Jules Verne |
In a science fiction
story published in English in the United States in 1889, entitled In the Twenty-Ninth
Century and subtitled One
Day of an American Journalist in 2889, Jules Verne made several
scientific predictions that, according to him, would take almost a millennium
to be put into practice. Let us look at a few of the most interesting:
•
The average lifetime of the human population will
have increased from 37 in 1889, to 68 in 2889. According to the UN, the average
longevity in the world exceeded 68 years in the five-year period from 2005 to
2010, almost nine centuries before Verne’s forecast. Here, as elsewhere, he
underestimated.
•
The land and sea voyages of the nineteenth century
will have been replaced in the XXIX by air
travel, or intercontinental underwater pneumatic tubes.
At present, little more than a century after Verne’s story, although air travel
has achieved great primacy, land and sea travel continue to exist, and for
distances less than a thousand kilometers make a successful competition to air
travel. Intercontinental pneumatic tubes, on the other hand, are still science
fiction, although there some recent
steps in this direction.