What do you think?
Rate this book
297 pages, Paperback
First published April 28, 1968
❝ If he was indeed mad, his delusions were beautifully organized.❞
“He now perceived that there were more ways than one behind the back of space.”
‘’Our posturings, our imagined self-importance, the delusion that we have some privileged position in the Universe, are challenged by this pale light. Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves’’
Carl Sagan, Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space
''I intended the film to be an intensely subjective experience that reaches the viewer at an inner level of consciousness, just as music does; to “explain” a Beethoven symphony would be to emasculate it by creating an artificial barrier between conception and appreciation. You’re free to speculate as you wish about the philosophical and allegorical meaning of the film—and such speculation is an indication that it has succeeded in gripping the audience at a very deep level—but I don’t want to spell out a verbal road map for 2001 that every viewer will feel obligated to pursue or fear he’s missed the point.''
‘’.... Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke’s ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’, is where the islands of southeastern Mediterranean became the solar system’s planets and moons, and the wine-dark sea the airless void of interplanetary interstellar, and even intergalactic space’’