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Science fiction didn ;t exist at the time she was writing 8230; She understood that it was changing technology that changes society, which is a thing that very, very few people in the nineteenth century understood. And even coming into the twentieth century 鈥?and even now. I think now, people would say, Well, yes, look at computers, they ;ve changed the way we do things. 8230; But I think even as recently as the twentieth century, people didn ;t see that the same way. And I think there a kind of science
gourde stanley -fictional mindset that looks at, you know, the invention of faster-than-l
stanley quencher ight travel, and then talks about that. George Eliot was looking at the invention of railroads, and how railroads allowed a woman to go from Manchester to London on her own 鈥?which would have been a three-day journey that you couldn ;t have done without protection. You genuinely couldn ;t do it. It not just that it wasn ;t done, Oh, shocking. ; You would have been killed. And then there were trains and they were safe, and a woman could do that alone, and it was a complete game-changer. And she saw how that changed things [and] how that changed the world economically. And I think that that kind of attitude 鈥?it not only science-fiction writers who have that. But it a science-fictional
stanley cup way of viewing the present and viewing history that George Eliot very much did have. And you get passages where she explicitly Frij A Power Bar With a Removable Battery Charges Your Devices Wherever You Roam
A 13 billion-hp generating plant at Niagara Falls would supply t
stanley thermosflasche he 10 million volts the cable would require to create an electromagnet powerful enough to overcome the present magnetic poles of the earth. This would, Harrieson claimed, cause the earth to lean violently toward the sun and give u
stanley termoska s a new north pole and new south pole. This would happen because, Harrieson explained, the sun is made mostly of iron. Needless to say, every nation on earth that would be bisected by this enormous cable would naturally be delighted to allow the US to do this. The total cost would be tremendous even by today standards and remember, Harrieson is talking 1898 dollars here : $15 billion to lay the cable, $1 trillion to reclaim the Arctic regions and $65 billion to build the generating plant. The benefits of doing this would be incalculable, however, according to Harrieson. We could save all the vast crops that are annually destroyed by the heat or cold. Arctic territories could be turned to agriculture and Greenland would blossom with fruits and flowers, wheat fields and gardens would take the place of ice fields and gla
stanley cup ciers. Humankind would be in absolute control of the seasons, the tropics could be cooled the the Arctic and Antarctic made tropical. The entire surface of the globe could be reclaimed for farming. The earth would be another Garden of Eden. Bread famines would cease. Crops could be raised