Possibly, on the former count; almost certainly on the latter. We should keep in mind that we had no accurate measurements of the distances to other stars, nor any concept of the speed of light as a cosmic "speed limit," until the work of Henrietta Leavitt and Albert Einstein (respectively) in the early 20th century.The "universe" would have been a lot smaller, limited to our solar system and in a pinch a couple of nearby stars.
Note that War Of The Worlds was about Martians. That's how far people were willing to let their imagination go.
... I don't think there would be any mention of "faster than light"...
When Einstein first communicated his theory of special relativity, people were mocking him, even physicists (though not the smartest) were openly mocking his theory so it's very unlikely that a writer of S.F. would have anticipated it.Possibly, on the former count; almost certainly on the latter. We should keep in mind that we had no accurate measurements of the distances to other stars, nor any concept of the speed of light as a cosmic "speed limit," until the work of Henrietta Leavitt and Albert Einstein (respectively) in the early 20th century.
Uhhhhh.... you guys are aware that there's a comic book out there that does exactly what you're talking about, right...?
Uhhhhh.... you guys are aware that there's a comic book out there that does exactly what you're talking about, right...?
It all depends on the talent of the people involved. Talented people can make great things with little means.Would have been a book that would have then been made into terrible TV movies by the BBC 150 years later.
messagers with dispatches would be used.
I'm an academic who studies nineteenth-century science fiction, and I can tell you exactly what Star Trek would have been like in 1866.
It would have been shit.
I disagree. Jules Verne and H.G. Wells invented everything, space travel, time travel, extraterrestrial wars, computers, lasers... plus many other things.
To say nothing about the contributions of Mary Shelley and E.A. Poe.
He could have been drawing from real-world newspaper accounts of what was going on out there.The "Old West" is still a very new, unexplored frontier in 1866, and Western fiction as we know it hasn't really begun for Roddenberry to draw from.
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