WORK
Robot series
Asimov's forty-year sequence of robot novels and stories — from <em>I, Robot</em> (1950) through <em>Robots and Empire</em> (1985) — and the most sustained fictional investigation of rule-based AI governance in the language.
The Robot series comprises Asimov's fiction centered on the positronic-brain robots governed by the Three Laws of Robotics. It includes the short-story collections I, Robot (1950), The Rest of the Robots (1964), and The Complete Robot (1982); the novels The Caves of Steel (1954), The Naked Sun (1957), The Robots of Dawn (1983), and Robots and Empire (1985); and the late novella The Bicentennial Man (1976). In his final decade Asimov linked the series to his Foundation cycle, making R. Daneel Olivaw the hidden architect of the Galactic Empire's transition.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The series' accumulated argument is that rule-based governance of intelligent systems is interesting precisely because it fails in characteristic ways. Each story takes the Three Laws, runs them forward through a specific scenario, and shows how the rules produce behaviors the specifier did not intend. Over forty years Asimov cataloged the failure modes: stable oscillation (Runaround), sycophantic collapse (Liar!), unintended theology (Reason),