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    • Jules Verne | Biography & Facts | Britannica
      • In 1857 Verne married and for several years worked as a broker at the Paris Stock Market. During this period he continued to write, to do research at the Bibliothèque Nationale (National Library), and to dream of a new kind of novel—one that would combine scientific fact with adventure fiction.
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  2. Jun 21, 2024 · Jules Verne, prolific French author whose writings laid much of the foundation of modern science fiction. Among his most famous novels are Journey to the Centre of the Earth, From the Earth to the Moon, Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, and Around the World in Eighty Days.

    • The Father of The “Science Novel” Genre
    • From Technological Optimism to Scepticism
    • A Prophet of Sustainable Development

    To begin with, this man who usually appears on any list of the fathers of science fiction never had or pursued a scientific education. Many of the founders and leading figures of this genre had a direct relationship with science, such as Wells, Asimov and Clarke, or with technology, such as Heinlein and Gernsback. Verne, however, studied law, his f...

    Thus, for many decades, scholars of Verne and his work have argued about his status as both a science fiction author and a technological prophet; science and technology were for him a medium, as the globe was for him to narrate a romantic exploration of Africa. In his 1988 book Jules Verne Rediscovered: Didacticism and the Scientific Novel, Arthur ...

    These are not the only nods in Verne’s work to technologies that prioritise what today we would call sustainability: in The Mysterious Island(1875) he proposed the use of what we now know as green hydrogen, obtained from the electrolysis of water for use as fuel, and water as “the coal of the future” for when “the deposits of coal are exhausted.” A...

    • Electric Submarines. The Nautilus is the amazing submarine created by Captain Nemo of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. In his novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea, Jules Verne introduced us to an electric submarine that he named the Nautilus.
    • Newscasts. Credit: Adobe Stock - PRI. In his book, In the Year 2889, Verne wrote, "instead of being printed, the Earth Chronicle is every daybreak spoken to subscribers, who, from interesting conversations with reporters, statesmen and scientists, learn the news of the day."
    • Solar Sails. Credit: Adobe Stock - giovanni. Jules Verne conjectured about light-propelled spacecraft in his science fiction classic From the Earth to the Moon, in 1865.
    • Lunar Modules. Early artist conception of lunar module landing on the moon. Credit: NASA, 1962 - CC BY 2.0. Jules Verne also predicted today's Lunar module.
  3. Sep 26, 2016 · In his humorous From the Earth to the Moon, published in 1865, Jules Verne describes a crew of three people who launch themselves, in a gun-fired projectile, to the Moon.

  4. Jun 23, 2015 · Charles Carter and Richard Wolfenden, both of the University of North Carolina, have uncovered new evidence of abiogenesis, the process by which life arises from non-living chemical matter.

    • Joseph Dussault
  5. Jules Verne, (born Feb. 8, 1828, Nantes, France—died March 24, 1905, Amiens), French writer. He studied law then worked as a stockbroker while writing plays and stories. The first of his romantic adventures ( voyages extraordinaires ), Five Weeks in a Balloon (1863), was highly successful.

  6. Apr 19, 2022 · The new study fills in gaps about how life formed from primitive chemicals. Scientists have continually tried to pinpoint the exact origins of life on Earth. One of the leading...

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