Type | Story |
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Date | 1939-07 |
Pages | 12 |
Tags | science fiction |
The year is 1973, and anti-scientific religious sentiment is on the rise, as John Harman prepares to launch into space--the first rocket-ship, aiming for the moon. He is betrayed by an employee, who arranges for the ship to explode, but survives the incident.
This event--which caused substantial injury and death to bystanders--ushers in an age of Luddite control of all scientific research. A new government organization, the Federal Scientific Research Investigatory Bureau, is establish to regulate scientific research. All scientific research must be pre-approved.
But Harman has not given up. With a group of trusted colleagues, and the remains of his fortune, over a period of five years he secretly builds a new rocket ship--smaller, less capable, more dangerous, but still a chance for scientific progress. And--it works. He flies around the moon and returns alive.
His story--that of an underdog struggling for his dream--stirs the sentiments of the public, and their dissatisfaction with the current neo-Victorian age. Harman is a hero; the pendulum has swung back toward science.
Name | Role |
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Isaac Asimov | Author |
Relation | Sources |
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