bookmate game
Carl Sagan

Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space

Notify me when the book’s added
To read this book, upload an EPUB or FB2 file to Bookmate. How do I upload a book?
  • Rana Najafzadehas quoted2 years ago
    While almost everyone is taught that the Earth is a sphere with all of us somehow glued to it by gravity, the reality of our circumstance did not really begin to sink in until the famous frame-filling Apollo photograph of the whole Earth—the one taken by the Apollo 17 astronauts on the last journey of humans to the Moon
  • Rana Najafzadehas quoted2 years ago
    Life is a comparative rarity. You can survey dozens of worlds and find that on only one of them does life arise and evolve and persist
  • HThas quoted3 years ago
    Every one of these worlds is lovely and instructive. But, so far as we know, they are also, every one of them, desolate and barren. Out there, there are no "better places." So far, at least.
  • HThas quoted3 years ago
    Today we call them planets, the Greek word for wanderers. It was, I imagine, a peculiarity our ancestors could relate to.
  • HThas quoted3 years ago
    Moby Dick, spoke for wanderers in all epochs and meridians: "I am tormented with an everlasting itch for things remote. I love to sail forbidden seas . . ."
  • HThas quoted3 years ago
    The open road still softly calls, like a nearly forgotten song of childhood. We invest far-off places with a certain romance.
  • HThas quoted3 years ago
    But tell me, who are they, these wanderers . . .?

    —RAINER MARIA RILKE, "THE FIFTH ELEGY" (1923)
  • b1695912163has quoted4 years ago
    Today we call them planets, the Greek word for wanderers.
  • b1695912163has quoted4 years ago
    Long before Columbus, Indonesian argonauts in outrigger canoes explored the western Pacific; people from Borneo settled Madagascar; Egyptians and Libyans circumnavigated Africa; and a great fleet of ocean going junks from Ming Dynasty China crisscrossed the Indian Ocean, established a base in Zanzibar, rounded the Cape of Good Hope, and entered the Atlantic Ocean
  • Diego Ivánhas quoted4 years ago
    Herman Melville, in Moby Dick, spoke for wanderers in all epochs and meridians: “I am tormented with an everlasting itch for things remote. I love to sail forbidden seas…”
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)