Book detail: the World Set Free is presented as a focused source page for quotations connected with this book, collection, transcript, or source record.
Published in 1914, this novel by H.G. Wells imagines a future conflict in which scientists discover a weapon that releases the energy bound in heavy elements, causing unprecedented destruction. The story follows the scientists who invent this device and the global conflict that follows from its use. Notably, Wells wrote this work decades before the actual development of nuclear technology, making his depiction of atomic weapons and their effects remarkably prescient. The novel also examines the moral responsibilities of scientists and the unintended consequences of technological innovation. Wells drew the title from a biblical phrase about the world being freed, though the content deals with catastrophic warfare. The work stands as one of the earliest science fiction novels to seriously consider the implications of atomic energy and serves as a historical document reflecting early twentieth-century anxieties about industrial progress and modern warfare.
The quotes below use the same card format as the rest of the site, including topics, source notes, copy actions, image creation, and sharing controls.