The Dream of Space Travel
The concept of space travel holds a very dear and special place amongst civilization. For thousands of years civilization has dreamt of an ultimate goal of exploring foreign worlds, of reaching the stars, and living in space. Since the conception of the Round Earth in classical antiquity every era has progressed with this dream as its goal. We can find stories from thousands of years ago featuring space ships, ventures to strange planets and interstellar wars. Stories of space fiction permeated society, entertained children, and inspired young minds, breeding a civilization of people who wanted to explore the universe. It was assumed that we lived on a spherical world, that space was boundless in extent, that there were other worlds similar to our own, that they could one day be reached and explored and perhaps we could even meet alien species.
It was a marvelous and fantastic dream. A dream which is still cherished in all of us.
While space was always a dream and goal of civilization since at least the Ancient Greeks, the focus of specific adoration by the populous changed with time. In each era there was a hero caricature which represented humanity's immediate ambition and circumstance. In early eras of conquest the knight was the primary hero of society, which still vestiges in media and literature. The cowboy was the hero of the American Frontier. The soldier was the hero of WWII. Afterwards, at the dawn of the space age, the spaceman became the hero of popular media. He was seen to explore space, to conduct science in space, and fight in space, elevating the dreams of space travel into focus. Children were bombarded with images of Donald Duck exploring the moon. Young adults with fictions of Buck Rogers and Star Trek. Countless Science Fiction stories were written, with higher professions happily speculating about transgenerational space ships, dyson spheres, and terraforming foreign worlds. We believed in space travel with a deep passion and saw it as our civilization's future path. At the dawn of the space age this is what society wanted, and what society demanded.
What if, for some reason, such space travel as it was previously conceived was not technically feasible? If you told society that you could not do it then they simply would not believe you and would demand that you try harder. It must be possible. It has to be possible. They know it is possible. Anything else is an embarrassment to humanity. If you couldn't do it, the hearts and minds would turn their attention to someone else who could foster hope of their dream.
In aftermath of WWII the two largest remaining powers, United States and Soviet Union, hedged its bets on rockets and space as the next frontier. Following the guidelines of fiction, we needed space weapons and space reconnaissance. Hitler's V2 rocket was replicated and improved to provide a basis for missiles thought necessary to protect the homeland and bring in mutually assured destruction, ushering in a relative worldwide peace and prosperity. Our grasp of space technologies were utilized to send a man to the moon and send space probes to explore the solar system, to cries of joy and admiration worldwide. All of this was preconceptualized in inventive fiction to a surprising degree and was expected to happen in civilization’s ultimate progress towards the stars.
Things tend to happen because society wants it to happen. We create want and it turns into reality. We wanted freedom of speech so we got freedom of speech. Social dynamics changed over time and society wanted women to be equal in status to men, so it became so. Society began working longer hours and wanted more energy in the morning so we cultured coffee plants and invented energy drinks. Society wants to feel that they are special, and so there are a plethora of organizations telling you that you are special. If society wants it, it tends to happen. The entire world is designed and created based on what we want, and clashes happen when we disagree with each other and want different things.
The simple truth is that our civilization universally wanted space travel, so it happened. While skeptical organizations, such as the Flat Earth Society, continue to question how it happened and the veracity of these claims, it is undeniable that the motivation of space travel was based on a dream deeply embedded into the fabric of our civilization since an early time. It was a dream.
Alas, it was only a dream.