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Just the facts: Tsiolkovsky proposed (not in words, but in scientific papers) all dark-skinned people (“Negroes”, Indians, etc.), as well as useless old people (and all animals, when the need for them disappears-there will be artificial food) on earth are organized and physically exterminated in a short time in specially invented meat grinders (this is a fact). He also suggested covering the entire globe (and the oceans, probably) with a glass roof (to improve the climate). And he proposed to fly into space like this: lift a platform(a spaceport with a pack of rockets) into the sky with jet engines, on which there is another, smaller platform-a spaceport from which the next smaller platform starts in the sky – and so on, while pumping fuel from the lower rockets to the upper ones in flight (in general, 32 rockets are needed to enter orbit, and 256 rockets and the same number of pilots are needed to get off the planet).� If I'm wrong, add a minus sign.
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky made quite a big contribution not only in the field of engineering and physics, but also in philosophy. In the middle of the 19th century, a current called “Russian cosmism” appeared in Russian philosophy. Ideas that combine such problems as the search for unity, the place of man in the universe, and the relationship between Earth and space processes also strongly influenced the culture of Russia during the existence of the Soviet Union, especially in the post-war period, when man began to explore space. And one of the representatives of the philosophy of “Cosmism” is Tsiolkovsky, who himself used the term “cosmic philosophy”.