Image for Lumen

Lumen

See all formats and editions

Lumen was first published by Camille Flammarion (1842-1925) in 1872 as part of the Stories of Infinity collection.

Flammarion was a well-known French astronomer, writer and highly successful popularizer of science during the late 19th century.

This famous novel, written in the form of a philosophical dialogue, features a cosmic spirit named Lumen who reveals the scientific wonders of the celestial universe to Quaerens, a young seeker of knowledge.

Within its pages, the author mixes empirical observations about the nature and speed of light with vivid speculations about such diverse subjects as reincarnation, time travel, the reversibility of history and the ecospheres of alien planets.

Lumen is one of the first science fiction novels to include detailed descriptions of alien life forms and the first to imagine (30 years before Einstein's theory of relativity) the differences in perception that might result from traveling at velocities close to and beyond the speed of light. This Wesleyan edition is the first English translation of the original French text in over a hundred years.

The volume includes notes, appendices and a critical introduction.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£10.80 Save 20.00%
RRP £13.50
Product Details
Wesleyan University Press
0819565687 / 9780819565686
Paperback / softback
843.8
31/07/2002
United States
English
Foreign
200 p.
23 cm
general Learn More