Many science fiction writers have talked about the future of mankind, and many have predicted scientific discoveries, political events, and changes in daily life.

A report on the Russian website "FBR" monitored cases of writers predicting future events in their writings. In this regard, the mobile phone and answering machine appeared for the first time on the pages of the author's novel Yuri Dolguchin, "Miracle Maker", published in 1939.

The protagonist, Nikolai Tungosov, invented a microwave-based wireless phone. In turn, the Soviet Union tested the first model of this communication device in 1957 by Leonid Coprianovic.

The first real phone in the United States appeared in 1973, which means that Dolgochen was the first to mention the idea of ​​a mobile phone 34 years before the actual version of this device.

For his part, Ray Bradbury described in his novel "Fahrenheit 451", the mini speakers inserted directly into the ears. In the same novel, Bradbury cited some of the most notable innovations in the modern world, such as wireless headsets, flat panel TVs and some other devices.

The idea of ​​the phone received decades ago in science fiction novels (Reuters)

Astronomical discoveries
According to the report, some were aware of the existence of space objects long before they were actually detected. In 1726, Jonathan Swift, the author of the novel "Gulliver's Travels" on Laputta Island, reported that in a study by local astronomers two moons were discovered in Mars orbit.

In 1877 he made a telescope with sophisticated techniques to ascertain the writer's imagination and expectations. As a result of the research, Phobos and Demos were found to be closest satellites orbiting Mars.

In his novel Space Knight, Edmund Hamilton describes the adventures of Pluto's main character. In this novel, the author speaks in particular about the three satellites of this dwarf planet, Sharon, Cerberus, and Sticks. In fact, until 1940, science was unable to identify Pluto's moons, so the author allowed himself to release names inspired by Greek mythology on these satellites.

Thirty-eight years after the publication of Hamilton's novel, scientists discovered the largest moon of the dwarf Pluto "Sharon". In 2011 and 2012, the rest of the objects mentioned by Hamilton were discovered.

Space scientist
On the other hand, in the novel Space Odyssey, Arthur Clarke bombards the comet for a substance that allows him to study his chemical composition. The method was already used in 2005 by the US space agency NASA 47 years after the publication of the novel.

According to the report, the French writer Jules Verne in his novel "From the Earth to the Moon" issued in 1867, to task Apollo 11. In the novel, Verne put forward the idea of ​​solar sails for the first time, which depends in the modern era in the construction of space stations.

Many novelists predicted future mortal diseases such as Harry Harrison in his novel "Plague of Space" (1965)

Epidemics
The writer of the article that many novelists predicted future fatal diseases, such as Harry Harrison in his novel "Plague of Space" (1965), and Jack London, who predicted in the novel "Crimean plague" extinction of mankind in 2013, which terrified the The hearts of some, especially as this history coincided with the spread of the Ebola epidemic in Africa.

Medical discoveries
According to the author, access to treatments for deadly diseases is a concern for science fiction writers.

Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" of 1818 caused a stir, because of her revolutionary view of medicine and medical ethics. No one thought that the writer's predictions of saving lives with the help of electricity and organ transplantation would become a reality.

When Aldous Huxley published his famous novel of the bitter reality of 1932, genetic engineering was just a fantasy. But 40 years after the publication of the novel A Brave New World, many of the things that Huxley has described are turning into concrete reality.

Policy area
In 2013, information was circulating that the US intelligence service had intercepted phone calls from foreign diplomats, heads of allied states and other senior officials. In his novel "1948", George Orwell discussed the idea of ​​full control and government control.

Everyday life
In 1888, Edward Bellamy published his novel "Looking Back", in which he stated that money would disappear completely from everyday life, which would prompt everyone to use credit cards.

In addition, the first means of interpretation from one language to another appeared in Douglas Noel Adams's "Traveler's Guide to the Galaxy". In the novel "Strange in a Strange Land" of 1967, Robert Anson Henlin spoke of the modern aquatic family for the first time.

The Titanic sinking
American author Morgan Robertson (1889) reported the collision of a ship with an iceberg in the North Atlantic, and most of its passengers sank, which happened to the Titanic. Fourteen years before the accident, Robertson described the ship and the reasons for its sinking.

Military equipment and weapons
Herbert George Wells is one of the leading figures in the field of world fiction, not only expecting certain types of weapons but predicting a change in the nature of wars as well. Thirty-one years before the atomic bombardment of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Wells described in his novel "The Liberation of the World" the atomic bomb and its consequences.

In conclusion, the writer noted that Wales in his book "The War in Space" issued in 1907 details the aerial bombardment, and the economic crisis resulting from transport disturbances, inflation and refugee flows.