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First published in ''The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction'' (October 1969 issue), by Creator/IsaacAsimov, this {{novelette}} is after Dr Susan Calvin retires from United States Robots and Mechanical Men Corporation, having passed on her role as Chief Robopsychologist to Clinton Madarian.

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First published in ''The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction'' (October 1969 issue), by Creator/IsaacAsimov, this {{novelette}} is after Dr Dr. Susan Calvin retires from United States Robots and Mechanical Men Corporation, having passed on her role as Chief Robopsychologist to Clinton Madarian.



* BeneathNotice: Bogart goes crazy trying to find the "witness" Madarian claimed had heard Jane rattle off the location of three potentially habitable exoplanets. He's desperate enough to ask Dr Calvin for advice, who quickly realizes that Bogart didn't think to ask the truck driver.

to:

* BeneathNotice: Bogart goes crazy trying to find the "witness" Madarian claimed had heard Jane rattle off the location of three potentially habitable exoplanets. He's desperate enough to ask Dr Dr. Calvin for advice, who quickly realizes that Bogart didn't think to ask the truck driver.



* EnergeticAndSoftSpokenDuo: Dr Calvin [[InvokedTrope invokes this trope]], recognizing that people would appreciate having an ebullient extrovert after decades of her being an [[IronLady indomitable introvert]]. He replaces her as Chief Robopsychologist in this story.
* {{Fembot}}: The JN series ([[InSeriesNickname Jane]]) of robots {{Invoked|Trope}} the idea of a feminine robot in order to quell potential unrest against the idea of "robots without constraint", designed to be more creative than previous models. They experimented with narrower "hips" (but discarded it in the next iterations), used female pronouns, and created a contralto voice to [[DefiedTrope defy]] RoboSpeak. When the whole project is explained to [[IronLady Dr Calvin]], she begins rolling her eyes as hard as she can.

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* EnergeticAndSoftSpokenDuo: Dr Dr. Calvin [[InvokedTrope invokes this trope]], recognizing that people would appreciate having an ebullient extrovert after decades of her being an [[IronLady indomitable introvert]]. He replaces her as Chief Robopsychologist in this story.
* {{Fembot}}: The JN series ([[InSeriesNickname Jane]]) of robots {{Invoked|Trope}} the idea of a feminine robot in order to quell potential unrest against the idea of "robots without constraint", designed to be more creative than previous models. They experimented with narrower "hips" (but discarded it in the next iterations), used female pronouns, and created a contralto voice to [[DefiedTrope defy]] RoboSpeak. When the whole project is explained to [[IronLady Dr Dr. Calvin]], she begins rolling her eyes as hard as she can.



* InMediasRes: This story starts after a meteorite has killed Chief Robopsychologist Clinton Madarian and destroyed [[RobotNames JN-5]], before rewinding years back to when Dr Calvin resigned, promoting Madarian to her former role.

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* InMediasRes: This story starts after a meteorite has killed Chief Robopsychologist Clinton Madarian and destroyed [[RobotNames JN-5]], before rewinding years back to when Dr Dr. Calvin resigned, promoting Madarian to her former role.



* NonMammalMammaries: The first model, [[RobotNames JN-1]], has a narrowed waistline to imply {{Fembot}}. Bogart objects to this, as well as the potential "breasts" that might go along with them. JN-5 is just a little more delicate in build then a 'male', with a tapering waist and a voice described as liquid and musical. Since Dr Asimov was known for lampooning robot tropes, it's likely that this was a deliberate dig at other 'female' robots in fiction.

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* NonMammalMammaries: The first model, [[RobotNames JN-1]], has a narrowed waistline to imply {{Fembot}}. Bogart objects to this, as well as the potential "breasts" that might go along with them. JN-5 is just a little more delicate in build then a 'male', with a tapering waist and a voice described as liquid and musical. Since Dr Dr. Asimov was known for lampooning robot tropes, it's likely that this was a deliberate dig at other 'female' robots in fiction.



* WomenAreWiser: This story sets up the idea that women have an intuition for the right decision that men lack, only to {{Subvert|edTrope}} it at the end, when the narration reveals that Dr Calvin simply took the practical action of calling the truck driver to confirm her guess. Women are apparently blessed with common sense, not magical thinking (although it may as well be magical to the people [[ZigZaggedTrope who don't have any]]).

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* WomenAreWiser: This story sets up the idea that women have an intuition for the right decision that men lack, only to {{Subvert|edTrope}} it at the end, when the narration reveals that Dr Dr. Calvin simply took the practical action of calling the truck driver to confirm her guess. Women are apparently blessed with common sense, not magical thinking (although it may as well be magical to the people [[ZigZaggedTrope who don't have any]]).
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* HilariousInHindsight: Though probably not intended as anything more than FutureSocietyPresentValues, the story did predict that the real life tech industry would be laughably sexist, about 40 years before this became known. The line about "everyone knowing" women are dumber than men, which is disproved in the story itself, might not even be an example of that trope if we assume the board mistakenly think their sexism is more common than it is and are blind to their own biases that prevent them from being wholly rational actors.
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* MenAreGenericWomenAreSpecial: The robots built by US Robotics have no gender, but when it's suggested that thy build a robot with [[WomenAreWiser intuition]], people immediately jump to the idea of a [[{{Fembot}} girl robot]]. Madarian takes that idea and pushes it as a way to make the [[RobotNames JN series]] special.

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* MenAreGenericWomenAreSpecial: The robots built by US Robotics have no gender, but when it's suggested that thy they build a robot with [[WomenAreWiser intuition]], people immediately jump to the idea of a [[{{Fembot}} girl robot]]. Madarian takes that idea and pushes it as a way to make the [[RobotNames JN series]] special.
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* FutureSocietyPresentValues: While the story plainly deconstructs the prejudices behind the titular trope, the extent to which characters in its future setting baldly state that most people believe women to be less intelligent still comes across as jarring today.
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* AndroidsArePeopleToo: As the story goes on it becomes very clear that Madarian has come to love Jane-5 the way a parent loves a child, praising her whenever she succeeds at even a minor task, gets very offended when Bogert critiques her performance, pulls strings so she can go to Earth despite the BanOnAI, and is really protective of her above and beyond just being expensive. When Jane goes to Flagstaff, the astronomers are just as enamored of her as they would be a real woman. Because Jane can reason intuitively unlike earlier robots, it’s implied that she is the first robot to actually deserve being treated this way, since intuition and troubleshooting was the only remaining advantage humans had over robots.


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* HilariousInHindsight: Though probably not intended as anything more than FutureSocietyPresentValues, the story did predict that the real life tech industry would be laughably sexist, about 40 years before this became known. The line about “everyone knowing” women are dumber than men, which is disproved in the story itself, might not even be an example of that trope if we assume the board mistakenly think their sexism is more common than it is and are blind to their own biases that prevent them from being wholly rational actors.


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* MillionToOneChance: The meteorite that kills Madarian and destroys Jane is so unlikely that one character opens the possibility that it was divine wrath.


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* PosthumousCharacter: Madarian and Jane die at the start, then there is a flashback to the JN series’ creation.


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* SelfParody: Makes fun of the male chauvinism present in the earlier robot stories written before women’s lib. The men are all fools and Susan the only one not clutching the IdiotBall. Unlike “Literature/FirstLaw” though, Dr. Asimov never said [[ParodyRetcon it wasn’t meant seriously]].
* SpiritualSuccessor: To “Literature/FirstLaw”. They are the only two Asimov stories to feature [[RobotGirl female robots]], the robots are special for reasons beyond that, and both stories mock the series conventions.


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* YouGoGirl: The ending is basically Susan Calvin telling the guys how dumb they are.
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* TitleDrop:
** Madarian references the story's title when he proposes that the creative robot be marketed as "a feminine robot with intuition."
** Towards the story's end, Susan Calvin says the title directly when Bogert is filling her in on the situation around the [[{{Fembot}} JN robot]].
--->She snorted at one point. "Feminine intuition? Is that what you wanted the robot for? You men. Faced with a woman reaching a correct conclusion and unable to accept the fact that she is your equal or superior in intelligence, you invent something called feminine intuition."
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removed red links.


'' Twenty Years Of The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction'' (1970), '' Planet Der Selbstmorder'' (1970), ''Fiction'' (issue #199, July 1970), ''Literature/TheBicentennialManAndOtherStories'' (1976), ''Urania'' (issue #736, November 1977), ''Literature/TheCompleteRobot'' (1982), ''The Asimov Chronicles: Fifty Years of Isaac Asimov'' (1989), ''Literature/RobotVisionsCollection'' (1990), and ''Literature/TheCompleteStories, Volume 2'' (1992).

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'' Twenty Years Of The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction'' (1970), '' Planet Der Selbstmorder'' (1970), ''Fiction'' (issue #199, July 1970), ''Literature/TheBicentennialManAndOtherStories'' (1976), ''Urania'' (issue #736, November 1977), ''Literature/TheCompleteRobot'' (1982), ''The Asimov Chronicles: Fifty Years of Isaac Asimov'' (1989), ''Literature/RobotVisionsCollection'' ''Robot Visions Collection'' (1990), and ''Literature/TheCompleteStories, Volume 2'' (1992).
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'' Twenty Years Of The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction'' (1970), '' Planet Der Selbstmorder'' (1970), ''{{Magazine/Fiction}}'' (issue #199, July 1970), ''Literature/TheBicentennialManAndOtherStories'' (1976), ''{{Magazine/Urania}}'' (issue #736, November 1977), ''Literature/TheCompleteRobot'' (1982), ''The Asimov Chronicles: Fifty Years of Isaac Asimov'' (1989), ''Literature/RobotVisionsCollection'' (1990), and ''Literature/TheCompleteStories, Volume 2'' (1992).

to:

'' Twenty Years Of The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction'' (1970), '' Planet Der Selbstmorder'' (1970), ''{{Magazine/Fiction}}'' ''Fiction'' (issue #199, July 1970), ''Literature/TheBicentennialManAndOtherStories'' (1976), ''{{Magazine/Urania}}'' ''Urania'' (issue #736, November 1977), ''Literature/TheCompleteRobot'' (1982), ''The Asimov Chronicles: Fifty Years of Isaac Asimov'' (1989), ''Literature/RobotVisionsCollection'' (1990), and ''Literature/TheCompleteStories, Volume 2'' (1992).
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None


'' Twenty Years Of The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction'' (1970), '' Planet Der Selbstmorder'' (1970), ''{{Magazine/Fiction}}'' (issue #199, July 1970), ''Literature/TheBicentennialManAndOtherStories'' (1976), ''{{Magazine/Urania}}'' (issue #736, November 1977), ''Literature/TheCompleteRobot'' (1982), ''Literature/TheAsimovChronicles: Fifty Years of Isaac Asimov'' (1989), ''Literature/RobotVisionsCollection'' (1990), and ''Literature/TheCompleteStories, Volume 2'' (1992).

to:

'' Twenty Years Of The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction'' (1970), '' Planet Der Selbstmorder'' (1970), ''{{Magazine/Fiction}}'' (issue #199, July 1970), ''Literature/TheBicentennialManAndOtherStories'' (1976), ''{{Magazine/Urania}}'' (issue #736, November 1977), ''Literature/TheCompleteRobot'' (1982), ''Literature/TheAsimovChronicles: ''The Asimov Chronicles: Fifty Years of Isaac Asimov'' (1989), ''Literature/RobotVisionsCollection'' (1990), and ''Literature/TheCompleteStories, Volume 2'' (1992).
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None


''Literature/TwentyYearsOfTheMagazineOfFantasyAndScienceFiction'' (1970), ''Literature/PlanetDerSelbstmorder'' (1970), ''{{Magazine/Fiction}}'' (issue #199, July 1970), ''Literature/TheBicentennialManAndOtherStories'' (1976), ''{{Magazine/Urania}}'' (issue #736, November 1977), ''Literature/TheCompleteRobot'' (1982), ''Literature/TheAsimovChronicles: Fifty Years of Isaac Asimov'' (1989), ''Literature/RobotVisionsCollection'' (1990), and ''Literature/TheCompleteStories, Volume 2'' (1992).

to:

''Literature/TwentyYearsOfTheMagazineOfFantasyAndScienceFiction'' '' Twenty Years Of The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction'' (1970), ''Literature/PlanetDerSelbstmorder'' '' Planet Der Selbstmorder'' (1970), ''{{Magazine/Fiction}}'' (issue #199, July 1970), ''Literature/TheBicentennialManAndOtherStories'' (1976), ''{{Magazine/Urania}}'' (issue #736, November 1977), ''Literature/TheCompleteRobot'' (1982), ''Literature/TheAsimovChronicles: Fifty Years of Isaac Asimov'' (1989), ''Literature/RobotVisionsCollection'' (1990), and ''Literature/TheCompleteStories, Volume 2'' (1992).
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None


First published in ''Magazine/TheMagazineOfFantasyAndScienceFiction'' (October 1969 issue), by Creator/IsaacAsimov, this {{novelette}} is after Dr Susan Calvin retires from United States Robots and Mechanical Men Corporation, having passed on her role as Chief Robopsychologist to Clinton Madarian.

to:

First published in ''Magazine/TheMagazineOfFantasyAndScienceFiction'' ''The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction'' (October 1969 issue), by Creator/IsaacAsimov, this {{novelette}} is after Dr Susan Calvin retires from United States Robots and Mechanical Men Corporation, having passed on her role as Chief Robopsychologist to Clinton Madarian.
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Society Marches On has been renamed; cleaning out misuse and moving examples


* SocietyMarchesOn: The designers of a subtly [[FemBot feminine-looking robot]] believe that everyone will assume it is mentally inferior to other robots. One character explicitly states that if there's ''anything'' the average person believes, it's that women are less intelligent than men. Upon saying this, he nervously glances around (Dr Susan Calvin having recently retired). At the end, after Dr Calvin comes back to save the day, the [[AnAesop lesson]] is that men dismiss women's equal (if not superior) intelligence as mere "intuition".
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* InMediasRes: This story starts after a meteorite has killed Chief Robopsychologist Clinton Madarian and destroyed [[RobotNames JN-5]], before rewinding years back to when Dr Calvin resigned, promoting Madarain to her former role.

to:

* InMediasRes: This story starts after a meteorite has killed Chief Robopsychologist Clinton Madarian and destroyed [[RobotNames JN-5]], before rewinding years back to when Dr Calvin resigned, promoting Madarain Madarian to her former role.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* AIIsACrapshoot: This story follows why the first model isn't always the final design model, as JN-1 has a pinched waist that Bogert rejects on the basis of structural weakness. JN-2 proves incapable of drawing correlations at all, JN-3 had a flaw in the design that ruined the brain, and JN-4 was nearly, but not quite, what Mandarin wanted. JN-5 was the final prototype, [[NewTechIsNotCheap after billions of dollars and years of work had been invested]].

to:

* AIIsACrapshoot: This story follows why the first model isn't always the final design model, as JN-1 has a pinched waist that Bogert rejects on the basis of structural weakness. JN-2 proves incapable of drawing correlations at all, JN-3 had a flaw in the design that ruined the brain, and JN-4 was nearly, but not quite, what Mandarin Madarian wanted. JN-5 was the final prototype, [[NewTechIsNotCheap after billions of dollars and years of work had been invested]].



* BeneathNotice: Bogart goes crazy trying to find the "witness" Mandarin claimed had heard Jane rattle off the location of three potentially habitable exoplanets. He's desperate enough to ask Dr Calvin for advice, who quickly realizes that Bogart didn't think to ask the truck driver.

to:

* BeneathNotice: Bogart goes crazy trying to find the "witness" Mandarin Madarian claimed had heard Jane rattle off the location of three potentially habitable exoplanets. He's desperate enough to ask Dr Calvin for advice, who quickly realizes that Bogart didn't think to ask the truck driver.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


->"The trouble with you, Peter, is that when you think of a witness to a planetological statement, you think of planetologists. You divide up human beings into categories, and despise and dismiss most. A robot cannot do that. The First Law says, 'A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.' Any human being. That is the essence of the robotic view of life. A robot makes no distinction. To a robot, all men are truly equal, and to a robopsychologist who must perforce deal with men at the robotic level, all men are truly equal, too."\\

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->"The -->"The trouble with you, Peter, is that when you think of a witness to a planetological statement, you think of planetologists. You divide up human beings into categories, and despise and dismiss most. A robot cannot do that. The First Law says, 'A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.' Any human being. That is the essence of the robotic view of life. A robot makes no distinction. To a robot, all men are truly equal, and to a robopsychologist who must perforce deal with men at the robotic level, all men are truly equal, too."\\
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Page Creation

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First published in ''Magazine/TheMagazineOfFantasyAndScienceFiction'' (October 1969 issue), by Creator/IsaacAsimov, this {{novelette}} is after Dr Susan Calvin retires from United States Robots and Mechanical Men Corporation, having passed on her role as Chief Robopsychologist to Clinton Madarian.

One of the first actions Madarian takes in his new role as Chief Robopsychologist is to design a robot "without constraints". He's annoyed when he has to point out that ThreeLawsCompliant are not the only constraints modern robots are built with, and discussion on how to pitch his idea in a public-friendly way leads him to declare the JN series as [[{{Fembot}} feminine robots]], with [[WomenAreWiser feminine intuition]].

"Feminine Intuition" has been republished several times;
''Literature/TwentyYearsOfTheMagazineOfFantasyAndScienceFiction'' (1970), ''Literature/PlanetDerSelbstmorder'' (1970), ''{{Magazine/Fiction}}'' (issue #199, July 1970), ''Literature/TheBicentennialManAndOtherStories'' (1976), ''{{Magazine/Urania}}'' (issue #736, November 1977), ''Literature/TheCompleteRobot'' (1982), ''Literature/TheAsimovChronicles: Fifty Years of Isaac Asimov'' (1989), ''Literature/RobotVisionsCollection'' (1990), and ''Literature/TheCompleteStories, Volume 2'' (1992).
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!!"Feminine Intuition" contains examples of:

* AIIsACrapshoot: This story follows why the first model isn't always the final design model, as JN-1 has a pinched waist that Bogert rejects on the basis of structural weakness. JN-2 proves incapable of drawing correlations at all, JN-3 had a flaw in the design that ruined the brain, and JN-4 was nearly, but not quite, what Mandarin wanted. JN-5 was the final prototype, [[NewTechIsNotCheap after billions of dollars and years of work had been invested]].
* AsteroidThicket: While the chief robopsychologist and a prototype robot with important information about nearby habitable exoplanets are being transported via aircraft, they're hit by a meteorite. Because of how improbable it is, the characters speculate as to whether some higher intelligence orchestrated the meteor strike to keep Earth from learning about their alien neighbors. The odds against this happening are so astronomically high, they're compared to the odds of guessing the location of exoplanets to colonize in the first place.
* BeneathNotice: Bogart goes crazy trying to find the "witness" Mandarin claimed had heard Jane rattle off the location of three potentially habitable exoplanets. He's desperate enough to ask Dr Calvin for advice, who quickly realizes that Bogart didn't think to ask the truck driver.
->"The trouble with you, Peter, is that when you think of a witness to a planetological statement, you think of planetologists. You divide up human beings into categories, and despise and dismiss most. A robot cannot do that. The First Law says, 'A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.' Any human being. That is the essence of the robotic view of life. A robot makes no distinction. To a robot, all men are truly equal, and to a robopsychologist who must perforce deal with men at the robotic level, all men are truly equal, too."\\
"It would not occur to Madarian to say a truck driver had heard the statement. To you a truck driver is not a scientist but is a mere animate adjunct of a truck, but to Madarian he was a man and a witness. Nothing more. Nothing less."
* CharacterTitle: The 1970 German translation calls this [[CompletelyDifferentTitle "Jane 5"]], promoting the robot to titular importance.
* EnergeticAndSoftSpokenDuo: Dr Calvin [[InvokedTrope invokes this trope]], recognizing that people would appreciate having an ebullient extrovert after decades of her being an [[IronLady indomitable introvert]]. He replaces her as Chief Robopsychologist in this story.
* {{Fembot}}: The JN series ([[InSeriesNickname Jane]]) of robots {{Invoked|Trope}} the idea of a feminine robot in order to quell potential unrest against the idea of "robots without constraint", designed to be more creative than previous models. They experimented with narrower "hips" (but discarded it in the next iterations), used female pronouns, and created a contralto voice to [[DefiedTrope defy]] RoboSpeak. When the whole project is explained to [[IronLady Dr Calvin]], she begins rolling her eyes as hard as she can.
* InMediasRes: This story starts after a meteorite has killed Chief Robopsychologist Clinton Madarian and destroyed [[RobotNames JN-5]], before rewinding years back to when Dr Calvin resigned, promoting Madarain to her former role.
* InSeriesNickname: US Robots were originally assuming they would nickname the JN series "John". Once they come up with the gimmick of presenting their creative brain as "feminine intuition", the nickname was changed to "Jane".
* MenAreGenericWomenAreSpecial: The robots built by US Robotics have no gender, but when it's suggested that thy build a robot with [[WomenAreWiser intuition]], people immediately jump to the idea of a [[{{Fembot}} girl robot]]. Madarian takes that idea and pushes it as a way to make the [[RobotNames JN series]] special.
-->Madarian seized on that. "All right. A girl robot. Our robots are sexless, of course, and so will this one be, but we always act as though they're males. We give them male pet names and call them he and him. Now this one, if we consider the nature of the mathematical structuring of the brain which I have proposed, would fall into the JN-coordinate system. The first robot would be JN-1, and I've assumed that it would be called John-10...I'm afraid that is the level of originality of the average roboticist. But why not call it Jane-1, damn it? If the public has to be let in on what we're doing, we're constructing a feminine robot with intuition."
* NewTechIsNotCheap: After several failures together costing half a billion dollars, JN-5, Madarian insists that the previous attempts weren't failures, explaining what was learned was also of benefit to the company.
* NonMammalMammaries: The first model, [[RobotNames JN-1]], has a narrowed waistline to imply {{Fembot}}. Bogart objects to this, as well as the potential "breasts" that might go along with them. JN-5 is just a little more delicate in build then a 'male', with a tapering waist and a voice described as liquid and musical. Since Dr Asimov was known for lampooning robot tropes, it's likely that this was a deliberate dig at other 'female' robots in fiction.
* OrwellianRetcon: Some versions of the story (such as in ''Literature/TheCompleteRobot'') contain the [[ThreeLawsCompliant Three Laws of Robotics]], while other publications (such as in ''Literature/RobotVisionsCollection'') leave it out.
* PerverseSexualLust: The planetologists at Flagstaff Observatory are initially wary of the [[RobotNames JN-5 robot]] that was brought to them to determine where the most likely habitable exoplanet is, but when they hear her voice, she immediately becomes "[[InSeriesNickname Jane]]", and they try impressing her.
-->"She said, 'Good afternoon, gentlemen. I am so glad to meet you.' And it came out in this beautiful contralto...That was it. One man straightened his tie, and another ran his fingers through his hair. What really got me was that the oldest guy in the place actually checked his fly to make sure it was zipped. They're all crazy about her now. All they needed was the voice. She isn't a robot any more; she's a girl."
* RobotNames: US Robots were originally assuming the JN series would be nicknamed John. Once they come up with the gimmick of presenting the series's more creative brain as "feminine intuition", they became Janes.
* SecondaryCharacterTitle: The 1970 German translation, "Jane 5", prompts the prototype robot to titular importance, despite not ever speaking on-screen.
* SocietyMarchesOn: The designers of a subtly [[FemBot feminine-looking robot]] believe that everyone will assume it is mentally inferior to other robots. One character explicitly states that if there's ''anything'' the average person believes, it's that women are less intelligent than men. Upon saying this, he nervously glances around (Dr Susan Calvin having recently retired). At the end, after Dr Calvin comes back to save the day, the [[AnAesop lesson]] is that men dismiss women's equal (if not superior) intelligence as mere "intuition".
* WomenAreWiser: This story sets up the idea that women have an intuition for the right decision that men lack, only to {{Subvert|edTrope}} it at the end, when the narration reveals that Dr Calvin simply took the practical action of calling the truck driver to confirm her guess. Women are apparently blessed with common sense, not magical thinking (although it may as well be magical to the people [[ZigZaggedTrope who don't have any]]).
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