Isaac Asimov had writer's block once. It was the worst ten minutes of his life. One of the pioneers of
Science Fiction, Isaac Asimov invented or popularized many of the genre's tropes -
Robot Buddies, Galactic Empires,
world-spanning cities - but is best known for the
Laws of Robotics and the
Foundation Trilogy, both early works. He is considered one of the "Big Three" of
Science Fiction along with
Arthur C. Clarke and
Robert A. Heinlein, and is the owner of one seriously awesome pair of sideburns.
Dr. Asimov was a professor of biochemistry, and one of the most prolific writers of science fiction and fact in history, with novels, short stories, scholarly articles, books about writing itself, a book of facts and at least two joke books to his credit. This is to the point where he wrote a book in every Dewey Decimal System category except for Philosophy. In addition, he was a
Promoted Fanboy; he started reading the pulp sci-fi magazines sold in his family's candy stores when he was young, began writing his own stories when he was eleven, and managed to get published when he was nineteen.
Robots in early science fiction almost always
Turned Against Their Masters, a trope Asimov felt was
ridiculous. Robots were tools; they would be safe by design. After a few preliminary stories, he formalized this with the
Three Laws of Robotics:
- A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
- A robot must obey orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
- A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.
Asimov noted that the three laws are, at their core, basic principles of machine engineering scaled up for designing hard
AIs, i.e. a well-designed tool (like a kitchen knife) should not cause its user grievous injury, it should accomplish its intended function efficiently, and it should be able to perform its tasks without damaging itself. Nevertheless, he engaged in destructive testing of these laws in his subsequent robot stories, showing how robots could still cause trouble through an
overly literal interpretation of their orders and the Three Laws, and even twist them to justify
killing humans and
taking over the world with a
Zeroth Law Rebellion. The original short stories revolving around robots most prominently featured the female robopsychologist Susan Calvin, a misanthrope who used her intellect to resolve the malfunction featured in those stories. Other stories in the series tended to feature similar thought processes to those followed by Calvin - just not
her.
The "Robot Novel" trilogy that began with
The Caves Of Steel was set thousands of years farther in the future. In this setting, Earth was a
vassal of its original "Spacer" colony worlds, which had grown powerful and wealthy with the help of robots. The novels revolved around the tension between the Spacers and the overcrowded, dystopian Earth, as viewed through the eyes of plainclothes police detective Elijah Baley, who repeatedly finds himself assigned to politically explosive murder cases alongside the humanoid robot R. Daneel Olivaw. The stories also explored the potential consequences of robots on a variety of possible human societies.
The
Foundation Trilogy is a sequence of stories set after the fall of a Galactic Empire, describing a conspiracy/
Xanatos Roulette to restore civilization
* starting centuries before it falls. Take that, Xanatos!
. They were the first to be set in a future history, covering the thousand year interregnum. (Well, maybe about half of it, before
Author Existence Failure.) These were set in the same universe as his earlier "Galactic Empire" stories, but he did not write
bridging material between the two until much later. After uniting the Galactic Empire and
Foundation, Asimov then linked
Foundation and the robot stories through an elaborate
Retcon.
As you might expect, various of his stories may be found online - notably his own favorite among those that he wrote, "
The Last Question
", and one many consider his best, "
Nightfall
".
Dr. Asimov's stories have also been adapted for television several times, most notably in
Out of the Unknown and a full-length adaptation of "The Ugly Little Boy". He also co-created the short-lived television series
Probe for ABC.
He died of AIDS, contracted through a blood transfusion. He left instructions for this not to be published until 10 years after his death in which time he thought acceptances of HIV would change.
Works by Isaac Asimov with their own trope pages include:
Isaac Asimov's other works provide examples of: