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Introduction Science fiction has certain satisfactions peculiar to itself. It is possible, in trying to portray future technology, to hit close to home. If you live long enough after writing a particular story, you may actually have the pleasure of finding your predictions reasonably accurate and yourself hailed as a sort of minor prophet. This has happened to me in connection with my robot stories, of which Light Verse included here is an example.
I began writing robot stories in , when I was nineteen years old, and, from the first, I visualized them as machines, carefully built by engineers, with inherent safeguards, which I called The Three Laws of Robotics.
In doing so, I was the very first to use the word robotics in print, this taking place in the March, issue ofAstounding Science Fiction. As it happened, robots of any kind were not really practical until the mids when the microchip came into use.
Only that made it possible to produce computers that were small enough and cheap enough, while possessing the potentiality for sufficient capacity and versatility, to control a robot at nonprohibitive expense. We now have machines, called robots, that are computer-controlled and are in industrial use. They increasingly perform simple and repetitious work on the assembly lineswelding, drilling, polishing and so onand they are of increasing importance to the economy.
Robots are now a recognized field of study and the precise word that I invented is used for itrobotics. To be sure, we are only at the very beginning of the robotic revolution. The robots now in use are little more than computerized levers and are very far from having the complexity necessary for the Three Laws to be built into them. Nor are they anything close to human in shape, so they are not yet the mechanical men that I have pictured in my.
Nevertheless, the direction of movement is clear. The primitive robots that have come into use are not the Frankenstein-monsters of equally primitive science fiction. They do not lust for human life although accidents involving robots can result in human death, just as accidents with automobiles or electrical machinery can. They are, rather, carefully designed devices intended to relieve human beings of arduous, repetitive, dangerous, nonrewarding duties so that, in intent and in philosophy, they represent the first steps toward my storyrobots.
The steps that are yet to come are expected to proceed further in the direction I have marked out. A number of different firms are working on home robots that will have a vaguely human appearance and will fulfill some of the duties that once devolved on servants.
The result of all this is that I am held in considerable regard by those working in the field of robotics. Nof and published by John Wiley appeared, and, on request of the editor, I supplied it with an introduction. Of course, in order to appreciate the accuracy of my predictions, I had to be fortunate enough to be a survivor.
Because I had begun at a very early age, and because I was fortunate, I managed to do this and words cannot tell you how grateful I am for that.
Actually, I carried on my predictions of the future of robotics to the very end, to the ultimate moment, in my story The Last Question, published in I have a sneaking suspicion that, if the human race survives, we may continue to progress in that direction in some ways anyway.
Still, survival is limited at the best, and I have no chance of seeing very much more of the future course of technology. I will have to content myself with having future generations witness and I hope applaud what triumphs of this sort I may gain.
I, myself, wont, Nor are robots the only area in which my crystal ball was clear. In my story The Martian Way, published in , I described a space walk quite accurately, although an actual feat of this sort didnt take place till fifteen years afterward. Foreseeing space walks was not a very daring piece of prescience, I admit, for, given spaceships, such things would be inevitable.
However, I also described the psychological effects and thought of one that was rather unusualparticularly for me. I am, you see, a pronounced acrophobe with an absolute terror of heights and know perfectly well that I will never voluntarily go on a spaceship. If, however, I were somehow forced on one, I know, too, that I would never dare leave it for a space walk.
Nevertheless, I put personal fear to one side and imagined the space walk to produce euphoria. I had my space travelers quarrel over whose turn it was to get out into space and drift in quiet peace among the stars. And when space walks became fact, such euphoria was felt.
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