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Exploring the Unknown - Selected Documents in the History of the U.S. Civil Space Program, Volume VII: Human Spaceflight: Projects Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo (Paperback)
Loot Price: R927
Discovery Miles 9 270
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Exploring the Unknown - Selected Documents in the History of the U.S. Civil Space Program, Volume VII: Human Spaceflight: Projects Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo (Paperback)
Series: NASA History
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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One of the most important developments of the twentieth century has
been the movement of humanity into space with machines and people.
The underpinnings of that movement-why it took the shape it did;
which individuals and organizations were involved; what factors
drove a particular choice of scientific objectives and technologies
to be used; and the political, economic, managerial, and
international contexts in which the events of the Space Age
unfolded-are all important ingredients of this epoch transition
from an Earthbound to a spacefaring people. This desire to
understand the development of spaceflight in the United States
sparked this documentary history series. The extension of human
activity into outer space has been accompanied by a high degree of
self-awareness of its historical significance. Few large scale
activities have been as extensively chronicled so closely to the
time they actually occurred. Many of those who were directly
involved were quite conscious that they were making history, and
they kept full records of their activities. Because most of the
activity in outer space was carried out under government
sponsorship, it was accompanied by the documentary record required
of public institutions, and there has been a spate of official and
privately written histories of most major aspects of space
achievement to date. When top leaders considered what course of
action to pursue in space, their deliberations and decisions often
were carefully put on the record. There is, accordingly, no lack of
material for those who aspire to understand the origins and
evolution of U.S. space policies and programs. This reality forms
the rationale for this series. Precisely because there is so much
historical material available on space matters, the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) decided in 1988 that it
would be extremely useful to have easily available to scholars and
the interested public a selective collection of many of the seminal
documents related to the evolution of the U.S. civilian space
program. While recognizing that much space activity has taken place
under the sponsorship of the Department of Defense and other
national security organizations, the U.S. private sector, and in
other countries around the world, NASA felt that there would be
lasting value in a collection of documentary material primarily
focused on the evolution of the U.S. government's civilian space
program, most of which has been carried out since 1958 under the
Agency's auspices. As a result, the NASA History Division
contracted with the Space Policy Institute of George Washington
University's Elliott School of International Affairs to prepare
such a collection. This is the seventh volume in the documentary
history series; one additional volume containing documents and
introductory essays related to post-Apollo human spaceflight will
follow. The documents selected for inclusion in this volume are
presented in two chapters: one covering the Mercury and Gemini
projects and another covering Project Apollo.
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