Around Kepler's "Dream"
Jean-Pierre Luminet

TL;DR
Kepler's 'Dream' is a pioneering work blending science and imagination, illustrating lunar perception and influencing space travel literature, with a complex structure reflecting evolving astronomical knowledge.
Contribution
This paper highlights Kepler's 'Dream' as a significant precursor to science fiction, emphasizing its innovative structure and its impact on subsequent space exploration narratives.
Findings
Kepler's 'Dream' links ancient imagination to scientific discovery.
The text's structure evolved with astronomical advancements.
It influenced later space travel literature.
Abstract
Johann Kepler (1571-1630) is sometimes considered as a precursor of science-fiction novels with the writing of "Somnium, sive opus posthumum of astronomia lunaris". In this work published posthumously in 1634 by his son Ludwig, Kepler intends to defend the Copernican doctrine by detailing the perception of the world for an observer located on the Moon. Although Kepler was not the first to write the fantastic account of a voyage from the Earth to the Moon and "pass around a message", we show here that his "Dream" is made conspicuous under many aspects. Firstly, his author is one of the most remarkable minds of the history of sciences. Secondly, the "Dream" constitutes the missing link between the texts of pure imagination by Lucian of Samosata (IInd c. AD), and the fantasy novels based on scientific discoveries by Jules Verne, at the end of XIXth century. In the third place, the complete…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Developments in Astronomy
