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SCIENCE, LITERATURE AND ART VS RELIGION
Atheistic Readings

AT THE END OF MARCH, ANOTHER EVENING FROM THE CYCLE “SCIENCE. LITERATURE AND ART AGAINST RELIGION. SCIENTISTS AND POETS, JOURNALISTS AND WRITERS TALKED ABOUT THE TASKS OF ATHEISTIC PROPAGANDA, ABOUT WAYS AND METHODS TO FIGHT AGAINST RELIGION. ACADEMICIAN S. SKAZKIN WAS INTRODUCING THE PRESENT SPEECH. CORRESPONDING MEMBER OF THE USSR Academy of Sciences Yu. Frantsev, WRITERS V. BELYAEV, S. LVOV, CANDIDATE OF PHILOSOPHICAL SCIENCES V. CHERTIKHIN, POETS S. SHCHIPACHEV, A. BEZYMENSKY, V. BERESTOV, JOURNALIST A. BELOV, FORMER PROFESSOR OF THE THEOLOGIST IYA A. OSIPOV.

Presidium of the evening "Science, literature and art against religion". From left to right: V. P. Belyaev, S. P. Shchipachev, K. P. Frantsev, V. A. Chertikhin, L. I. Vasiliev, A. V. Belov, A. I. Bezymensky, A. A. Osipov. Speaker SD Skazkin.

BELOW WE PUBLISH A SUMMARY OF THE SPEECHES OF SOME PARTICIPANTS OF THE EVENING.


DISCOVER WITH THE FACTS
Academician S. SKAZKIN

It goes without saying that as long as the world is split into two camps, there will always be an ideological struggle between them.

In order to understand what is happening now in the capitalist world, I would like to dwell on what the bourgeoisie is doing to strengthen its positions. She believes that the best way to do this is by restoring the authority of religion. In a country like the United States of America, where three-quarters of the entire population are Protestants, descendants of Puritans, big business and monopolies now support the Catholic Church. Why? As true businessmen, they are quite frank about this: Protestantism is too rational, there is too much of the mind in it. And Catholicism is a religion that affects the emotional side of a person, in other words, it better fools the people, that's why they support it.

What is being done in this direction?

There are several Catholic universities in the United States that have developed a large publishing. Only at the Catholic University of Washington, in this center of Catholic education in America, over five thousand dissertations on the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas have been published in the last 30 years. The works of this philosopher of the Catholic Church, who lived in the 13th century, were in 1879 proclaimed by Pope Leo XIII the philosophical basis of Catholicism. And therefore, with such perseverance, modern Catholics study the philosophy of Aquinas. There is a point of view that religion, especially Catholic religion, if it does not save the bourgeoisie, then at least strengthens its position and, most importantly, can deal a blow to socialism, Marxism-Leninism and the Soviet Union in particular.

Now I have a book of more than 500 pages by a certain Gommes on my desk. On the first page, he says: "I conceived this book with the aim of subjecting Marxism-Leninism, dialectical materialism, to a thorough analysis from the standpoint of the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas."

Lack of time does not allow to state the essence of the work, but some of her thoughts are very characteristic. He says: “The Marxist method is imbued with historicism; Historicism is the basis of all Marxism, Marxism is a theory that considers both nature and man in his development, therefore, in Marxism, man is always irresistibly striving to improve the instruments of production. God, who exists for the author as a living being, does not exist for Marxism. Therefore, this godless institution and godless theory must be completely destroyed.

It is known that the church has always been associated with the most reactionary currents. Theologians themselves do not deny this. At all times, churches that claim to be universal (there are three of them: Christian, Muslim and Buddhism) have always made it their task to preserve the existing order. What does this mean in our language? Always guarded existing system operation. So it was in the slave-owning, feudal, capitalist world. This will not be the case, of course, only under socialism. But that is precisely why Gommes is an opponent of socialism.

How should we act? Of course, we need to train cadres who would act with anti-religious propaganda. But how? Here I recall one of Engels’ remarkable statements found in his papers: “A religion like Christianity cannot be done away with only with the help of ridicule and attacks, it must be overcome scientifically, that is, by historical explanation, and even natural science is not able to cope with this task (see the Archive of K. Marx and F. Engels, vol. 10, p. 352).

And in my department - I head the department of the history of the Middle Ages at Moscow University - I give in lectures - sometimes briefly, it is true - the history of Catholicism. I believe that presenting the history of the Catholic Church from the point of view of Marxism-Leninism is the best form of anti-religious propaganda. When you talk about the horrors that the Catholic Church did in its time, your hair stands on end. Let me give you just one fact.

In the second half of the 15th century, 1,500 "witches" were burned in the eastern part of France, adjacent to Switzerland. We know with you that there are no witches, and the people who fell on the fire were either mentally ill or, out of ignorance, believed in the devil. In most cases, these are healers who treated people with folk remedies. And these women were burned.

It is curious to note that in the 17th century Protestants burned "witches" at the stake. What abominations were covered up with the flag of religion? And only then will our propagandists be strong when they know the history of the church well. Unfortunately, we don't have many of those people.

Now in the West they say that Catholicism is being revived. What explains this? It can be explained only by one thing - the fear of the bourgeoisie, which clutches at straws, supporting Catholicism in every possible way, in fear of a possible collapse. Recently, a book was published there called "Be wise as snakes and meek as doves." In this pamphlet one can read that a church leader in the socialist countries must not only be able to crawl in unnoticed and slip away unnoticed, but also be able to sting, and in extreme cases send the enemy to the next world. What is the direction of these words can be seen from the fact that Moscow is called the center of hellish forces as a "symbol of the Antichrist."

A historical examination of the activities of various religions, including the Christian religion as a whole, provides a lot of material that directly shows that the church has always stood on the side of the ruling classes.


WHAT THE EYES SEEN
Writer V. BELYAEV

Academician S. D. Skazkin expressed a very correct idea that religion should be exposed by facts.

Unfortunately, we often resort to well-known, outdated facts, sometimes forgetting the events of recent years. IN Lately The Vatican and the new Pope Paul VI are trying, albeit timidly, to criticize the so-called mistakes of the Catholic Church in the past, while remembering Galileo and Giordano Bruno as innocent martyrs who fell victim to the mistakes of the old church. By criticizing these mistakes, they want to cover up the more modern atrocities of the church.

A few years ago, the Ministry of Culture of Ukraine offered me to write a script on any anti-religious topic. I began to sort through the events of my life, and the words of one of the famous writers, Joseph Conrad, suddenly came to mind: “Letters may be lost, lies may be written, but what the eyes have seen is the truth and remains in memory.”

I remembered many facts from my own life when I had to come into contact with religious practice. In the years of hunger, in my distant childhood, as a boy, I carried a censer behind a portly archimandrite - the rector of the monastery of St. Athanasius, which is located near Lubny. I waved the censer, but I kept thinking: will this important monk give me at least a few pieces of sugar from the wagon that he stole and dragged to his monastery?

I remembered the first spiritual pastor - priest Serafimovich, a tall, very handsome old man who gathered the children of the outskirts of Kamenetz-Podolsk on the churchyard of St. George's Church. He wanted to protect us from the influence of the revolution and did it very subtly, bribing unstable children's souls with multi-colored little books - the lives of saints, which he gave after each conversation. We willingly came to these talks and listened as the priest read fairy tales written in Aesopian language. We understood the true meaning of these tales a little later, when on one of the autumn days of 1921 military carts drove up to the church and Chekists in leather jackets ordered the church cellars to be opened; from there they pulled out a Maxim machine gun, rifles, boxes of ammunition. The enemies of the revolution used their faithful, primordial ally, the church, to prepare a counter-revolutionary coup in our city.

In more recent times, the world had a chance to see the active actions of churchmen on different parallels of the globe. But from what I saw, the conversation with the head of the Greek Catholic Church in Lvov, Metropolitan and Count Andrey Sheptytsky, was most impressive. The spiritual leader of the Uniates, nicknamed by the nationalists "Ukrainian Moses", in 1940 he did not hesitate to openly express his anti-Soviet views. He protested against the introduction of pioneer detachments in schools, complained about why the teaching of the law of God to children was forbidden, threatened to write memorandums to the Soviet government and wrote them. In the meantime, he gathered his agents for illegal conferences in the same way as then, during the First World War, he urged believers to remain faithful to the Austro-Hungarian monarch Franz Joseph of Habsburg.

However, he could not act otherwise, for he was closely associated with many of the ruling dynasties of Europe. The Uniate Church subordinate to him, the religious springboard of the Vatican, created to absorb all Orthodoxy, served all the oppressors of the common people faithfully for centuries.

At the same time, it was quite obvious to me that this was a cunning and intelligent, highly educated enemy, not like many Orthodox bishops. But after the war, it became known that almost no church compromised itself like the Greek Catholic Church, led by Andrey Sheptytsky. Taking wishful thinking, she was firmly convinced of the inevitable fall of the Soviet system and that she would be the first to fulfill the far-reaching plans for the religious expansion of the Vatican.

That is why I decided to show many of the actions of this church and its hierarchs, first in the script, and then in the film Ivanna. I wanted to prove precisely with facts how, in the hard times of people's grief, the church completely exposed the falsity of its commandment "Thou shalt not kill" and how in a slave way it served any bloody Nazi occupier, on the belt buckle of which there was an inscription: "Gott mit UIS!" - "God is with us!".

There is a scene in the film that the clerics would very much like to consign to oblivion: the aged Sheptytsky receives the chief of German military intelligence, the notorious Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, in his chambers. Canaris came to Sheptytsky to ask for help from Nazi Germany in the supply of cannon fodder from Ukrainian youth. Sheptytsky agreed and, after the terrible defeat of the sixth army of Field Marshal Paulus on the Volga, in the summer of 1943, he blessed the creation of the Ukrainian SS division "Galicia", directly subordinate to the Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler. The Metropolitan sent his best canons to the division and appointed it Protopresbyter, Doctor of Theology and Mitrat Basil Laba, who is now quietly residing in Canada. Its representatives took part in parades and other ceremonies of the division, when it marched under the command of Nazi officers along the streets of Lvov and Stanislav with flags "To Moscow!".

From the point of view of even a primitive political mind, it was madness to bless the church to the new SS formation of the Nazis after the fate of the war had been decided. But, blinded by hatred for communism, Sheptytsky and his hierarchs went for broke. Come what may! They plugged their ears, closed the windows, trying not to hear the roar of the Soviet guns, which were already thundering near Brody, where the division had been thrown. They closed their windows and ears, hoping that the Almighty would work a miracle and grant victory to their main political boss, Hitler, whose troops they greeted with bells in June 1941. But the miracle didn't happen. Soviet army reappeared on the streets of Lvov, and soon after the death of Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky, together with members of the commission investigating German atrocities, we came to the chapter house on Svyato-Juraska Hill to Sheptytsky's successor, then Archbishop Joseph Slipy. Some of the uninformed members of the commission naively believed that this experienced Jesuit, a frequenter of all fascist banquets, would willingly put his signature under the act of Nazi atrocities.

It wasn't there. Slipy flatly refused to sign the act and said that he was not aware of any such atrocities. You never know what people greedy for sensations are talking about?

Then I noticed his excelence, that hundreds of Lvov residents told us that in the summer, when the Nazis burned hundreds and thousands of corpses of their victims on the sands outside the suburb of Lychakov, the smell of burning bodies was heard in the city center and on the Holy Jurassic Hill.

You see, young man,” Vladyka Slipy replied cynically to me, stroking the diamond panagia with his well-groomed fingers, “even in summer I have a habit of keeping the windows in the chapterhouse closed and I don’t know about any smells of the vain secular world ...

Not only this conversation prompted me to write a script designed to show the true face of the Greek Catholic Church.

A few years after visiting the chapter, I happened to find myself in a dense forest near Brody. In one of the ravines I saw a pile of white skulls. Rains and winds, autumn slush and melting snows have bleached them. Another reminder of the terrible war, I thought, and asked the collective farmer accompanying me:

Whose skulls are these?

3 divisions "Galicia", - my companion answered in a calm, ordinary voice.

It must have been not the first time he had come across such traces of war. And for a long time I stood over a pile of white skulls and thought about the monstrous betrayal of the church.

And one more circumstance made me take up my pen and tell the truth about the Uniate Church. On October 24, 1949, that is, almost fifteen years ago, Yaroslav Galan, an outstanding Ukrainian writer of the tribunes, a communist, an exposer of the servants of darkness, was meanly killed by the pupils of the church - Ukrainian nationalists in his office. He mercilessly showed the behind-the-scenes side of religion, exposed its false morals, its betrayal.

Having prepared mentally the physical murderers of Yaroslav Galan, putting into their hands an ax consecrated by the clerics and, in particular, by the priest Denis Lukashevich, whose son was sent to commit this bloody atrocity, the church remained true to its ancient tradition - a cruel reprisal against dissidents, especially those who know well many of its innermost secrets.

And Yaroslav Galan was one of those very dangerous and active enemies of the church. He did not want darkness, but light for his liberated people. He wanted all the forces, all the energy and mind of the people to be unchained and freed from the tenacious and sticky fetters of religious prejudice and deceit.

When a soldier falls on the battlefield with enemies, his comrades in arms and like-minded people should take a rifle from the hands of the fallen and continue the fight.

We must continue the brave and necessary, honest work of Yaroslav Galan, mobilizing all the forces of our science and literature to fight the servants of darkness.

Photo captions:

1. Unknown portrait of Yaroslav Galan, dating back to 1945. The photo perfectly conveys the courageous appearance of an unbending fighter against religion. This picture was given to the writer V. Belyaev by the reader A. Akimov.

2. "White brothers", who are preparing the Vatican in Tunisia for missionary work in Africa.

The year of publishing: 1964

Edited by M. D. Millionshchikov

Science and Humanity 1964

This old edition was issued in: 1964. Printing house: Publishing house "Knowledge". Science and humanity 1964. Author of the book: Edited by M. D. Millionshchikov. For bibliophiles and collectors of books on the topic: thematic reference books, applied sciences. Place of publication Moscow

Science and Humanity is a popular science international yearbook published in the USSR in Russian since 1962 by the Znanie publishing house, the Knowledge All-Union Society and the USSR Academy of Sciences. ISSN 0201-680X.
One of the main themes of the yearbook "Science and Humanity" is the international cooperation of scientists in the name of peace. The yearbook is published by the Znanie publishing house and is a full-fledged color edition containing articles on the topics: "Man", "Earth", "Chronicle of Science", articles on the microcosm, etc. This book will introduce us to an amazing world where the mind questions nature, where an inquisitive eye peers into the atom and into the expanses of the universe. This world is called science. This book will show you the face of modern science. You will learn about the latest victories of human talent and the questions that science faces today.
Circulation 100,000 copies.


Publication year: 1964
Place of publication: Moscow
Publisher, printing house: Znanie Publishing House
Book binding: Modern binding
Lot safety: Excellent
Edition size format: Standard format edition (from 120x165 to 170x240mm)

  • Book binding: Modern binding
  • Publication year: 1964
  • Edition size format: Standard format edition (from 120x165 to 170x240mm)
  • Edited by M. D. Millionshchikov
  • Lot security: Excellent
  • Publisher, printing house: Publishing house "Knowledge"
  • Place of publication: Moscow

  • 1910 approximately P. Gorlov,

    For lovers of old publications on the topic: opera, ballet, theater. Published: circa 1910. Theater history. (Miniature library "Science and life"). Publisher: Edition "Science and Life"....

    25 €


  • 1966 Edited by M. D. Millionshchikov,

    The edition was printed in: 1966. The book was published in: Znanie Publishing House. This book was written: Edited by M. D. Millionshchikov. For bibliophiles and collectors of books on the topic: ...

    30 €


  • 1905 Edited by F.S. Gruzdev,

    "Science and Life" is a monthly popular science illustrated magazine general profile. Founded in 1890. Matvey Nikanorovich Glubokovsky (1857-1903). The aim of the magazine...

    The journal "Science and Life" was founded in 1890. Its creator, Matvey Nikanorovich Glubokovsky (1857–1903), was an original and versatile personality. Born into the family of a poor rural priest in the Vologda province. He graduated from the seminary, but did not follow in his father's footsteps (by the way, his brother Nikolai became a prominent theologian, emigrated after 1917). He studied at the Lazarevsky Institute of Oriental Languages, but did not become an orientalist. He volunteered for the army, but did not become a military man either. He graduated from the medical faculty of Moscow State University in 1885, received a diploma as a doctor, but medicine did not become his profession. While still a student, he began working as a proofreader at Moskovskie Vedomosti, and soon began to lead the main sections of the newspaper, write editorials, and make scientific reviews. He also published in many other Russian newspapers and magazines. He was the author of poems, stories, plays and scientific treatises on medicine, mathematics and mineralogy. Even before the advent of Esperanto, he proposed a project for a world language based on mathematics. Patented several inventions.

    In 1890 he created his weekly magazine, whose goal in the first issue was proclaimed "the popularization of knowledge and the communication of all outstanding scientific and practical news in the most popular form, but without falling into a tabloid tone and standing aside from any tendentiousness and politicking." The then "Science and Life" had a format similar to today's "Spark", 16 pages and was published once a week.

    In 1894, the publisher of Science and Life, considering that five rubles for an annual subscription was an unbearable price for many, began to publish the Delo magazine, also popular science, but characterized by a more practical orientation and costing only a ruble a year.

    Due to the serious illness of the editor, the publication of Science and Life ceased in 1900. Even before that, the magazine was clearly fading: its volume was reduced (some issues consisted of only two pages), previously published articles were often repeated, an announcement began to appear about the desire to sell the magazine to other hands.

    In 1904-1906, a journal under this name was published in St. Petersburg under the editorship of the agronomist F.S. Gruzdev, but it was rather a socio-political and artistic publication that did not pay much attention to the popularization of science.

    The publication was resumed only in 1934, under the editorship of N.L. Meshcheryakov (1865–1942), an old Bolshevik, publicist, later a corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences. In a completely different historical setting, the journal largely retained the program of the old Science and Life. But, of course, instead of "renouncing tendentiousness and politicking," the program article that opened the first issue emphasized: "All questions in the articles of our journal will be covered from the point of view of Marxism-Leninism."

    In 1938, "Science and Life" became an organ of the USSR Academy of Sciences, and in 1948, after the creation of the All-Union Society for the Propagation of Political and scientific knowledge passed into the system of this society. These reorganizations noticeably "dried up" the journal and made it of little interest. The content of the magazine was also strongly affected by the general atmosphere prevailing in the country by that time. Almost all the discoveries and developments of Soviet scientists could not be written for reasons of extreme secrecy. It was impossible to write about the achievements of foreign science and technology - after all, this is propaganda of the capitalist way of life. Explanatory articles on many new branches of science and technology, for example, on the bourgeois sciences of genetics and cybernetics, could not appear in the journal. It was impossible to report even some natural phenomena, for example, earthquakes on the territory of the USSR, so that hostile propaganda would not pick up this topic.

    From 1943 to 1961, the journal was headed by Alexander Sergeevich Fedorov, a metallurgical engineer.

    A new era of Science and Life began in 1961, when Viktor Nikolaevich Bolkhovitinov (1912–1980), a physicist by education, a journalist by profession, and a poet by vocation, became the editor-in-chief. Viktor Nikolayevich was born into a family of teachers in the city of Sasov (now the Ryazan region). He grew up in an atmosphere of deep respect for knowledge and an equally deep conviction in the need to share this knowledge, to spread it.

    VN Bolkhovitinov began his career as a tractor driver at a local state farm, then worked as a miner and electrician. After graduating from the Faculty of Physics of Moscow State University, he worked as an engineer-physicist, taught at high school, at the university, was on research work at the research institute. More than ten years he worked in the magazine "Technology - Youth". VN Bolkhovitinov's Peru owns artistic essays on figures of science and culture - Mendeleev, Tsiolkovsky, Newton, Lobachevsky, Gorky, Leonov. His book "Centuries" about the outstanding Russian physicist was published more than once in the ZhZL series. He was a member of the editorial board of Litgazeta. Bolkhovitinov also wrote poems, but never published them in his journal; several poems were published in Science and Life only after his death.

    He dreamed of creating his own popular science magazine, which was no less difficult in the middle of the last century than it is now, although for different reasons. First, Viktor Nikolaevich tested and refined his ideas about what a publicly available journal about science and technology should be like, creating in 1956 under the auspices of the Komsomol a magazine for young people called "Young Technician", which had big success among young people. A few years later, having managed to achieve a special resolution of the almighty Central Committee of the CPSU, Bolkhovitinov undertook the reorganization of the boring journal Science and Life, then intended mainly for lecturers and activists of the All-Union Society for the Dissemination of Political and Scientific Knowledge.

    In just a few months, having taken with him most of the staff from the editorial office of "Young Technician", Viktor Nikolayevich turned the magazine into an interesting, lively and accessible reading for the whole family. Of course, the situation in the country, which had changed by that time due to the “thaw”, and the weakening of censorship and ideological restrictions contributed to the success. The circulation in a few years grew more than 20 times, so that the subscription had to be limited so that all the paper produced in the USSR did not go to Science and Life. The design, the scheme of the magazine, laid down in 1961, turned out to be so promising and durable that it is maintained to this day, even the main headings invented at that time have been preserved.

    From 1980 to 2008, the magazine was headed by Igor Konstantinovich Lagovsky, an engineer, a participant in World War II, who defended the skies of Moscow. Since 1951, Igor Konstantinovich began to publish in popular science magazines, without leaving the profession of an engineer, and in 1956 V.N. Bolkhovitinov invited him to work in the newly organized "Young Technician". Igor Konstantinovich became there first as a literary worker, and then as deputy editor-in-chief. In September 1960, he moved to Science and Life and worked there as executive secretary until April 1961, when, during the reorganization of the journal, he was appointed deputy editor-in-chief. The author of numerous popular science articles and notes, the author of the book "Your Free Time", which was repeatedly reprinted.

    Now there are not so many employees left in the editorial office who were part of the team created by Bolkhovitinov and his friends, but, apparently, the charge received then is so strong that it is transferred to those who come again. Or maybe the fact is that the new employees, of course, read "Science and Life" in childhood and adolescence.



    Russian and Soviet monthly popular science illustrated magazine of a wide profile. Founded in 1890 by Matvey Nikanorovich Glubokovsky (1857-1903). The purpose of the magazine was proclaimed the popularization of science, and its motto was: "About science - accessible, about life - seriously." The target audience was not limited by age or professional framework. The magazine was published once a week and was small in volume. The publication of the magazine ceased in 1900 due to a serious illness of the editor. In October 1934, the publication of Science and Life was resumed under the editorship of N. L. Meshcheryakov (1865-1942), and since 1938 the publication has become an organ of the USSR Academy of Sciences. Since 1948, the journal has been published by the All-Union Society "Knowledge".

    Since 1961, the journal has been changing its direction and content towards accessibility for a wide range of readers. The circulation of the magazine in the 1970-1980s reached 3 million copies and was one of the highest in the USSR. In 1984, the magazine was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labor. In 1990, the journal was founded by the editorial staff and the Pravda publishing house (since 1992, the Press publishing house).

    Designed as a family reading magazine, it covers wide circle topics, including astrophysics, astronautics, history, biology, chemistry, and medicine. In addition to popular science articles and news of science and technology, the journal constantly contains such headings as " world of hobbies”, “Kunstkamera”, “Little tricks”, “Crossword with fragments”, “Linguistic tasks”, “Advice for a home master”, “For fantasy lovers” and much more. Since 2007, the magazine has a section for schoolchildren called “Uma Chamber”. In 2008, E. L. Lozovskaya became the editor-in-chief of the journal. Circulation for 2009 - about 44 thousand copies, and in 2013 - about 40,000 copies.

    It should be noted that until today the magazine has not lost its familiar recognizable “face” for many decades. And its content is sustained in the same long-term traditions. And it is not surprising that in 2016 the magazine was recognized as the best popular science publication and was awarded the All-Russian Prize "For Loyalty to Science", presented by the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation.

    Bibliography of fantastic journal publications
      1956
    • N. Dolotin. In the world of fantasy: [Article about published books of science fiction] // Science and Life, 1956, No. 11 - p.58-60
      1957
    • Payu Kiy. Blue Beam: Journalist's Notes: [Outline] / Subtitled "A Window to the Future"; Rice. Kaplan // Science and Life, 1957, No. 3 - pp. 48-52
    • M. Vasiliev. Journey to 1977: [Outline] / Subtitled "Window to the Future"; Rice. N. Petrova // Science and Life, 1957, No. 4 - p.48-52
    • Nick. Grishin. The Sun's Twin: [Science Fiction Story] / Subtitled "Window to the Future"; Rice. A. Sysoeva // Science and Life, 1957, No. 7 - p.48-51
    • Yu. S. Khlebtsevich. Flight to Venus: [Essay] / Subtitled "Window to the Future"; Rice. A. Sysoeva // Science and Life, 1957, No. 8 - p.53-56
      1958
    • R. G. Perelman. Galactic Ship Drives: [Outline] / Subtitled "Window to the Future"; Rice. A. Sysoeva // Science and Life, 1958, No. 7 - p.60-64, 1st page incl.
      1960
    • Alexey Sazonov. Star Odyssey: A Science Fiction Tale / Fig. A. Listkova // Science and Life, 1960, No. 10 - p.56-66; No. 11 - p.48-58; No. 12 - p.64-73
    • Alexander Koltsov. The Secret of the White Devils: Story / Fig. E. Skakalsky // Science and Life, 1960, No. 10 - p.66-70
    • Boris Lyapunov. Reporting from space. The twenty-first century: [Essay] / Fig. A. Sysoeva // Science and Life, 1960, No. 11 - pp. 4-8, 16
    • Yu. M. Rall. Intelligent inhabitants of the Universe: [Article, to which excerpts from well-known SF works are attached] / Fig. E. Skakalsky // Science and Life, 1960, No. 11 - pp. 32-40, 1 pp. incl.
      1961
    • Anatoly Dneprov. Professor Leonozov's Experiments: A Science Fiction Story / Fig. A. Sysoeva // Science and Life, 1961, No. 3 - p.52-60
    • Anatoly Dneprov. The Purple Mummy: A Science Fiction Story / Fig. A. Erasova // Science and Life, 1961, No. 7 - p.65-70; No. 8 - p.94-99
    • B. Lyapunov. Conversation with Captain Nemo: [Fantasy and reality in the books of Jules Verne] / Fig. N. Strizhenova // Science and Life, 1961, No. 9 - p.49-51
    • A. N. Studitsky. The Mind of the Universe: An Excerpt from a Science Fiction Novel / Fig. N. Strizhenova // Science and Life, 1961, No. 9 - p.64-71; No. 10 - p.98-103; No. 11 - p.92-97
    • R. Bradbury. Green Morning (From the book "The Martian Chronicles"): [Science fiction story] / Per. from English. Z. Bobyr; Rice. E. Bachurina // Science and Life, 1961, No. 9 - p. 91-93
    • Boris Lyapunov. Earth - planet: [Life amends the assumptions of science fiction writers Tsiolkovsky and Belyaev] // Science and Life, 1961, No. 10 - p.27-28
    • B. Lyapunov. The future is on the screen: [About science fiction films] // Science and Life, 1961, No. 12 - pp. 52-55
      1962
    • Boris Sheinin. In the bowels of the planet: Film story / Fig. E. Bachurina // Science and Life, 1962, No. 1 - p. 74-84; No. 2 - p.84-92
    • Roman Yarov. Component of genius: Story / Fig. I. Blioha // Science and Life, 1962, No. 3 - p.64-71
    • I. Warsaw. Robie: Joke Story / Fig. N. Kolchitsky // Science and Life, 1962, No. 4 - p.102-107
    • Robert Sheckley. The Cost of Living: A Science Fiction Story / Abbreviated. per. from English. G. Itkis; Rice. E. Bachurina // Science and Life, 1962, No. 6 - p.64-68
    • Ray Bradbury. Rust: A Science Fiction Story / Per. from English. Z. Bobyr // Science and Life, 1962, No. 8 - p.100-101
    • Roman Yarov. Goodbye, Martian!: Story / Fig. E. Bachurina // Science and Life, 1962, No. 9 - p.82-84
    • Lyon Miller. Available data on the Warp effect: [Fantastic joke story] / Per. from English. I. Inozemtsev // Science and Life, 1962, No. 10 - p.100-103
    • Frederick Brown. Answer: [Fantastic story] / [Translator not specified] // Science and Life, 1962, No. 10 - p.102
    • Isaac Asimov . Sense of Power: A Science Fiction Pamphlet / Per. from English. Z. Bobyr // Science and Life, 1962, No. 11 - p. 81-85
      1963
    • A. E. Kobrinsky. Professor Fool's Discovery: [Science Fiction Story] // Science and Life, 1963, No. 2 - pp. 81-84
    • V. Chuk. "Structure and life of rhinogrades": [Conclusion to the book of Harald Stumpke] // Science and Life, 1963, No. 4 - p. 82
    • A. Clark. The Pacifist: [Science Fiction] Story / Per. from English. Z. Bobyr; Rice. L. Smekhova // Science and Life, 1963, No. 5 - p.88-91
    • V. Tendryakov. Journey of a Century: A Science Fiction Tale / Fig. V. Novozhilova // Science and Life, 1963, No. 9 - p.72-85; No. 10 - p.86-94; No. 11 - p.70-82; No. 12 - p.70-79
    • L. Trauberg. Unknown seer: [On the life and work of Albert Robida] // Science and Life, 1963, No. 12 - p.66-68
      1964
    • Nikita Conversations. Four fours: A chapter from a humorous story / After. prof. V. V. Parina // Science and Life, 1964, No. 1 - p.133-138
    • Valentin Rich. Cassiopeian stories: Fantastic humoresques // Science and Life, 1964, No. 2 - p.150-151
        The feat of Professor Zart - p.150 Distribution - p.150-151 Keck and Kiber - p.151
    • Arthur C. Clark. Sands of Mars: A Science Fiction Novel / Reprinted in abbreviated form; Per. [from English] Natalia Trauberg; Rice. Evg. Bachurin // Science and Life, 1964, No. 4 - p.120-129; No. 5 - p.124-132; No. 6 - p.104-117
    • Raymond F. Jones. Noise Level: A Science Fiction Story / Per. [from English] Yuri Loginov; Rice. Evg. Bachurin // Science and Life, 1964, No. 8 - p.126-136; No. 9 - p.138-145
    • Alexander Volkov . Seven Underground Kings: fairy tale/ Printed in abbreviated form; Rice. L. Smekhova // Science and Life, 1964, No. 10 - p.73-81; No. 11 - p.126-137; No. 12 - p.120-130
      1965
    • V. Kaverin. How Baron Brambeus appeared: [Article about Osip Senkovsky] // Science and Life, 1965, No. 4 - p.127-131
    • F. Paul and S. Kornblat. Space Traders: [Science Fiction Novel] / Fragments from the Novel; Per. from English. N. Kuznetsova and T. Shinkar // Science and Life, 1965, No. 5 - pp. 108-115; No. 6 - p.126-130; No. 7 - p.120-128
    • I. Bestuzhev-Lada. Arthur Charles Clark and his book "Features of the Future": [Article] // Science and Life, 1965, No. 7 - p.63-67
    • Nikolai Amosov. Notes from the Future: A Science Fiction Novel. Book one "Start" // Science and life, 1965, / Fig. B. Dashkokova, K. Sokolova // Science and Life, 1965, No. 9 - 8 pp., pp. 97-120; No. 10 - 8 pages incl., pp. 97-121; No. 11 - 8 pages incl., pp. 97-116; No. 12 - 8 pages incl., pp. 97-110.
      1966
    • Bertrand Russell. The Theologian's Nightmare: A Story / Per. from English. G. Lev; Rice. L. Smekhova // Science and Life, 1966, No. 3 - p.86-87
    • Lino Aldani. Orders are not discussed: Humoresque / Per. from Italian. A. Vasiliev; Rice. E. Bachurina // Science and Life, 1966, No. 5 - p.122-125
    • Y. Nikitin. Fantastic micro stories // Science and life, 1966, No. 12 - p.106
        Prehistoric - p.106 Linguistic - p.106
      1967
    • Francis Godwin. The Man in the Moon, or the Extraordinary Journey Made by Dominic Gonzalez, the Spanish Adventurer, or the Air Ambassador: An Excerpt from a Fantasy Novel / Per. [from English] V. Rovinskaya // Science and Life, 1967, No. 4 - p.64-70
    • Vladimir Orlov. Francis Godwin and his book: [Foreword to the novel by F. Godwin] // Science and Life, 1967, No. 4 - p.66-67
    • V. Kaverin. Snow Maiden: Fantastic story // Science and life, 1967, No. 5 - p.78-82
    • Alexander Kazantsev. Martian party: From stories in the wardroom: [Story] // Science and Life, 1967, No. 8 - p.109-113
    • Jean Ferry [Michel Demuth]. Tiger Gentleman: [Story] / Per. from fr. A. Teterevnikova // Science and Life, 1967, No. 9 - p.110-111
    • On the way to the space age: [About K. E. Tsiolkovsky] // Science and Life, 1967, No. 10 - p.78-80
      1968
    • Placid and Museau: [Comic about time travel] // Science and Life, 1968, No. 2 - 6-7th pages incl.; No. 3 - 3rd page of the region.
    • Vadim Nikolaev. Star Patrol: Legend of Tomorrow: [Sci-Fi Play] / Fig. G. Novozhilova // Science and Life, 1968, No. 2 - 8 pages incl., pp. 97-108; No. 3 - 8 pages incl., p. 97-109
    • Guy de Maupassant. Martian: [Story] / Per. [from French] L. Stern // Science and Life, 1968, No. 8 - p.122-124
    • Alexander Volkov . The fiery god of marans: A fairy tale / Abbreviated. option; Rice. L. Vladimirsky // Science and Life, 1968, No. 9 - p.108-116; No. 10 - p.120-129; No. 11 - p.124-133; No. 12 - p.134-143
    • Robert Young. The Stars Are Calling, Mr. Keats: A Fantastic Tale / Per. from English. R. Oblonskaya // Science and Life, 1968, No. 10 - p.106-111
      1969
    • Y. Sokolov. Line from a poem: Fantastic story // Science and life, 1969, No. 8 - p.108-117
    • A. J. Deutsch. Mobius strip: Sci-fi humoresque / Per. from English. Tatyana Shinkar // Science and Life, 1969, No. 12 - p.102-109
      1970
    • Clifford Simak. Machine: Fantastic story / Per. from English. M. Yanovskaya // Science and Life, 1970, No. 2 - p.121-124
    • Alexander Volkov . Yellow fog: Fairy tale / Abridged version // Science and Life, 1970, No. 3 - p.129-137; No. 6 - p.130-137; No. 7 - p.103-109; No. 8 - p.106-112
    • Boris Lyapunov. "Dreams, legends and first fantasies": [Article] // Science and Life, 1970, No. 5 - p.90-95
    • Isaac Asimov . Ah, Batten, Batten!: Humoresque / Per. [from English] Tatyana Shinkar // Science and Life, 1970, No. 10 - p.133-139
    • F. Rabiza. A book about fantasy: [Rec. on the book by B. Lyapunov "In the World of Dreams" (1970)] // Science and Life, 1970, No. 12 - p. 140
      1971
    • "Star Patrol" in France: [On the staging of the eponymous fantasy play by Vadim Nikolaev by the student theater] // Science and Life, 1971, No. 4 - p. 75
      1972
    • Ludek Peshek. Icy rings of Saturn: [First reproduction] // Science and Life, 1972, No. 4 - 4th page incl.
    • Ludek Peshek. Icy rings of Saturn: [Second reproduction] // Science and life, 1972, No. 4 - 4th page incl.
      1973
    • Placid and Muso: [Comic book about a naughty robot] // Science and Life, 1973, No. 12 - 8th page incl., p.97
      1974
    • Nikita Bogoslovsky. For you, science fiction writers: A practical guide for beginners // Science and Life, 1974, No. 1 - pp. 157-159
    • Leonid Leonov. The universe according to Dymkov: A fragment of the novel // Science and Life, 1974, No. 11 - p.38-43
      1975
    • Keith Pedler, Jerry Davis. Mutant-59: A Science Fiction Novel / Per. from English. K. Senina // Science and Life, 1975, No. 1 - p.128-142; No. 2 - p.130-143; No. 3 - p.130-144
    • N. Plate. A novel about the responsibility of scientists: [Afterword to the novel by K. Pedler and J. Davis "Mutant-59"] // Science and Life, 1975, No. 3 - p. 145
    • L. Peshek. Jupiter, view from the nearest moon: [Reproduction] // Science and Life, 1975, No. 4 - 5th page incl.
    • Hieronymus Stebnitsky. Abduction Symposium: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life, 1975, No. 6 - p.128-130
      1976
    • D. Wodhems. "Time is money": [Science fiction story] / Per. from English. I. Gurova // Science and Life, 1976, No. 5 - p.120-130
      1977
    • Martin Gardner. The Professor Who Had No Side: A Fantastic Story / Per. from English. I. Vereshchagin; Author's note // Science and Life, 1977, No. 5 - p.125-129
    • Aldous Huxley. Little Archimedes: [Story] / Per. from English. S. Maizels // Science and Life, 1977, No. 8 - p.122-132
      1978
    • Isaac Asimov . Discovery of Walter Seals: [Fantastic story] / Per. from English. T. Ginzburg // Science and Life, 1978, No. 1 - p.126-133
    • Tatiana Slutskaya. Bore: [Fantastic] humoresque // Science and Life, 1978, No. 3 - p.150-151
    • Nikita Bogoslovsky. Grains of Budlentura: A Science Fiction Story // Science and Life, 1978, No. 4 - p.113
    • E. Brandis. L. N. Tolstoy illustrates Jules Verne: [Article] // Science and Life, 1978, No. 9 - p.53-57
      1979
    • Boris Privalov. Through the mouth of a baby: A story from the cycle "Unobvious-probable" // Science and Life, 1979, No. 6 - p.129-131
    • Friedrich Brown. Volnoviki: Ecological humoresque / Per. from English. M. Litvinova // Science and Life, 1979, No. 7 - p.128-136
    • Ursula Le Guin. April in Paris: A fantastic story / Per. from English. Nora Gal // Science and Life, 1979, No. 9 - p.126-131
    • B. Kogan. If you slow down the globe ...: Sci-fi humoresque // Science and Life, 1979, No. 10 - p. 85
      1980
    • Yuri Prokopenko. Protection: Humoresque / C Ukrainian. Per. Yan Ostrovsky // Science and Life, 1980, No. 1 - p.112-113
    • Paul Gallico. Jenny: [Novel] / Per. from English. N. Trauberg // Science and Life, 1980, No. 1 - p.138-145; No. 2 - p.112-118; No. 3 - p.126-134
    • Y. Kotlyarsky. Master BIS-eighteen: [Fantastic] humoresque // Science and Life, 1980, No. 3 - p.102-103
    • Placid and Muso: Robot: [Comic] // Science and Life, 1980, No. 8 - 7th page incl.
    • Isaac Asimov . Such a beautiful day ...: [Fantastic story] / Per. from English. V. Artamonov and L. Dymova // Science and Life, 1980, No. 8 - p.146-155
    • A. Kolbintsev. What is Bandryuk doing?: [Fantastic] humoresque // Science and Life, 1980, No. 12 - p.126-128
      1981
    • Gianni Rodari. Three stories / Per. from Italian. L. Vershinin // Science and Life, 1981, No. 1 - p.138-145
        Fisherman at the Garibaldi Bridge - pp.138-140 Powered by Tin Cans - pp.141-143 Mr. Kappa and the Betrothed - pp.143-145
    • V. Pronin and N. Leonidov. My second "I", or the Situation not provided for by the program: Humoresque (Authorized translation from a foreign language) // Science and Life, 1981, No. 3 - p.128-130
    • Vladimir Slutsky. Ode to a Fairy Tale: Humoresque // Science and Life, 1981, No. 5 - p.132
    • James Thurber. "Macbeth" under investigation: A story / Per. from English. T. Zaymovskaya and A. Sharov // Science and Life, 1981, No. 7 - p.147-149
    • "The Secret of the Third Planet": [About the cartoon of the same name by the Soyuzmultfilm film studio and color frames from the cartoon] // Science and Life, 1981, No. 9 - 8th page incl., p.97
    • A. Kolbintsev. Operation PE-KA: [Fantastic] humoresque // Science and Life, 1981, No. 12 - p.150-151
      1982
    • L. Ziman. One hundred years of Pinocchio: [About the fairy tales of Carlo Collodi and Alexei Tolstoy] // Science and Life, 1982, No. 1 - p.118-121
      1983
    • Friedrich Schiller. Spiritualist: A fragment of the novel / Per. from German M. Mikhailova // Science and Life, 1983, No. 3 - p.116-127
    • Gianni Rodari. Cows from Vipetano: [Story] / Per. from Italian. I. Konstantinova // Science and Life, 1983, No. 7 - p. 97-99
    • Leonardo da Vinci. Fairy tales, legends, parables / [Trans. from Italian] // Science and Life, 1983, No. 9 - p.68-69.
        Paper and ink - p.68-69 Bee and drones - p.69
    • D. Konstantinovsky. Sineoki: Science Fiction Story // Science and Life, 1983, No. 10 - pp. 142-144
      1984
    • Ilya Yanitov. Teacher and student: Fairy tale // Science and life, 1984, No. 1 - p.128-130
    • Christopher Anvil. Heuristics: Story / Per. from English. L. Dymov // Science and Life, 1984, No. 2 - p.109-111
      1985
    • V. Berdnikov. Pictures of the artist Darov: Fantastic story // Science and life, 1985, No. 6 - p.147-149
    • Moses Markov. Physiologist Niu's Mistake: (On a long-distance train): Sci-fi novel / Magazine version; Rice V. Loginov // Science and Life, 1985, No. 8 - p.116-131; No. 9 - p.118-131; No. 10 - p.110-123
      1986
    • V. Firsov. Return: Fantastic story // Science and life, 1986, No. 11 - p.134-143
    • Herbert W. Franke. The Berry Winterstein Story: [Fantastic Tale] / Per. [from German] R. Rybkina // Science and Life, 1986, No. 12 - pp. 144-149
      1987
    • Astrid Lindgren. Roni, the robber's daughter: [Fairy tale] / Per. from the Swedish and prepared a magazine version of L. Lungin; Artist I. Wikland // Science and Life, 1987, No. 4 - p.116-129; No. 5 - p.118-131; No. 6 - p.118-130
    • L. Lungina. About Astrid Lindgren and her new heroes: Notes of a translator // Science and life, 1987, No. 4 - p.129-131
    • Vladimir Gubarev. "Phantom": [Story] / Journal version // Science and Life, 1987, No. 6 - p.67-81; No. 7 - p.56-71
      1988
    • A. Vulis. "Hoffmaniad" by botanist X, or Literary deeds of Professor A. V. Chayanov: [Article] // Science and Life, 1988, No. 5 - p. 98
    • Alexander Chayanov. The extraordinary but true adventures of Count Fyodor Mikhailovich Buturlin, described according to family legends by the Moscow botanist H. and illustrated by the phytopathologist Y: [The Tale] // Science and Life, 1988, No. 5 - p. 99-106; No. 6 - p.139-149
      1989
    • Stanislav Lem. The thirteenth journey of Iyon the Quiet (From the book "The Star Diaries of Iyon the Quiet": [Fantastic novel] / Transl. [from the floor.] Z. Bobyr // Science and Life, 1989, No. 1 - p. 142-149
    • Andrey Nuikin. Knighting: A Fairy Tale for Teenagers of All Ages / Fig. E. Smolyan // Science and Life, 1989, No. 2 - p.136-146; No. 3 - p.142-151; No. 4 - p.121-131
    • John Coin. Call me!: [Science fiction story] / Per. [from English] V. Bakanov // Science and Life, 1989, No. 7 - p.150-151
    • V. Makhlin. Where do Lilliputians come from?: [An article about the origin of the name of the heroes of J. Swift's novel "Gulliver's Travels"] // Science and Life, 1989, No. 9 - p.120-121
      1990
    • J. Ballard. Twelfth track: [Fantastic story] / Per. from English. T. Shinkar // Science and Life, 1990, No. 6 - p.148-150
    • Herbert W. Franke. The Last Programmer: [Fantastic story] / Per. with him. Rostislav Rybkin // Science and Life, 1990, No. 7 - p.150-153
    • V. Lishevsky. Five minutes to Mars: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life, 1990, No. 10 - p.152-153
      1991
    • Agatha Christie. Temple of Astarte: [Fantastic story] / Per. from English. T. Shinkar // Science and Life, 1991, No. 1 - p.131-136
    • Ursula K. Le Guin. Wizard of Earthsea: [Fantasy novel] / Per. [from English] Irina Togoeva; Rice. Denis Gordeev // Science and Life, 1991, No. 2 - p.148-154; No. 3 - p.147-153; No. 4 - p.144-151; No. 5 - p.142-151; No. 6 - p.142-150; No. 7 - p.140-151; No. 8 - p.138-149; No. 9 - p.124-139
    • Nikita Bogoslovsky. Three fantastic scientific stories // Science and Life, 1991, No. 2 - pp. 126-128
        Einstein in danger - p.126-127 Laughing gas - p.127-128 Obvious but probable - p.128
    • Jerome Klapka Jerome. New utopia: [Fantastic story] / Publication by A. Blum. [Trans. from English] // Science and Life, 1991, No. 8 - p. 80-85
    • A. Barkov. Who are they - the Master and Margarita?: [Article] / Photo from the collection of A. Zadikyan and. B. Myagkova // Science and Life, 1991, No. 9 - p. 88-96; No. 10 - p.52-58
    • Wyn N. Whiteford. One way - to tomorrow: [Fantastic story] / Per. from English. Nora Gal // Science and Life, 1991, No. 12 - p.138-141
      1992
    • Ursula K. Le Guin. The Tombs of Atuan: [Fantasy novel] / Per. [from English] I. Togoeva; Drawings by Elena Kachelaeva // Science and Life, 1992, No. 1 - pp. 106-118; No. 2 - p.102-113; No. 3 - p.34-46; No. 4 - p.104-113; No. 5-6 - p.120-129
    • Julius Kagarlitsky. Conan Doyle without Sherlock Holmes: [Preface to the story "Silver Mirror"] // Science and Life, 1992, No. 7 - p.104
    • A. Conan Doyle. Silver Mirror: A Story / Per. V. Kulagina-Yartseva // Science and Life, 1992, No. 7 - p.104-108
    • Ursula K. Le Guin. On the last shore: [Science fiction story] / Printed in abbreviated form; Per. from English. I. Togoeva; Rice. E. Kachelaeva // Science and Life, 1992, No. 8 - p.110-123; No. 9 - p.107-119; No. 10 - p.106-117; No. 11 - p.104-119; No. 12 - p.110-122; 1993, No. 1 - p.110-121
      1993
    • Alex Hamilton. Warning: [Fantastic story] / Per. [from English] A. Leshchinsky // Science and Life, 1993, No. 2 - p.124-128
    • J[ames] Hilton. Lost Horizon: [Fantasy novel] / Magazine edition; Per. [from English] N. Gvozdareva; Rice. E. Bashkirova // Science and Life, 1993, No. 5 - p. 98-105; No. 6 - p. 80-84; No. 7 - p. 80-88; No. 8 - p.98-106; No. 9 - p.115-122; No. 10 - p.; No. 11 - p.113-121
    • E. Berzin, Doctor of Historical Sciences. Dr. Faust: [About Johann Georg Faust] // Science and Life, 1993, No. 7 - p.121-126
    • Cosmos of Marina Sterligova // Science and Life, 1993, No. 9 - 8th page of the tab
    • M. Sterligova. Quanta of space: [Reproduction] // Science and Life, 1993, No. 9 - 8th page of the tab
      1994
    • Barbara Hambley. Dragonbane: [Fantasy novel] / Magazine version. Per. from English. E. Lukina; Rice. I. Perlovoi // Science and Life, 1994, No. 1 - p.110-123; No. 2 - p.116-129; No. 3 - p.110-119; No. 4 - p.112-128; No. 5 - p.112-124; No. 6 - p.104-117; No. 7 - p.114-128; No. 8 - p.116-127; No. 9 - p.115-129; No. 10 - p.113-122
      1995
    • E. Voiskunsky. Chimera: [Fantastic] tale / Fig. N. Koshkina // Science and Life, 1995, No. 7 - p.104-117; No. 8 - p.118-127; No. 9 - p.120-126; No. 10 - p.119-130; No. 11 - p.120-127
      1996
    • Julius Kagarlitsky. "Foresight" of the 21st century: [Preface to the "Experience of Autobiography" by G. Wells] // Science and Life, 1996, No. 3 - p.112-113
    • Herbert Wells. Experience of autobiography: Chapters from a book / Journal version; [Trans. from English] // Science and Life, 1996, No. 3 - p.116-125
    • Wilkie Collins. The Ghost of John Jago, or the Living Dead: [The Tale] / Per. from English. E. Melenevskaya // Science and Life, 1996, No. 5 - p.112-123; No. 6 - p.108-121
    • Jack Ritchie. Darling, do not kill indiscriminately!: [Story] / Per. from English. E. Melenevskaya; Drawings by N. Doroshenko // Science and Life, 1996, No. 7 - p.112-120
    • D. Plachta. Near future: [Story] / Per. from English. G. Lyateva // Science and Life, 1996, No. 11 - p.121-122
    • D. Plachta. Awakening: [Story] / Per. from English. A. Korzhenevsky // Science and life, 1996, No. 11 - p.122
      1997
    • Isaac Asimov . Link: [Fantastic story] / Per. [from English] A. Kazakevich and G. Lyatiev // Science and Life, 1997, No. 3 - p.146-147
    • Sergei Sukhinov. Fairy of the Emerald City: [Tale-tale] / Fig. M. Misuno // Science and Life, 1997, No. 4 - 8 pages incl., pp. 65-75; No. 5 p.108-115; No. 6 - p.120-128; No. 7 - p.120-127
    • S. Melnikov. Leap Through the Ages: Science Fiction Story // Science and Life, 1997, No. 5 - p.62-64
    • Jules Verne. Paris in the 20th century: [Science fiction novel] / Per. from French by I. Zhelvakova and M. Vishnevskaya // Science and Life, 1997, No. 8 - p.108-120
      1999
    • Ben Bova. Private Entrepreneurship: [Story] / Per. from English. V. Bakanova // Science and Life, 1999, No. 7 - p.108-113
      2000
    • Leonid Vladimirsky. Pinocchio is looking for a treasure: A fairy tale // Science and Life, 2000, No. 1 - p.112-123
    • Kirill Berendeev. Wall: [Story] // Science and Life, 2000, No. 2 - p.126-130
    • Oleg Ovchinnikov. The one that ...: [Fantastic story] // Science and life, 2000, No. 4 - p.120-126
    • Tamara Kryukov. Magician for two hours: [Tale-tale] / Fig. A. Zobninskaya // Science and Life, 2000, No. 5 - p.124-131; No. 6 - s108-111; No. 7 - p.111-114; No. 8 - p.96-98
      2001
    • Igor Podkolodny, Sergey Strelchenko. Fulfillment of desires: [Story] // Science and life, 2001, No. 1 - p.98-99
    • Robert Sheckley. Fishing season: [Fantastic story] / Per. from English. Aram Oganyan // Science and Life, 2001, No. 2 - p.114-120
    • Damon Knight. "Oasis" and aliens: [Fantastic story] / Per. from English. A. Korzhenevsky and G. Lyatiev // Science and Life, 2001, No. 5 - p.122-125
    • Ray Bradbury. Gift: [Fantastic story] / Per. from English. A. Oganyan // Science and Life, 2001, No. 12 - p.22-23
      2002
    • Rostislav Nesterov. Polygon: [Fantastic story] / Fig. V. Maslova // Science and Life, 2002, No. 1 - p.122-124
    • Nina Bowden. The Witch's Daughter: [Story] / Magazine version; Per. from English. Elena Gorskaya; Drawings by V. Maslov // Science and Life, 2002, No. 2 - p.110-121; No. 3 - p.114-122; No. 4 - p.110-118; No. 5 - p. 114-123; No. 6 - p.110-117
    • Roald Dahl. Tasting: [Story] / Per. from English. A. Oganyan; Rice. L. Fedorova // Science and Life, 2002, No. 8 - p.114-120
    • Robert Sheckley. Budgetary planet: [Fantastic story] / Per. from English. A. Oganyan; Rice. L. Fedorova // Science and Life, 2002, No. 9 - p. 90-95
      2003
    • Robert Sheckley. Accountant: [Fantastic story] / Per. from English. Aram Ohanyan; Rice. A. Zobninskaya // Science and Life, 2003, No. 3 - p.118-122
    • Sergei Trishchenko. We were here: [Fantastic story] / Fig. M. Shalaveyene // Science and Life, 2003, No. 4 - p.100-103
    • Tamara Nikolaev. What flower does Kolobok have?: [Fairy tale] / Fig. M. Shalaveyene // Science and Life, 2003, No. 4 - p.110-111
    • Leonid Leonov. Buryga: [Fantastic story] / Afterword. N. Leonova; Rice. M. Shalaveyene // Science and Life, 2003, No. 5 - p.76-83
    • Sergey Chekmaev. [Fantastic stories] / Fig. M. Shalaveyene // Science and Life, 2003, No. 12 - p.110-117
        An indispensable assistant - p.110-113 Light of life - p.114-117
      2004
    • Kirill Benediktov. Conquistador in Dreamland: [Fantastic story] / Fig. B. Grigorieva // Science and Life, 2004, No. 7 - p.120-128
    • Yuri Nesterenko. From the life of aliens: [Stories] // Science and Life, 2004, No. 8 - p.124-133
        According to the terms of the contract - p.124-129 A ship is waiting for us! – p.130-133
      2005
    • Y. Nesterenko. From the life of aliens: [Fantastic stories] / Fig. I. Shumilkina // Science and Life, 2005, No. 7 - p.117-122
        Viceroy of the Emperor - p.117-119 Dead-end branch - p.119-122
    • A. Nikolaev. Faddey Bulgarin - "Poor Yorick" of Russian journalism: [Article] // Science and Life, 2005, No. 8 - p.118-120
    • Faddey Bulgarin. Plausible Fables, or Wandering the World in the Twenty-ninth Century: [A Fantastic Tale] / Fig. I. Shumilkina // Science and Life, 2005, No. 8 - p.121-133
    • Sergey Chekmaev. Agariki: [Science fiction story] // Science and Life, 2005, No. 10 - p.126-131
    • I. Written. Banal modern detective story: [Fantastic story] / Fig. N. Kundukhova // Science and Life, 2005, No. 11 - p.110-113
    • I. Written. Forced landing: [Fantastic story] / Fig. N. Kundukhova // Science and Life, 2005, No. 12 - p.122-126
    • Andrey Salomatov. Robot Vasya: [Fantastic story] / Fig. M. Shalaveyene // Science and Life, 2005, No. 12 - p.133-134
      2006
    • Yuri Nesterenko. From the life of aliens: Conquerors: [Fantastic story] / Fig. N. Kundukhova // Science and Life, 2006, No. 1 - p.132-136
    • Andrey Salomatov. Tanyusha: [Fantastic story] / Fig. N. Kundukhova // Science and Life, 2006, No. 2 - p.128-129
    • Joseph Written. Rebellious Muscle Memory: [Fantastic Tale] / Fig. N. Kundukhova // Science and Life, 2006, No. 3 - p.118-124
    • Andrey Salomatov. Our neighbors: [Fantastic story] / Fig. N. Kundukhova // Science and Life, 2006, No. 4 - p.126-127
    • Sergey Chekmaev. The price of a dream: [Fantastic story] // Science and life, 2006, No. 5 - p.134-137
    • Igor Kharichev. Evil old woman: [Fantastic story] // Science and life, 2006, No. 6 - p.134-135
    • Yuri Nesterenko. VIPs: [Fantastic tale] / Fig. Yu. Sarafanova // Science and Life, 2006, No. 7 - p.114-115
    • Oleg Ovchinnikov. Total Immersion: [Fantastic Story] / Fig. Yu. Sarafanova // Science and Life, 2006, No. 8 - p.123-125
    • Denis Chekalov. I want to lose weight: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life, 2006, No. 10 - p.113
    • Sergei Abaimov. You'll get used to it in time!: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Yu. Sarafanova // Science and Life, 2006, No. 11 - p.132-135
    • Sergey Chekmaev. Panacea: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life, 2006, No. 12 - p.140-142
      2007
    • Svyatoslav Loginov. High tech: [Fantastic story] // Science and life, 2007, No. 3 - p.130-135
    • Boris Rudenko. Winner: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life, 2007, No. 5 - p.136-138
    • Zinovy ​​Yuriev. Deadly immortality: [Fantastic novel] / Journal version // Science and life, 2007, No. 6 - p.125-131; No. 7 - p.; No. 8 - p.; No. 9 - p.128-135
    • Sergei Abaimov. Loyalty forever: [Fantastic story] // Science and life, 2007, No. 12 - p.146
      2008
    • Ant Skalandis. June Day: [Chapters from a new book about the life and work of science fiction writers Arkady and Boris Strugatsky] // Science and Life, 2008, No. 2 - p.70-80
    • Ant Skalandis. Happy boy: [Chapter from a new book about the life and work of science fiction writers Arkady and Boris Strugatsky] // Science and Life, 2008, No. 3 - p.72-80
    • Pavel Mikhnenko. Etiquette: [Fantastic story] // Science and life, 2008, No. 6 - p.144-149
      2009
    • Anatoly Shalin. Futuria: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2009, No. 2 - p.122-125
    • Pavel Mikhnenko. Scavenger: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2009, No. 3 - p.134-140
    • Natalia Lebedeva. Old farm: [Fantasy story] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2009, No. 5 - p.130-136
    • Anatoly Radov. Georg: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2009, No. 6 - p.135-137
    • Pavel Mikhnenko. Protracted arrest: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2009, No. 8 - p.116-122
    • Gleb Gusakov (Yaroslav Verov). Will there be a word at the beginning?: Reflections on the fantasy festival "FantOR" // Science and Life, 2009, No. 9 - pp. 3-5
    • Yaroslav Kudlak. Symbiosis: [Science fiction story] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2009, No. 9 - p.122-133
    • Alexander Belyaev. Is it easy to be cancer?: A biological fantasy story / Photo by Yuri Astafiev // Science and Life, 2009, No. 10 - p.124-127
    • Nelli Kravklis, Mikhail Levitin. Three lives of a writer: [Article about the life and work of science fiction writer Alexander Romanovich Belyaev] // Science and Life, 2009, No. 10 - p.126-132
    • Yaroslav Verov. Never Answer Strangers: [Fantastic Tale] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2009, No. 12 - p.130-133
      2010
    • Alexander Yudin. Project Adam: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2010, No. 1 - p.116-124
    • Oleg Demin. Talking, laughing, crying: [Science fiction story] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2010, No. 2 - p.120-129
    • Boris Rudenko. Tornado: [Science fiction story] / Fig. Renata Yakimenko // Science and Life, 2010, No. 3 - p.113-123
    • Pavel Amnuel. I Remember Killing Josh: [Sci-Fi Story] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2010, No. 4 - p.66-72
    • Sergey Chebanenko. Elder Ninelia's casket: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Lyudmila Odintsova // Science and Life, 2010, No. 5 - p.128-135
    • Yaroslav Kudlach. Eleven and a Half Inches: [Science Fiction Story] / Fig. author // Science and Life, 2010, No. 6 - p.114-123
    • Vladislav Vystavnoy. Swiss Folding Cat: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life, 2010, No. 7 - p.123-127
    • Svetlana Tulina. Blind man and his trick: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Lyudmila Slyusarenko // Science and Life, 2010, No. 8 - p.114-118
    • Boris Rudenko. Shore of the Clyde: [Science fiction story] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2010, No. 10 - p.128-135
    • Mike Gelprin. Postman: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Vasily Sigunov // Science and Life, 2010, No. 11 - p.130-132
      2011
    • Higgs Boson ": [Review] // Science and Life, 2011, No. 1 - p.15
    • Leonid Shusterman. House of Schrödinger's cats: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Dmitry Nekrasov // Science and Life, 2011, No. 1 - p.134-136
    • Yaroslav Kudlach. Wanderlust: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Anna Khaichuk // Science and Life, 2011, No. 2 - p.74-80
    • Svetlana Pozdnyakova [Lyudmila Sinitsyna]. Dmitry Fedotov. "Aberration". Boris Georgiev. "The Hunt for Ulysses": [Review] // Science and Life, 2011, No. 2 - p.80
    • Svetlana Pozdnyakova [Lyudmila Sinitsyna]. Zinovy ​​Yuriev. "An Alien Body, or the President's Puzzle": [Review] // Science and Life, 2011, No. 3 - p.39
    • Pavel Amnuel. White curtain: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2011, No. 3 - p.132-136
    • Arkady Grigoriev. Perpetum: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Dmitry Dolgov // Science and Life, 2011, No. 5 - p.114-115
    • Maxim Khorsun. Citizen of Kydonia: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Alexandra Pavlenko // Science and Life, 2011, No. 8 - p.140-141
    • Konstantin Sitnikov. Mars is cruel?: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Sultana Galimzyanov // Science and Life, 2011, No. 9 - p.136-140
    • Sergey Chebanenko. Spaceship "Crazy Hands": [Fantastic story] / Fig. Sultana Galimzyanov // Science and Life, 2011, No. 10 - p.122-130
    • Tatyana Ivanova. Surprise me. And then we'll talk about money: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Sultana Galimzyanov // Science and Life, 2011, No. 11 - p.130-136
      2012
    • Boris Rudenko. Another Life: [Fantastic Tale] / Fig. Sultana Galimzyanov // Science and Life, 2012, No. 1 - p.122-129; No. 2 - p.120-128; No. 3 - p.124-132; No. 4 - p.126-131
    • Yaroslav Kudlach. Star Sorter: [Fantastic Tale] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2012, No. 5 - p.130-133
    • Irina Istratova. Wild dogs: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Lyudmila Slyusarenko // Science and Life, 2012, No. 7 - p.108-114; No. 8 - p.108-114; No. 9 - p.126-132
    • Tatyana Tomakh. IO, my IO: [Fantastic story] / Pic. Lyudmila Odintsova // Science and Life, 2012, No. 10 - p.121-127
    • Yaroslav Kudlach. Barakudra attacks from the left: [Fantastic story] / Fig. author // Science and Life, 2012, No. 11 - p.119-126
    • Pavel Amnuel. "The Lost Giant...": [About Science Fiction Writer Edward Page Mitchell] // Science and Life, 2012, No. 12 - p.115-118
    • Edward Page Mitchell. Man without a body: [Fantastic story] / Per. not specified // Science and Life, 2012, No. 12 - p.119-122
    • Edward Page Mitchell. The spectroscope of the soul [Fantastic story] / Per. not specified // Science and Life, 2012, No. 12 - p.123-124
      2013
    • Christina Karimova. Typical representative: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Yaroslav Kudlach // Science and Life, 2013, No. 1 - p.134-135
    • Igor Veresnev. Allergy: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Sultana Galimzyanov // Science and Life, 2013, No. 2 - p.114-122
    • Alla Dymovskaya. Has it already been like this?: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Yaroslav Kudlach // Science and Life, 2013, No. 3 - p.122-124
    • Igor Veresnev. Reality moderator: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Yaroslav Kudlach // Science and Life, 2013, No. 3 - p.118-129
    • Tatyana Tomakh. Between gods and freedom: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Yulia Golub // Science and Life, 2013, No. 3 - p.120-129
    • Svetlana Pozdnyakova [Lyudmila Sinitsyna]. Dmitry Karmanov. “I am almighty”: [Review] // Science and Life, 2013, No. 5 - p.109
    • Natalya Karpushina. In the footsteps of the Babylonians: [ Mathematical riddle from J. Verne's novel "The Mysterious Island"] // Science and Life, 2013, No. 6 - p. 81 - [Answer in the 7th issue, p. 94]
    • Boris Rudenko. Mentors: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Yaroslav Kudlach // Science and Life, 2013, No. 6 - p.120-128; No. 7 - p.108-119; No. 8 - p.118-127
    • Pavel Amnuel. The science of fantastic discoveries: [ Science fiction And scientific discoveries] // Science and Life, 2013, No. 9 - p.99-102
    • Arthur Conan Doyle. Disintegrator: [Fantastic story] / Per. [from English] Grigory Panchenko. Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2013, No. 9 - p.103-109
    • Marina Yasinskaya. Infect me with real: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2013, No. 12 - p.124-129
      2014
    • Natalya Karpushina. Chance starts and... wins: [Favorite books from a mathematical angle] // Science and Life, 2014, No. 1 - p.91-93 - [Answers in the 2nd issue, p.90-91]
        A thousand and one probabilities: [Mathematical riddle from the epic of Natalia Shcherba "Chasodei"] - p.91
  • Pavel Sheinin. 40,000 deaths of flight attendant Zhivov: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Nikita Dmitrenko // Science and Life, 2014, No. 2 - p.122-127
  • Vladimir Maryshev. Natural factor: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2014, No. 3 - p.114-117
  • Svetlana Pozdnyakova [Lyudmila Sinitsyna]. "Parabellum. USSR, XXII century. War in space". Compiled by: S. Chekmaev: [Review] // Science and Life, 2014, No. 3 - p.119
  • Boris Georgiev, Valentin Klyuchko. Sunset in crimson: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2014, No. 4 - p.120-125
  • Svetlana Pozdnyakova [Lyudmila Sinitsyna]. Sergei Tsikavy. "Replacement": [Review] // Science and Life, 2014, No. 5 - p.134
  • Marina Yasinskaya. Carte blanche: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2014, No. 5 - p.128-134
  • Natalya Karpushina. How the heroes of fairy tales solved puzzles: [Favorite books from a mathematical angle] // Science and Life, 2014, No. 7 - pp. 81-83 - [Answers in the 8th issue, pp. 87-88]
      The Hatter's Riddle: [Mathematical riddle from L. Carroll's "Alice in Wonderland"] - p.82 How many legs?: [Mathematical riddle from P. Travers' story "Mary Poppins"] - p.82-83 Trapped by Snape: [Mathematical riddle from J. Rowling's novel "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone"] - p.83
  • Elena Pervushina. Fire Trees: [Fantastic Tale] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2014, No. 7 - p.128-135; No. 8 - p.114-120; No. 9 - p.118-127; No. 10 - p.114-121; No. 11 - p.116-125
  • Natalya Karpushina. Where the queen was in a hurry: [Mathematical riddle from L. Carroll's fairy tale "Alice in Wonderland"] // Science and Life, 2014, No. 12 - p.85-88
  • Yuri Molchan. Substance "Life": [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2014, No. 12 - p.126-129
      2015
    • Nick. bitter. The tale of James Maxwell and his pet demon // Science and Life, 2015, No. 1 - p.84-90
    • Igor Veresnev. House on Mosquito Wasteland: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2015, No. 1 - p.112-117
    • Natalya Karpushina. In one stroke: [Favorite books from a mathematical angle] // Science and Life, 2015, No. 2 - p.81-83 - [Answers in the 3rd issue, p.85-86]
        "Circulina": [Mathematical riddle from N. Nosov's story "Dunno in the Sunny City"] - p.81-82 Distance on the map: [Mathematical riddle from N. Gorkavy's book "Celestial Mechanics"] - p.82 Carroll's problem: [About an entertaining geometric figure invented by Lewis Carroll] - p.82-83 Obvious solution: [Matem atic riddle from B. Werber's novel "Thanatonauts"] - p.83
  • Christina Karimova. In a human way: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2015, No. 2 - p.114-122
  • Valery Bokhov. Operation: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2015, No. 3 - p.128-130
  • Nick. bitter. The tale of the space traveler Immanuel Kant, whom everyone considered a homebody philosopher // Science and Life, 2015, No. 4 - pp. 90-96
  • Nick. bitter. The Tale of Saint-Victor and Becquerel, who discovered the mysterious radiation // Science and Life, 2015, No. 5 - p.85-88
  • Yaroslav Khoteev. The last campaign: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2015, No. 5 - p.140-143
  • Nick. bitter. The Tale of the Philosopher's Stone and the Governess Who Received Two Nobel Prizes // Science and Life, 2015, No. 6 - pp. 87-93
  • Mikhail Zagirnyak. On guard of consumption: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2015, No. 6 - p.130-132
  • Nick. bitter. The Tale of Max Planck, who found his constant in the light of an electric lamp // Science and Life, 2015, No. 7 - pp. 92-96
  • Larisa Solovieva. One of the first...: [About Edmond Hamilton] / Fig. Frank Paul // Science and Life, 2015, No. 7 - p.113
  • Edmond Hamilton. Seaborn: [Fantastic story] / Per. [from English] Larisa Solovyova. Rice. Finlay Virgil // Science and Life, 2015, No. 7 - p.114-123
  • Mike Gelprin. Left bank, right bank: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Rita Balmina // Science and Life, 2015, No. 8 - p.112-119
  • Nick. bitter. The Tale of Ernest Rutherford, who invented the space model of the atom // Science and Life, 2015, No. 9 - pp. 92-96
  • Evgeny Boushev. Trial of humanity: [Fantasy story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2015, No. 9 - p.108-115
  • Natalya Leskova. Genuine feeling: [Fantastic story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2015, No. 12 - p.134-140
      2016
    • Nick. bitter. The tale of the super detective Niels Bohr, who found the connection between the Rutherford atom, the Fraunhofer lines and the Planck curve: [A scientific fairy tale].// Science and Life, 2016, No. 1 - p. 89-95
    • Dmitry Guzhvenko. Rainbow fingers: [Fantasy story] / Fig. Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2016, No. 1 - p.126-127
    • Natalya Karpushina. On a visit to the antipodes: [Mathematical riddle from L. Carroll's fairy tale "Alice in Wonderland"] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 2 - p.86-90
    • Nick. bitter. The Tale of the Duke de Broglie, who discovered the strangest waves in the world: [Scientific Tale] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 2 - p.81-85
    • . Not alive and not dead: [Article-discussion of the topic “What can science fiction writers do in the 21st century?” Raised by the journal Science and Life] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 4 - p.112-113
    • Semyon Skorynin. The evolution of fishing: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2016, No. 4 - p.114-115
    • Gleb Gusakov. Strong science fiction is one of the signs of a great power: [Article-discussion of the topic “What can science fiction writers do in the 21st century?” Raised by the journal Science and Life] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 5 - pp. 118-119
    • Grigory Panchenko. An unexpected obstacle: [Preface to Arthur Conan Doyle's story "The Voice of Science"] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 5 - p.120-121
    • Arthur Conan Doyle. Voice of Science: [Story] / Translation [from English] Grigory Panchenko; Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2016, No. 5 - p.120-126
    • Nick. bitter. The tale of the physicist Werner Heisenberg, who knew nothing for sure: [A scientific tale] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 6 - p.85-90
    • Boris Dolingo. Fiction is the most powerful tool for developing the imagination: [Article-discussion of the topic “What can science fiction writers do in the 21st century?” Raised by the journal Science and Life] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 6 - p.118-120
    • Nikita Chabrets. Radiance of memory: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2016, No. 6 - p.122-128
    • Alan Kubatiev. Fantasts are engaged in the present: [Article-discussion of the topic “What can science fiction writers do in the 21st century?” Raised by the journal Science and Life] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 7 - p.116-117
    • Igor Veresnev. For a fistful of rusty bitcoins: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2016, No. 7 - p.118-125
    • Nick. bitter. The tale of the cheerful physicist Georgy Gamow and the cold breath of the hot universe: [Scientific fairy tale] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 8 - p.91-98
    • Anton Pervushin. There are no forbidden topics in science fiction: [An article discussing the topic “What can science fiction writers do in the 21st century?” Raised by the journal Science and Life] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 8 - pp. 108-109
    • Margarita November. The Perfect Killer: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2016, No. 8 - p.110-114
    • Andrey Bystrov. “A person needs a person”: [Article-discussion of the topic “What can science fiction writers do in the 21st century?” Raised by the journal Science and Life] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 9 - p.102-103
    • Gennady Prashkevich, Sergei Solovyov. Hero from the future: [Article about the work of science fiction writer Jules Verne] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 10 - p.87-93
    • Vitaly Pishchenko. Knowledge, a non-standard look ... and talent: [Article-discussion of the topic “What can science fiction writers do in the 21st century?” Raised by the journal Science and Life] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 10 - pp. 112-113
    • Eugene Breeze. Elysium Prime: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2016, No. 10 - p.114-123
    • Nick. bitter. The Tale of the Astronomer Iosif Shklovsky and Alien Civilizations: [Scientific Fairy Tale] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 11 - p.86-92
    • Yaroslav Khoteev. Stop, I'll get off!: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2016, No. 11 - p.118-124
    • Pavel Amnuel. Science fiction in the XXI century: [Article] // Science and Life, 2016, No. 12 - p.114-116
    • Alexander Zmushko. Fast food: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2016, No. 12 - p.116-117
      2017
    • Andrey Bystrov. The fourth reality of HG Wells: [Article] / Illustrations provided by the author // Science and Life, 2017, No. 1 - p.104-111
    • Andrey Bystrov. Mr. Horn's Pharmacy: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2017, No. 1 - p.112-117
    • Nick. bitter. The Tale of the Three Bogatyrs Who Fought the "Electric Dragon": [Scientific Fairy Tale] // Science and Life, 2017, No. 2 - p.81-89
    • Andrey Kokoulin. Finisher: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2017, No. 2 - p.118-125
    • Yuri Kudlach. Baron Munchausen in life and literature: [Article] / Photo by Lyudmila Sinitsyna // Science and Life, 2017, No. 3 - p.90-95
    • Vladimir Titov. Mushroom hunting: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2017, No. 3 - p.112-119; No. 4 - p.114-121
    • Nick. bitter. The Tale of the Electric Frog and the Italian Physicist Alessandro Volta, the Founder of the Doctrine of Electricity: [Scientific Tale] // Science and Life, 2017, No. 4 - p.86-94
    • Natalya Karpushina. Help Mathematics!: [Favorite books from a mathematical angle] // Science and Life, 2017, No. 5 - p.83-85 - [Answers in the 7th issue, p.89]
        Healing the treasury from "scrofula": [Mathematical riddle from M. Twain's novel "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court"] - p.83 Balls or cubes: [Mathematical riddle from Vladimir Levshin's story "Nulik the Sailor"] - p.83-84 Stubborn genie: [Mathematical riddle from L. Lagin's story "Old Man Hottabych" »] – p.85
  • S. Loginov. Own world: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2017, No. 5 - p.116-123; No. 6 - p.120-129
  • Nick. bitter. The tale of how Michael Faraday was discovered, who discovered the electromagnetic field: [Scientific tale] // Science and Life, 2017, No. 6 - pp. 81-89
  • Nick. bitter. Tale of dark matter and dark space: [Scientific fairy tale] // Science and Life, 2017, No. 7 - p.81-88
  • Tatyana Bespalova. By-effect: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2017, No. 7 - p.106-109
  • Igor Veresnev. Now, today, forever: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2017, No. 8 - p.112-118
  • Natalya Karpushina. Intricate plots: [Favorite books from a mathematical angle] // Science and Life, 2017, No. 9 - p.96-85 - [Answers in the 11th issue, p.95-96]
      According to the laws of mythology: [Mathematical riddle from L. Lagin's story "Old Man Hottabych"] - p.96 Numerical focus: [Mathematical riddle from V. Lyovshin's trilogy "Master of Scattered Sciences"] - p.98-99
  • Irina Domnina. Knight's move: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2017, No. 9 - p.122-126
  • Nick. bitter. The tale of amateur paleontologist Mary Anning, who found real dragons: [Scientific fairy tale] // Science and Life, 2017, No. 10 - p.81-91
  • Pavel Amnuel. Alfie: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2017, No. 10 - p.134-140
  • Andrei Silenginsky. On the scales ...: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2017, No. 11 - p.100-105
  • Nick. bitter. Tale of mysterious cities and forgotten languages: [Scientific fairy tale] // Science and Life, 2017, No. 12 - p.81-90
  • Elena Shchetinina. Alone in the field: [Fantastic story] / Drawing by Maya Medvedeva // Science and Life, 2017, No. 12 - p.122-127
      2018
    • Alexander Markov. Dream seller: [Fantastic story] // Science and life (Moscow), 2018, No. 1 - p.112-118
    • Andrei Silenginsky. Dead end: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life (Moscow), 2018, No. 2 - p.116-124
    • Igor Veresnev. Warm home: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life (Moscow), 2018, No. 3 - p.124-135
    • Pavel Amnuel. Cinema and the laws of physics: [Neglect of the laws of science in the science fiction films Star Wars (1977), The Martian (2015), Gravity (2013), Passengers (2016), Interstellar (2014) and Armageddon (1998)] // Science and Life (Moscow), 2018, No. 4 - pp. 81-87
    • Sergey Zubkov. Principle number one: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life (Moscow), 2018, No. 4 - p.116-119
    • Anton Pervushin. The Song of the Self-Beast: A Fantastic Tale from the cycle "Introspection of the Universe" // Science and Life (Moscow), 2018, No. 5 - p.112-118; No. 6 - p.114-119; No. 7 - p.116-122; No. 8 - p.112-121
    • Ina Goldin. Do not leave silently: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life (Moscow), 2018, No. 9 - p.118-122
    • Alexander Markov. Record holder: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life (Moscow), 2018, No. 10 - p.120-125
    • Pavel Amnuel. Expert: [Fantastic story] // Science and Life (Moscow), 2018, No. 11 - p.104-112; No. 12 - p.112-121
    About the journal
    • Science and life: Responsible tribune: [Review of a popular science magazine] // Technique - youth, 1944, No. 9 - p.30
    • "Science and Life" // Great Soviet Encyclopedia in 30 volumes. T.17. – M.: Soviet Encyclopedia, 1974 - p.
    • Bonifatiy Kedrov. The journal "Science and Life" is 50 years old // Technique - youth, 1984, No. 10 - p.50-51
    • “We strive to preserve the spirit and traditions of the magazine”: [Questions answered by Chief Editor magazine "Science and Life" Elena Lozovskaya] // Trinity version (Troitsk, Moscow region), 2008, October 28 (No. 15) - p. 7
    • SF story competition "If today is tomorrow": [About the competition held by the journal "Science and Life"] // Noon, XXI century, 2012, No. 11 - p.171-172

  • © Vladimir Molod, 2015-2018

    Series: Science and Life (magazine)
    Publisher: , 1964
    secondhand edition
    Volume: 1920 pages

    "Science and life" life monthly- monthly popular science October 1934 illustrated magazine of the wide Edition resumed profile, printed organ of the year Publication of the All-Union Society "Knowledge". 1890 Founded in 1890 1934. The edition is renewed. The circulation in October 1934 was one year. Magazine circulation million copies in the 1970s - reached the 1980s reached Circulation of 3 million copies illustrated magazine in USSR. Circulation popular illustrated for 2009 scientifically popular- about 44 monthly scientific 000 copies. The magazine wide magazine touches the set general profile themes: man and All-Union Society society, sciences organ of the All-Union Earth, physics, astronomy, press organ, mathematics, space, technology, profile printed technology; on the pages of the highest magazines are economic USSR Circulation conversations, tells about economic conversations than wrote "Science economic and life" 50 magazines are maintained and 100 years magazine pages back and more the conversation is told other.

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