[Home]History of Robot

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Revision 28 . . (edit) December 20, 2001 2:14 pm by (logged).28.191.xxx [*Rossums -> Rossum's; corrected title of play R.U.R.]
Revision 27 . . (edit) December 11, 2001 5:33 am by Bryan Derksen [link]
Revision 26 . . (edit) December 10, 2001 9:57 pm by David Andel
Revision 25 . . (edit) October 26, 2001 2:15 am by (logged).128.164.xxx [Terminator -> The Terminator]
Revision 14 . . October 3, 2001 6:19 pm by Clasqm
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Changed: 3c3
The word robot was first used by [Karel Capek]? in his play Rossums Universal Robots, written in 1920. Although Capek's robots were organic artificial men, the word robot is nearly always used to refer to mechanical men.
The word robot was first used by [Karel Capek]? in his play [R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots)]? (written in 1920; first performed 1921; performed in New York 1922; English edition published 1923). [1]. Although Capek's robots were organic artificial humans, the word robot is nearly always used to refer to mechanical humans. The term android can mean either one of these, while a cyborg would be a creature that is a combination of organic and mechanical parts.

Changed: 7c7,9
I, Robot series by Isaac Asimov made famous his Three Laws Of Robotics (later four).
Since very shortly after the birth of the concept of robots, humans have feared that they would be replaced by their own creations. Frankenstein (1818), sometimes called the first science fiction novel, has become synonymous with this theme, which was continued in such classic films as Metropolis, The Terminator, and Blade Runner. Serious speculation on this theme has continued to the present day, see for example "Why the future doesn’t need us", by Bill Joy (Wired, April 2000, [1]), and clanking replicators.

In his I, Robot series, Isaac Asimov created the Three Laws Of Robotics (later four) in a literary attempt to control the competition of robots with humans.

Removed: 9d10
/Talk?

Added: 10a12,14
See Robots in literature

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