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NARRATOR: Kaluga, Russia, May 1903.
Little-known Russian schoolteacher Konstantin
Tsiolkovsky publishes a landmark paper
on rocket science titled "Exploration of Outer Space
by Means of Rocket Devices."
At a time when the Wright brothers are still working
to achieve the first powered flight,
Tsiolkovsky writes about groundbreaking concepts
for the exploration of space, including what he calls
the ideal rocket equation, a formula which
calculates the amount of velocity needed to lift
a body into outer space.
Incredibly, his theories would prove instrumental in helping
the Soviet Union launch the first man-made object into
orbit more than 50 years later.
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky wasn't a classically trained
scientist.
He was a secondary-school math teacher,
but he was so enamored with getting into space
that he created the rocket science and mathematics
in the early 1900s that led to the first thing
created by humanity to be launched into space, Sputnik.
To put into perspective how influential Tsiolkovsky's
work was, this was the basis work that everybody
had to use later.
Von Braun used it during his research on rockets,
and most of the world sees the Tsiolkovsky
rocket equation as the beginning of modern rocket science.
PAUL STONEHILL: Where did he get those ideas?
Where does his knowledge come from?
His ideas about space and civilizations that populate it
were incredible, and he persisted that when humans will
go into outer space, we will become
like other alien civilizations.
NARRATOR: Alien civilizations?
How did a Russian math teacher who grew up in a small village
in eastern Russia come to believe that there were
other intelligent beings in the universe
and that it was mankind's destiny
to join them in the cosmos?
The answer is simple.
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, like millions of other Russians
of his day, subscribed to a philosophy known as cosmism,
which promoted the idea that humanity
has an ancient connection to extraterrestrial beings.
Russian cosmism began in the mid and late 19th century.
Within the traditions of cosmism,
there are many who believe that our origins
are actually alien in nature.
That is to say the human civilization is
an alien transplant and that in going into space
we are actually going back home.
NARRATOR: What made Tsiolkovsky and others like him so certain
that aliens existed and that space travel
held the key to humans reconnecting
with these otherworldly beings?
For the answer, ancient-astronaut theorists
point to Tsiolkovsky's writings in which he described
extraterrestrial beings sending messages and information
to mankind from the stars.
He also wrote that he himself had
personally received a number of interplanetary communications.
He also felt that he was receiving telepathic messages
from extraterrestrials.
This leaves us to ponder, was he actually
in contact with intelligences from out there?
Did they guide his hand?
Did they supply this equation?