The Expected World

EXPIRES: 1888

WRITTEN: 1873

At present weapons are being changed every ten years, and even more frequently. In another fifteen years or so, people will use for shooting not rifles but some kind of lightning, some sort of a machine emitting a holocaustal electrical stream. Tell me: what can we invent in this line so as to surprise our neighbors? What if in fifteen years every great power will have secretly stored away one such surprise for any kind of eventuality? Alas, we are merely capable of imitating and purchasing ammunition from others, and—at best—of repairing it at home. To invent such machines we should have to have our own independent, and not purchased, science, not an imported but a free one—one that has taken root in our soil. As yet we do not possess such a science, nor do we even have a purchased one.

Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky

The Diary Of A Writer

Written: 1873

Addressed to: 1888

Source: The Diary Of A Writer

Author: Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky

Category: Culture & Society


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