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165 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
165 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4460
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Title: HPR4460: Arthur C. Clarke
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4460/hpr4460.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-26 00:55:15
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 4,460.
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For Friday the 5th of September 2025, today's show is entitled, Arthur A.C., Plark.
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It is part of a series science fiction and fantasy.
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It is hosted by Ahukah and is about 12 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, this begins our fifth look at Arthur A.C., Plark.
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Hello, this is Ahukah, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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in our series on science fiction and fantasy.
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And we recently finished our look at the first of what we call the Big Three of the Golden
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Age.
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That would have been Isaac Asimov.
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I'm going to go into the second one now and that's Arthur C. Clarke.
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Asimov Clarke and then Robert Heinlein, which you get to later, are the Big Three.
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Now Arthur C. Clarke was born in 1917 in Somerset, England and was a space enthusiast
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from an early age.
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In 1934, while only a teenager he joined the British Interplanetary Society.
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And about 10 years later, in 1945, he proposed a system of using geostationary satellites
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to provide communication.
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Now, he did not invent the idea of satellites and others that already noted the advantages
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to geostationary satellites.
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But he made the connection that they would be extremely useful for communications and
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actively publicize this idea.
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So in his later TV programs, he does identify himself as the inventor, which is only a slight
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exaggeration.
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Now during World War II, he did serve in the Royal Air Force as a radar specialist.
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So clearly some scientific background from early on.
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And then from 1946 to 1947, and again from 1951 to 1953, he served as president of the
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British Interplanetary Society.
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Now in 1951, he also published a book called The Exploration of Space, which was later
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used by Werner von Braun to convince US President John F. Kennedy that a trip to the moon was
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possible.
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Now, he was a commentator for CBS News when the Apollo 11 moon landing took place in 1969.
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Now he also had a strong interest in the ocean and in scuba diving and moved to Sri Lanka
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in 1956, remaining there until his death in 2008.
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Now in addition to his writing, he had three television series, Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious
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World, Arthur C. Clarke's World of Strange Powers, and Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious Universe.
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But it is, of course, his writing that made him famous.
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Now, he was known as what we call a hard science fiction writer, meaning that he avoided
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elements of fantasy and concentrated on realistic science, even if sometimes extrapolated a bit
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into the future.
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But when you look at his body of work, it is not clear that this is entirely accurate.
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Still, you should expect science to feature prominently in his books without the obvious
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fantasy elements that someone like, for instance, Robert A. Heinlein did in a number of his
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books, and he, Heinlein, seemed to move very easily between hard science fiction and fantasy.
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But of the big three, I would say azimuths, at least as scientific, if not more so than
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Clarke.
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And the fantasy elements do, in fact, appear in his first major work, which we're about
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to discuss.
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Now, against the fall of night was originally published as a novella in 1948, then expanded
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into a novel in 1953.
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He then rewrote some of it and expanded it further as a novel called The City and the
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Stars in 1956.
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Now this has been considered a classic work that should be on everyone's bookshelf,
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but we'll have more to say about that at the end.
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The original novella accounts for about a third of the final novel, and in hindsight, while
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it is classic, it is also a bit of a mess.
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The setting to the story is two and a half billion years into the future, and while the
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current state of science suggests we don't make it that far, this was not known when
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Clarke wrote the novel.
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Still, that detail isn't really important.
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It is set far in the future, leave it at that.
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The oceans have dried up, which is realistic, given what we know.
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There is a city called Diaspar, and as far as they know, they're the only city on the
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planet.
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It is completely enclosed and underground, and the residents never leave, and no one comes
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to visit.
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The history, as they know it, is that there was a conflict long ago, where humanity,
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which had begun to venture out into space, was beaten back by savage invaders, who left
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a remnant alive on the condition that no one ever leaves the planet.
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But now no one ever leaves the city, it is safer that way.
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Now the city of Diaspar, and you should think that Diaspar and Diaspora are strongly related
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words here, is run by a central computer.
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And its memory banks contain all of the memories of each inhabitant.
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From time to time, the central computer provides a new body, and puts the stored memories
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of a person into this new body.
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So the inhabitants are in practice immortal.
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But one day, Alvin is born, and Alvin is someone who has never lived before.
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This is the first time in centuries that this has happened.
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When Alvin has curiosity about the rest of the world, something the deeply conservative
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and agoraphobic inhabitants of Diaspar usually lack.
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He wants to see the outside world, and eventually he discovers that there was once an underground
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transit system between cities.
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It has been abandoned, but he is eventually able to find an entrance into it, gets it open,
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and takes himself to another city called Liss.
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Now, people in Diaspar didn't even know that Liss existed.
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It's the opposite of Diaspar in most ways.
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It is outside, in a green valley, and the people have cultivated philosophy and developed
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telepathy.
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They live naturally and are conceived and born in the usual manner, living and dying without
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immortality.
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But they are against the high technology of Diaspar and seem to reject most technology.
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They are also very xenophobic and conservative in a different way.
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They are afraid of space travel and all mechanical devices.
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Now there, Alvin makes a friend called Hilvar.
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The two then investigate a strange light and discover a fortress called Shalmarine,
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which is where the savage invaders were fought off with fearsome weapons so long ago.
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There they discover an old extraterrestrial and a robot.
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Apparently someone called Master came there with his followers and this robot.
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And the robot and the old extraterrestrial are all that is left.
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Now the robot has a mind block put in place by the master that prevents the robot from
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giving out any information at all.
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The master and his followers were some kind of religious cult that talked about something
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people that they called the great ones who have left but will eventually return someday.
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Alvin convinces the old extraterrestrial to let him take the robot to see how the world
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has changed but also gives the robot stern instructions not to let him return to lists
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even if he begs to.
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Because he believes they will use their mental powers to stop him because they are so anti-technology.
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They get back to diaspar, Alvin and the robot and he use the central computer to break
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the block on the robot.
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Then they find the spaceship of the master outside diaspar which is where it had apparently
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landed and it is still functional.
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So Alvin gets Hilvar again and then they go into deep space in the spaceship where they
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encounter Vanimond, a being pure intellect.
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But Hilvar with his telepathic powers can converse with Vanimond.
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Very convenient for the plot there.
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They bring Vanimond back to earth and it turns out that everything they thought they knew
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was wrong.
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There never were any savage invaders and Shalmarine was actually built to blow up the moon which
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for some reason was going to collide with the earth.
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Now in point of fact the moon is gradually moving away from the earth, albeit very slowly.
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It is receding at about 3.8 cm per year so nothing to worry about in the near term.
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And the remnants of humanity still on earth are there because they refused to participate
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in a great project that the rest of humanity had engaged in to produce a pure intellect.
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Now as it happened the first attempt was a disaster that produced something called the
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mad mind.
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It was immensely powerful but also insane and it devastated the galaxy before being imprisoned
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in a strange artificial star called the black sun.
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Vanimond was the second and successful experiment in pure intellect and is apparently destined
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to combat the mad mind when it eventually escapes its imprisonment.
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Now the rest of humanity having constructed Vanimond is then contacted by aliens from
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outside the galaxy who urgently request them to come and so they go to the aliens and
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they're gone.
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Now the city and the stars, the final version that Clark came up with was supposed to be
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an improvement over against the fall of night but the changes are in the details really.
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In the earlier novel, Alvin's companion is Theon, son of Saronis, instead of Hilvar.
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And there are details about the societies of diaspiring lists that are different.
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What they find in the fortress of Shalmarine is an old man instead of an extraterrestrial.
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But it is noteworthy that against the fall of night remained in print long after the
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city and the stars was published and many people continued to prefer the earlier version.
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But whichever version, it is hard to make a serious claim that this represents hard science.
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It is an early work from a developing writer and shows a lot of influence from the pulp
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stories that Clark undoubtedly read as a teenager.
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If you want to be well educated in the history of science fiction, this is unavoidable but
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to a modern reader, I suspect it will seem a little bit weird.
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I happen to like the old pulp style of writing.
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The sense of wonder, as they call it, but this is definitely an older style of writing.
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So this is Hookah for Hacker Public Radio, signing off and is always encouraging everyone
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to support free software.
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Bye-bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contribute link to find out
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how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive
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and our sings.net.
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On this advice status, today's show is released on our Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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