BEIJING, March 19 -- Pioneering science fiction
writer and visionary Arthur C. Clarke, best known for his work on the movie
"2001: A Space Odyssey," has died in his adopted home of Sri Lanka at the age of
90.
He died of heart failure doctors linked to the
post-polio syndrome that had kept him wheelchair-bound for years.
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Pioneering science fiction writer and
visionary Arthur C. Clarke, best known for his work on the movie "2001: A
Space Odyssey," has died in his adopted home of Sri Lanka at the age of
90. (File Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
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Marking his "90th orbit of the sun" in December, the
prolific British-born author and theorist made three birthday wishes: For E.T.
to call, for man to kick his oil habit and for peace in Sri Lanka.
Clarke was born in England on Dec. 16, 1917, and
served as a radar specialist in the Royal Air Force during World War Two.
He was one of the first to suggest the use of
satellites orbiting the earth for communications, and in the 1940s forecast that
man would reach the moon by the year 2000 -- an idea experts at first dismissed
as rubbish.
When Neil Armstrong landed in 1969, the United States
said Clarke "provided the essential intellectual drive that led us to the moon."
Clarke wrote more than 80 books and 500 short stories
and articles, and wanted to be remembered foremost as a writer.
Trained as a scientist, he was renowned for basing
his work on scientific fact and theory rather than pure fiction and for keeping
humanity at the heart of his technological visions.
In 1964, he started to work with the film maker
Stanley Kubrick on the script of a groundbreaking film which was to win
audiences and accolades far wider than those of most previous science fiction --
"2001: A Space Odyssey."
Based loosely on a short story he had written in 1948, it dealt poetically with themes of human evolution, technology and consciousness and came to be regarded by many as one of the greatest films ever made.