The book began in 1866 and talked about the shipwreck sea monster. In the first year, several ships reported this "monster" and expressed it as being larger and slender than the other whales. A few months later, the "monster" started attacking nearby ships. All the countries of the world are reluctant to leave the ocean and the United Nations sent Abraham Lincoln to destroy this monster in hopes of bringing peace to the sea. The best people in the ocean research were invited to join the crew until the monster was killed.
Verne's 20,000 alliance at the seafloor has published continuous publications between 1869 and 1870. At the moment, as the international business takes off between hemispheres, the ocean is often traversed by ships. However, the depth of the ocean remains mysterious for scientists, not only that Nautilus is misunderstood as Naruti, it also leads to the adventure of Professor Aronnax and his unconscious explorer community. This is just the beginning. Just a few decades later, HG Wells will write his prophetic short story "The Land Ironclads" (1903). It is a story of deadlock caused by tank invention. In 1912, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (yes it) published his novel "The Lost World", explores the adventure in South America and finds the mysterious plateau where the dinosaurs are still wandering Let's see.
As the authors stated - this is the theme elsewhere in SXSW - SF works have a long history predicting the future. The classic 20,000 league Jules Verne of the seafloor caused the public imagination of the submarine. Arthur C. Clarke proposed geosynchronous satellite communication in 1945, and the short series of Isaac Asimov robots series began to appear in the 1940's in fear of the operation of modern intelligent robots. The author draws out several historical references from the way each big collision fundamentally improved the previous technology and introduced the new technology. In World War I, the tank was invented It was difficult when it raised the groan first in the trench, but it was not moving enough, and it was too late in ground battle . In this war, aircraft were used for the first time in combat for a large scale, but it was once again proved that aerodynamics is not the deciding factor of the result.