Arthur C. Clarke Zitate
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Sir Arthur Charles Clarke, CBE, FRAS, Sri Lankabhimanya, war ein britischer Science-Fiction-Schriftsteller und Physiker. Durch den Film 2001: Odyssee im Weltraum von Stanley Kubrick, der auf einer Kurzgeschichte Clarkes beruht und dessen Drehbuch Clarke gemeinsam mit Kubrick schrieb, wurde er auch außerhalb der Science-Fiction-Szene bekannt. Clarke gilt als Visionär neuer Techniken, die er außer in Science-Fiction-Romanen und -Kurzgeschichten auch in wissenschaftlichen Artikeln beschrieb. Mit Isaac Asimov und Robert A. Heinlein wird er oft zu den „Big Three“ der englischsprachigen Science Fiction gezählt. Wikipedia  

✵ 16. Dezember 1917 – 19. März 2008   •   Andere Namen Arthur Charles Clarke
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Arthur C. Clarke Berühmte Zitate

Diese Übersetzung wartet auf eine Überprüfung. Ist es korrekt?

„Jede hinreichend fortgeschrittene Technologie ist von Magie nicht mehr zu unterscheiden.“

Clarkes Drittes Gesetz aus Profiles of the Future - zitiert von Andreas Weber in: Biokapital. Die Versöhnung von Ökonomie, Natur und Menschlichkeit, Berlin Verlag, Berlin 2008, ISBN 3827007925, Seite 57.
Original engl.: "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." - Profiles of the future: an inquiry into the limits of the possible (revised edition 1973). Seite 36
Variante: Jede hinreichend fortschrittliche Technologie ist von Magie nicht zu unterscheiden

Arthur C. Clarke Zitate und Sprüche

„Einsteinian time dilation.“

2010: Odyssey Two

Arthur C. Clarke: Zitate auf Englisch

“Science demands patience.”

Arthur C. Clarke buch The Light of Other Days

Quelle: 2000s and posthumous publications, The Light of Other Days (2000), Ch. 6

“I am the King.”

Arthur C. Clarke buch The Fountains of Paradise

Ah, but which king? The monarch who had stood on these granite flagstones — scarcely worn then, eighteen hundred years ago — was probably an able and intelligent man; but he failed to conceive that the time could ever come when he would fade into an anonymity as deep as that of his humblest subjects.
Quelle: 1970s, The Fountains of Paradise (1979), Ch. 11 “The Silent Princess”, p. 65

“That’s what I think they’re doing, eating themselves alive. They murder in the name of God and blindly destroy the very ecosystem that sustains them.”

Arthur C. Clarke buch Richter 10

“People are people.” Bert shrugged.
“What you’re really saying is that people are animals,” Crane replied. “And I say to you, it doesn’t have to be that way. We can make a civilization, a real civilization, built on real understanding of ourselves and our universe.”
Quelle: 1990s, Richter 10 (1996), Chapter 20, “Shimani-Gashi” (p. 362)

“What we find incredible is the way that people - right up to the early 2000s!”

Quelle: 1990s, 3001: The Final Odyssey (1997) p. 32
Kontext: calmly accepted behaviour we would consider atrocious. And believed in the most mindboggled... Nonsense, which surely any rational person would dismiss out of hand.' 'Examples, please.' 'Well... every year in some countries thousands of little girls were hideously mutilated to preserve their virginity? Many of them died - but the authorities turned a blind eye.' 'I agree that was terrible - but what could my government do about it?' 'A great deal - if it wished. But that would have offended the people who supplied it with oil and bought its weapons, like the landmines that killed and maimed civilians by the thousand.'

“So many people did it that it was no longer an obsession; it was a demographic.”

Arthur C. Clarke buch Richter 10

Quelle: 1990s, Richter 10 (1996), Chapter 4, “Geomorphological Processes” (p. 77)

“Of course, we in the so-called developed countries thought we were civilized.”

At least war wasn't respectable any more, and the United Nations was always doing its best to stop the wars that did break out.''Not very successfully: I'd give it about three out of ten.
1990s, 3001: The Final Odyssey (1997)

“All the religiosity around worries me—doesn’t it you?”

Arthur C. Clarke A Time Odyssey

Quelle: 2000s and posthumous publications, A Time Odyssey, Sunstorm (2005), Chapter 28, “The Ark” (p. 217)

“Such craziness captured media attention, but was fortunately still rare.”

Arthur C. Clarke A Time Odyssey

Quelle: 2000s and posthumous publications, A Time Odyssey, Sunstorm (2005), Chapter 27, “The Tin Lid” (p. 207)

“Democracy is our most important possession. If we throw it away when the going gets tough, we might never get it back.”

Arthur C. Clarke A Time Odyssey

Quelle: 2000s and posthumous publications, A Time Odyssey, Sunstorm (2005), Chapter 24, “BDO” (p. 182)

“You know, we’re not used to secrecy up here. It’s not encouraged. We all have to work together to keep alive. Secrecy is corrosive, Professor, bad for morale.”

Arthur C. Clarke A Time Odyssey

Quelle: 2000s and posthumous publications, A Time Odyssey, Sunstorm (2005), Chapter 9, “Lunar Descent” (p. 53)

“Maybe it’s a mark of a maturing culture, do you think, that secrets aren’t kept, that truth is told, that things are talked out?”

Arthur C. Clarke A Time Odyssey

Quelle: 2000s and posthumous publications, A Time Odyssey, Firstborn (2007), Chapter 49, “Areosynchronous” (p. 313)

“You do realize how many impossible things have to be true for that to have happened?”

Arthur C. Clarke A Time Odyssey

Quelle: 2000s and posthumous publications, A Time Odyssey, Firstborn (2007), Chapter 29, “Alexei” (p. 187)

“When the pious fools come up against the godless pagans who own Judea, the result is what might be called diplomatic incidents.”

Arthur C. Clarke A Time Odyssey

Quelle: 2000s and posthumous publications, A Time Odyssey, Firstborn (2007), Chapter 26, “The Stone Man” (p. 172)

“Slickness of presentation didn’t imply comprehensiveness of knowledge.”

Arthur C. Clarke A Time Odyssey

Quelle: 2000s and posthumous publications, A Time Odyssey, Firstborn (2007), Chapter 13, “Fortress Sol” (p. 77)

“Thinkers prepare the revolution; bandits carry it out.”

Arthur C. Clarke buch Richter 10

Quelle: 1990s, Richter 10 (1996), Chapter 18, “Hidden Faults” (p. 327)

“Man's bodily functions moved only toward death, but the mind could continue to enrich itself even as everything else embraced entropy.”

Arthur C. Clarke buch Richter 10

Quelle: 1990s, Richter 10 (1996), Chapter 18, “Hidden Faults” (p. 323)

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