Stephen Hawking — "I had a heart attack earlier this year... the ambulance took me to PC world for …"
I had a heart attack earlier this year... the ambulance took me to PC world for repairs.
I had a heart attack earlier this year... the ambulance took me to PC world for repairs.
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British theoretical physicist whose Hawking radiation work and A Brief History of Time (1988) brought black-hole physics to a mass audience while he lived with ALS for 55 years. Closely associated with Roger Penrose (his collaborator on singularity theorems) and Carl Sagan (fellow popularizer who wrote Brief History's foreword). For an intellectual contrast, see William Lane Craig, American philosopher of religion — Craig's Kalam cosmological argument depends on the Big Bang requiring a divine first cause; Hawking's no-boundary proposal was specifically designed to remove the moment that would require one — the cleanest cosmology-vs-natural-theology contrast in modern thought.
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A self-deprecating joke equating a heart attack with a computer malfunction. The punchline reroutes the patient to PC World — a UK consumer electronics retailer — instead of a hospital, treating the human body as hardware requiring technical repairs. Dark humor deflects from mortality by reframing the body as a fixable machine. The absurdity is deliberate: bodies don't go to PC World, but the logic holds if you're running on one.
Hawking was diagnosed with ALS at 21, progressively losing motor control. After a 1985 tracheotomy eliminated his natural voice, he communicated through an Intel-developed speech synthesizer — he literally ran on computer hardware to function. His identity became inseparable from machines. This joke exploits that reality with characteristic wit: since he genuinely depended on computers to speak and work, dispatching himself to PC World for repairs was darkly plausible rather than purely absurd.
PC World, the UK consumer electronics chain, launched in 1991 and became a household brand through the 2000s and 2010s. Hawking lived through computing's transformation from scientific instrument to mass-market appliance — a shift that gave him successive generations of communication devices. Britain's NHS handled medical emergencies; PC World sold hardware. The joke collapses that divide precisely when British society was growing genuinely dependent on personal computers, making the body-as-machine metaphor land as culturally resonant, not just absurd.
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