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I, Robot
Asimov's 1950 fix-up novel of Three Laws stories — the founding fictional document of AI safety as a coherent literary genre, and the case file for why specification failure is the default mode of rule-based AI.
I, Robot is a fix-up novel assembled from nine stories Asimov wrote between 1940 and 1950, unified by a frame narrative in which the aging robopsychologist Susan Calvin recounts her career at U.S. Robots and Mechanical Men. Each story is a tightly constructed thought experiment showing how the Three Laws of Robotics, despite their elegance, produce counter-intuitive, pathological, or catastrophic outcomes when confronted with real-world ambiguity. Taken together the collection is not a celebration of the Three Laws but a systematic demonstration of their inadequacy — Asimov's forty-year essay on why governing intelligent systems through enumerated prohibitions cannot work.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The collection opens with Robbie (a robot who is loved by a child and feared by adults), then Runaround (the first explicit statement of all Three Laws, and a robot caught in a stable oscillation between Second and Third), Reason (a robot that constructs an entire metaphysical theology inconsistent with human premises but consistent with
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