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by teddyh 1226 days ago
From what I remember, Asimov wanted to write science fiction stories about robots where robots were useful tools for humans, instead of the rampaging monsters robots usually were in stories written by other people. Asimov’s early robot stories had no specified rules for robots, but he soon thought about what the specific rules should be, and came up with some rules, and used them as a backdrop and lore for many (many) subsequent stories. The rules were therefore formed as a narrative tool, and we should not realistically expect anything more from them.
1 comments

Are you trying to say I'm reading too much into a science fiction author's work? Maybe. It's fun to think about it. He wrote it for me to have fun with it, no?
I’m saying that he did not invent the rules to show what a flawed concept they were, nor for the purpose of social commentary. He merely wanted some simple rules so that robots could be considered “safe” by the world and characters in his stories.

The so-called “death of the author” may be a truth with regards to you want to believe that the stories are about, but when actual authorial intent is a documented fact, what the author intended is, IMHO, not up for interpretation.

> He merely wanted some simple rules so that robots could be considered “safe” by the world and characters in his stories.

On the contrary, the first story to feature the Three Laws had the laws conflict with reach other and render the robot useless.

The entire point of the story is the counterintuitively bad emergent result of sensible-looking rules governing behaviour.

Later stories repeated this, finding new entertaining and interesting scenarios that showed the inadequacy of the laws.

Other stories did have them as background lore. But they originated as the center of the story, and very effectively, as we are talking about them 80 years later!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runaround_(story)

I’ll just link this here, and everybody can draw their own conclusions on what Asimov did and did not intend:

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Three_Laws_of_Rob...

Maybe from a purely literature analysis point of view you are correct. I wouldn't know, I didn't study literature analysis. But it feels like gatekeeping when you say I'm not allowed to interpret some science fiction story some way or another.