“Learning to ignore things is one of the great paths to inner peace.”
Quelle: Calculating God (2000), Chapter 14 (p. 137)
Robert J. Sawyer ist ein kanadischer Science Fiction-Autor.
Er beschreibt sich selbst als Hard Science Fiction-Autor, sorgt sich aber mehr um Charakterisierung und menschliche Psychologie als viele andere Vertreter dieses Subgenres. Seine Erzählungen behandeln oft Metaphysik im Stil von Arthur C. Clarke und Philosophie; er sieht Science Fiction als Literatur der Ideen an. Die Fernsehserie FlashForward basiert auf Sawyers gleichnamigem Roman aus dem Jahre 1999.
Wikipedia
“Learning to ignore things is one of the great paths to inner peace.”
Quelle: Calculating God (2000), Chapter 14 (p. 137)
“Naturally, one does not normally discuss plans to commit murder with the intended victim.”
Quelle: Flashforward
“Still, you must know that the fear of death is irrational; death comes to everyone.”
Quelle: Calculating God (2000), Chapter 25 (p. 235)
“Free will is an illusion. It is synonymous with incomplete perception.”
Quelle: Flashforward (1999), Chapter 12 epigram (p. 123; quoting Walter Kubilius)
Quelle: Frameshift (1997), Chapter 41 (p. 326; apparently quoting George Bernard Shaw)
“Not wanting to die was another universal constant, it seemed.”
Quelle: Calculating God (2000), Chapter 6 (p. 70)
“He who foresees calamities suffers them twice over.”
Quelle: Flashforward (1999), Chapter 1 epigram (p. 9; quoting Beilby Porteus)
“He cursed himself for thinking anything this complex would end up not being a source of problems.”
Quelle: Frameshift (1997), Chapter 26 (p. 184)
“You humans seem to have a profound capacity for ignoring obvious evidence.”
Quelle: Calculating God (2000), Chapter 2 (p. 23)
“…but there, because there is no grace of God, go I.”
Quelle: Frameshift (1997), Chapter 25 (p. 179)
“There may be oodles of possible humans, but it is a finite number.”
Quelle: Flashforward (1999), Chapter 16 (p. 167)
The Wreed wavered and vanished.
Quelle: Calculating God (2000), Chapter 32 (p. 309; ellipsis represents a minor elision of description)