Quote by: Arthur C. Clarke

Some dangers are so spectacular and so much beyond normal experience that the mind refuses to accept them as real, and watches the approach of doom without any sense of apprehension. The man who looks at the onrushing tidal wave, the descending avalanche, or the spinning funnel of the tornado, yet makes no attempt to flee, is not necessarily paralyzed with fright or resigned to an unavoidable fate. He may simply be unable to believe that the message of his eyes concerns him personally. It is all happening to somebody else.


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Author Bio


  • NameArthur C. Clarke
  • DescriptionBritish science fiction writer, science writer, inventor, undersea explorer, and television series host
  • AliasesSir Arthur Charles Clarke
  • BornDecember 16, 1917
  • DiedMarch 18, 2008
  • CountryUnited Kingdom
  • ProfessionInventor; Screenwriter; Writer; Engineer; Novelist
  • WorksRendezvous With Rama; The Fountains Of Paradise
  • AwardsCommander Of The Order Of The British Empire; Nebula Award; Stuart Ballantine Medal; Kalinga Prize