Carl Sagan — "Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it, we go…"
Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it, we go nowhere.
Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it, we go nowhere.
Click any product to generate a realistic preview. Up to 3 at a time.
* Initial load can take up to 90 seconds — revising the preview in another color is nearly instant.
"We are travelers on a cosmic journey, stardust, swirling and dancing in the eddies and whirlpools of infinity. Life is eternal. We have stopped for a moment to encounter each other, to meet, to love, …"
"What an astonishing thing a book is. It's a flat object made of trees, with flexible parts on which are imprinted many dark squiggles. But it is still a world of strong emotion, of thought, of revelat…"
"We are a way for the universe to know itself."
"An atheist is someone who is certain that God does not exist, someone who has compelling evidence against the existence of God. I know of no such compelling evidence. Because God can be relegated to i…"
"The universe is not required to be in perfect harmony with human ambition."
Found in 1 providers: grok
1 source checked
Imagination lets the mind explore possibilities that don't yet exist — fictional worlds, untested theories, futures not yet built. But the deeper point is that imagination isn't escapism; it's the prerequisite for all progress. Without the ability to picture something different from what currently exists, no scientific breakthrough, no art, no innovation is possible. Imagination isn't opposed to reality — it's the only mechanism by which reality ever changes.
Sagan spent his career insisting science and wonder are inseparable. As a Voyager mission scientist he championed the Pale Blue Dot image, and his TV series Cosmos reached 500 million viewers by making the universe feel personally relevant. He co-founded SETI, devoting real resources to imagining intelligent life elsewhere. For Sagan, imagination wasn't fantasy — it was the engine of inquiry, the reason humanity reached the Moon and dared ask whether we are alone.
Sagan wrote during the post-Apollo hangover of the 1970s–80s, when public enthusiasm for space had cooled and NASA budgets shrank. The Cold War made nuclear annihilation feel probable while deep-space exploration felt impractical. His Cosmos series aired in 1980 explicitly to rekindle public sense of possibility. The era's danger wasn't dreaming too large — it was the political and cultural pressure to stop dreaming about space and science altogether.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty