Aisling
New member
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2025
- Messages
- 20
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- 3
The Black Cloud, by Fred Hoyle: Brilliant for its time. Carl Sagan was a big fan.
Arthur C. Clarke's 'Rendezvous with Rama' Clarke made some unusually accurate forecasts for the future way back in 1964 in the TV programme ‘Horizon’. Still available, and watched, on YouTube.
*‘Rendezvous with Rama ' features a strange interstellar object travelling through our solar system that turns out to be an ancient spacecraft. In a strange echo of that fiction, an unidentified interstellar visitor has been observed very recently and should come close within the next couple of months. The consensus scientific opinion is that it is probably a comet, but a well-known American physicist thinks that it may be an alien visitor from a distant star system. We will soon find out!
Isaac Asimov's ‘ I, Robot’ Asimov was another great visionary, and his 3 Laws of Robotics are particularly relevant today as we seek means to control the incredibly fast evolution of AI.
Carl Sagan: ‘Contact’, his nonfiction book. ‘The Demon Haunted World,’ in 1995, prophesied the totalitarian state that the USA threatens to become today.
Jules Verne's Journey to the Centre of the Earth. Verne is the only non-scientist in the list, but he is often called ‘The Father of modern science fiction, and his technological predictions for the future were stunningly accurate.
*The title examples are arbitrary
Most, of course, are dated in their portrayal of social attitudes and archaic dialogue, but that adds to their charm. The wisecracking remarks made between Donovan and Powell in Asimov’s robot books, the 'Holy Space! and 'Jumping Jupiter!' exclamations, are of a different era and recall the early sci-fi magazines in the US.
Anybody else got any personal favourites?
Arthur C. Clarke's 'Rendezvous with Rama' Clarke made some unusually accurate forecasts for the future way back in 1964 in the TV programme ‘Horizon’. Still available, and watched, on YouTube.
*‘Rendezvous with Rama ' features a strange interstellar object travelling through our solar system that turns out to be an ancient spacecraft. In a strange echo of that fiction, an unidentified interstellar visitor has been observed very recently and should come close within the next couple of months. The consensus scientific opinion is that it is probably a comet, but a well-known American physicist thinks that it may be an alien visitor from a distant star system. We will soon find out!
Isaac Asimov's ‘ I, Robot’ Asimov was another great visionary, and his 3 Laws of Robotics are particularly relevant today as we seek means to control the incredibly fast evolution of AI.
Carl Sagan: ‘Contact’, his nonfiction book. ‘The Demon Haunted World,’ in 1995, prophesied the totalitarian state that the USA threatens to become today.
Jules Verne's Journey to the Centre of the Earth. Verne is the only non-scientist in the list, but he is often called ‘The Father of modern science fiction, and his technological predictions for the future were stunningly accurate.
*The title examples are arbitrary
Most, of course, are dated in their portrayal of social attitudes and archaic dialogue, but that adds to their charm. The wisecracking remarks made between Donovan and Powell in Asimov’s robot books, the 'Holy Space! and 'Jumping Jupiter!' exclamations, are of a different era and recall the early sci-fi magazines in the US.
Anybody else got any personal favourites?