March 19, 2008

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Arthur Clarke

LPOD-Mar19-08.jpg
image from JPL

Everyone in the world seemed to refer to him as Arthur C. Clarke, but in his videos he always introduced himself as just Arthur Clarke. He died early today, March 19 in Sri Lanka, the island he had lived on since 1956, but for the last decade he frequently used the Internet to deliver talks to science and science-fiction audiences. An example, is the greetings he sent the Cassini team in September 2007. Arthur Clarke did not write many novels that featured the Moon, but he wrote perhaps the most visible science fiction story of the last 50 years: 2001 - A Space Odyssey, whose movie version took Dr. Heywood R. Floyd and millions of viewers to the Moon and to the monolith buried in a crater near Tycho. Because so many astronomers and space scientists were inspired by his work craters throughout the solar system will be named for Clarke - there is already a Clark on the Moon (named for the American telescope makers). Perhaps on a moon far, far away another star child has been born, a reincarnated human to inspire another civilization.

Chuck Wood

Related Links
BBC obituary with video interviews


Yesterday's LPOD: Irresistible

Tomorrow's LPOD: A Step Closer To Solving the Riddle of Lunar Water


COMMENTS

1) I'll miss him ;(
Aleksander Božič

2) A true visionary, scientist and author... He was a childhood hero of mine and it's very sad to hear this news, he will be missed.
Mark Zambelli


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