrow with hunger and starvation for many days. In addition, Edison sent his colleagues from the Amazon rainforest of the United States to the coast of Japan, drawing and exploring every bizarre object. None of them give artificial light.
Edison resumed his experiments. Thus Edison tested a thousand times for the light of this electric lamp.
In the final experiment, the cotton yarn was subjected to some chemical modification and electrocuted, and the cotton fiber burned brightly into the glass bubble.
Thus, the number of objects discovered by Edison is over 1000. However if it is his majestic discovery it will join the flashlight.
When Edison died at the age of 85, the United States paid homage to Edison by stopping electric lights across the country for a minute to make him realize what the world would be like if he had not invented the electric light. The electric lamp was the dream of a boy selling ordinary paper.
So, the message that each of the above things conveys to us is that it becomes a historical fact that every creation will come from the dreams and fantasies of many who created it. This is what the Russian writer Maxim Karki said, "I can not even imagine an unimaginable work."
The term applies not only to literature and scientific discoveries but also to every man-made action and object. So, imagine, sow dreams.
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