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Arthur C. Clarke (16 December 1917–18 March 2008) was an English astronomer and prolific science fiction author.
For non-science fiction fans, Clarke's most famous work is the film 2001: A Space Odyssey - he collaborated with famed director Stanley Kubrick while simultaneously writing the novel of the same name. The story itself is based in part on various short stories by Clarke, most notably "The Sentinel", which was written for a 1948 BBC competition. It wouldn't be published until 1951, as "Sentinel of Eternity".
During World War II (1939-1945) Clarke worked on the team that developed radar, and proposed the idea of communication satellites placed in geostationary orbits in his 1945 paper "Extraterrestrial relays",[1] long before any government would have taken the concept seriously enough to issue a patent on it. Clarke popularized the idea of "space elevators" (first proposed by Konstantin Tsiolkovsky) in his book Fountains of Paradise. As of 2015, space elevators are being seriously investigated as a method of reaching space from the surface of the Earth.[2]
Among Clarke's classic works is the 1953 novel Childhood's End, which describes the evolutionary transition of humanity from beings with physical bodies to beings of pure mind. This may have contributed and/or been an inspiration to the transhumanist movement.
Although born in England, Clarke lived most of his later years in Sri Lanka because of his love of scuba-diving. There he was an occasional guest lecturer at the American Community Center, a school run by the U.S.A.I.D. program.
He was buried with a "Secular Ceremony" on 22 March 2008.[3]
Everyone is aware of Clarke's first three laws (and various other laws, from Asimov's to thermodynamics), but most people can usually only recall the third one, which has been applied to science fiction as well as some of reality itself — what would a medieval peasant make of an iPad, for instance? It's simple and catchy wording has been often parodied with variations such as "any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice".
Dr. Barry Gehm stated a corollary to Clarke's third law: Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.[5] Science fiction fandom offers two folk inversions: Any sufficiently analysed magic is indistinguishable from science,[6] and Any technology, no matter how primitive, is magic to those who don't understand it.[7]
In 1980 he presented Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious World, a TV series covering paranormal tropes and events, from UFOs and sea serpents to historical puzzles such as the then-unexplained crystal skulls. His role in the series extended to bookending each show with some intelligent, and sometimes cautiously supportive, commentary. In the tie-in book, he gives J. Allen Hynek's three kinds of close encounter a knowing wink ("borrowing shamelessly") with his three kinds of mysteries:
“”the fact that this [the understanding of radioactivity as a normal part of the universe] has not happened in the case of paranormal phenomena is one of the strongest arguments against their existence. After more than a hundred years of effort, the advocates of the paranormal have still been unable to convince the majority of their scientific peers that 'there is anything in it'. Indeed, the tide now seems to be turning against them with recent revelations of fraud and incredibly sloppy techniques in what once seemed to be well-established results.
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Finally, he presents Mysteries of the Zeroth Kind: the only mystery being how anybody was stupid enough to believe them in the first place. The Bermuda Triangle, ancient astronauts, and pyramid power belong here.
Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious World was followed up through the 1980s with further series and books, but with diminishing returns.[8]