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technological-superiority

The belief that human progress and national pride hinge on mastering advanced space travel technology.

2 chapters across 2 books

Childhood’s End (1953)Arthur C. Clarke

Chapter 6

The chapter introduces the tense space race between the United States and the Soviet Union, focusing on two key engineers, Reinhold Hoffmann and Konrad Schneider, who lead competing atomic drive projects for space exploration. As both prepare their ships for launch, the unexpected arrival of massive alien ships signals that humanity has been surpassed by a far more advanced extraterrestrial presence, ending the human race's solitude in the universe. This moment marks a profound shift in human history, overshadowing all previous achievements.

The Wanderer (1965)Fritz Leiber

Chapter 33

In this chapter, Ross Hunter, Margo, and Hixon attempt to escape a violent confrontation at Vandenberg Three, pursued by police and hostile teenagers, before being rescued by Rama Joan and Doc in a Corvette. Meanwhile, Don Guillermo Walker and the Araiza brothers witness a cataclysmic geological event as the Nicaraguan Isthmus of Rivas is submerged, permanently creating the Nicaraguan Canal and signaling a dramatic transformation of the landscape.