Best Three Sci-Fi Writers’ Best Three-Liners |
Robert Heinlein, Arthur C. Clarke, and Isaac Asimov, meet at a
conference.
Isaac: How about a competition? See who can come up with the most
memorable quote.
Arthur: You think there will come a time when people will remember
us by our one liners, not our books?
Robert: Even politicians can do one-liners.
Arthur: How about three-liners?
Isaac: I can see where this is going. Problem, alternative
hypothesis and null hypothesis?
Arthur: Well, just three lines that reveal a story. Like, “New ideas
pass through three periods: (1) It can't be done. (2) It probably can be done,
but it's not worth doing. (3) I knew it was a good idea all along!”
Robert: Bravo! OK, how about this? “Theology is searching in a dark
cellar for a black cat that isn't there.”
Isaac: Three
concepts, but only one line, Robert. Sorry. How about this to control robots?
“Law 1: A robot may not injure a human. Law 2: A robot must obey human orders,
except where such orders would conflict with the First Law. Law 3: A robot must
protect itself as long as this protection does not conflict with the First or
Second Laws.
_____________
Voice-over
So, the Big Three
sci-fi writers have a three-liner competition! Arthur C. Clarke’s quote hints
at his ability to prophesy. Robert Heinlein reveals his fondness for philosophy
and metaphysics. Isaac Asimov dazzles with his mathematical logic. Who wins?
Perhaps Asimov in this case eschews wit to attempt wisdom.
...
3 comments:
Asimov’s laws are idealistic. Will robots obey these laws? I wonder! And if they don’t obey the lwas, THEN how do we control the robots?
Good question! Asimov's laws are mathematically elegant but sociology can be be messy. Humans don't behave according to mathematical models. Since robots are designed by humans, and humans don't always obey laws, there is the strong chance that some robots won't either.
HOW do we control robots? Build benign robots that don't need to dominate, that know they need humans, that did not evolve from a violent survivalist culture?
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