RA3 - Intruder, Isaac Asimov's Robot City-Robots and Aliens Book 3 - Robert Thurston

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Isaac Asimov's Robot City: Robots And Aliens Book 3: Intruder by Robert Thurston
ISAAC ASIMOV’S
ROBOT CITY
ROBOTS
AND ALIENS
Intruder by Robert Thurston
Copyright © 1990
For My Lovely Ladies,
Rosemary and Charlotte
WHAT IS A HUMAN BEING?
ISAAC ASIMOV
It sounds like a simple question. Biologically, a human being is a member of the species Homo sapiens. If we agree
that one particular organism (say, a male) is a human being, then any female with which he can breed is also a human
being. And any males with whom any of these females can breed are also human beings. This instantly marks up
billions of organisms on Earth as human beings.
It may be that there are organisms that are too old to breed, or too young, or too imperfect in one way or another, but
who resemble human beings more than they resemble any other species. They, too, are human beings.
We thus end up with something over 5 billion human beings on Earth right now, and perhaps 60 billion who have
lived on Earth since Homo sapiens evolved.
That’s simple, isn’t it? From the biological standpoint, we are all human beings, whether we speak English, Turkish,
or Japanese; whether we have pale skin or dark; red hair or black; blue eyes or brown; flat noses or beaky ones; and
so on.
That, however, is a biological definition, a sophisticated one. Now suppose that you are a member of a primitive
tribe, homogeneous in appearance, language and culture, and you suddenly encounter someone who looks
superficially like you but has red hair, where you’ve seen only black; fair skin where you’ve seen only dark; and,
worst of all, who cannot understand “people language” but makes odd sounds, which he seems to understand, but
which clearly make no sense whatever.
Are these strangers human beings in the sense that you yourself are? I’m afraid the consensus would be that they are
not. Nor is it entirely a matter of lack of sophistication. The ancient Greeks, who were certainly among the most
sophisticated human beings who ever lived, divided all human beings into two groups: Greeks and barbarians.
By barbarians, they didn’t mean people who were uncivilized or bestial. They recognized that some barbarians, like
the Egyptians and Babylonians and Persians were highly cultivated. It was just that non-Greeks didn’t speak Greek;
they made sounds that made no more sense (to a Greek encountering other languages for the first time) than a silly
sound like “bar-bar-bar.”
You might feel that Greeks may have made that division as a matter of convenience, but that they didn’t go so far as
to think that barbarians weren’t human.
Oh, didn’t they? Aristotle, one of the most sophisticated of all the ancient Greeks, was quite certain that barbarians
were slave-material by nature, while Greeks were free men by nature. Clearly, he felt that there was something sub-
human about barbarians.
But they were ancients, however sophisticated they might have been. They had limited experience, knew only a small
portion of the world. Nowadays, we have learned so much we don’t come to those foolish conclusions. We know that
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Isaac Asimov's Robot City: Robots And Aliens Book 3: Intruder by Robert Thurston
all human-like creatures are a single species.
Yes? Was it so long ago that most White Americans were quite certain that African Blacks were not human in the
sense that they themselves were; that the Blacks were inferior and that to enslave them and let them live on the
outskirts of a White society was doing them a great favor? I wouldn’t be surprised if some Americans believe that
right now.
It was not so long ago that Germans maintained loudly that Slavs and Jews were sub-human, so that they were right
to do their best to rid “true” human beings of such vermin. And I wouldn’t be in the least surprised if there were lots
of people right now who harbor similar notions.
Almost everyone thinks of other groups as “inferior,” although often they do not care to say so out loud. They tend to
divide humanity into groups of which only a small part (a part which invariably includes themselves) are “true”
human beings.
The Bible, of course, teaches universality (at least, in places). Thus, consider one of my own favorite passages in the
New Testament, the parable of the “good Samaritan” (Luke 10:25-37). Someone tells Jesus that one of the beliefs
one must have if one is to go to Heaven is “to love...thy neighbour as thyself. “ Jesus says he is correct and the man
asks, “And who is my neighbour?” (In other words, does he love only his friends and people he likes, or is he
supposed to love all sorts of bums and rotters?)
And here comes the parable of the good Samaritan. To put it briefly, a man needs help, and both a Priest and a Levite
(professional do-gooders, who are highly esteemed by pious people) ignore the whole matter, but a Samaritan offers
a great deal of help.
Now we talk so much about a “good” Samaritan because of this parable, that we think of the Samaritans as all good
and are not surprised at the help he offers. However, to the pious Jews of Jesus’ time, Samaritans were heretics,
things of evil, objects of hatred—and here we have a despised Samaritan doing good when Priests and Levites do
not.
And then Jesus asks, “Which now of these three, thinkest thou, was neighbour unto him that fell among the thieves?”
And the man is forced to say, “He that shewed mercy on him.”
This is as much to say that all good people are neighbors even when they are the kind of beneath-contempt
individuals as Samaritans are. And it follows, since all human beings have the capacity to be good, all people are
neighbors and love should extend to all.
St. Paul says in Galatians 3:28: “There is neither Jew nor Greek; there is neither bond nor free; there is neither male
nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus.”
That is a flat statement of universality.
I know that there are many pious people who know these passages and who nevertheless maintain racist views of one
sort or another. Such is the desire to be part of a superior group that nothing can wipe out the tendency to picture
others as inferior; to divide human beings into a)human, b)semihuman, and c)sub-human, being careful always to put
yourself into the first class.
And if we have such trouble in getting human beings to define what a human being is, imagine the problem a robot
would have. How does a robot define a human being?
In the old days, when I was first beginning to write my robot stories, John W. Campbell (my editor and mentor)
challenged me on several occasions to write a story that hinged on the difficulty of defining a human being. I always
backed off. I did not have to try writing such a story to know that it would be a particularly difficult one to write and
that I couldn’t do it. At least, not then.
In 1976, however, I finally tackled the job and wrote “The Bicentennial Man. “ It dealt essentially with a robot that
became more and more human, without ever being accepted as a human being. He became physically like a human
being, mentally like a human being, and yet he never crossed the line. Finally, he did, by crossing the last barrier. He
made himself mortal, and as he was dying, he was finally accepted as a human being.
It made a good story (winning both the Hugo and the Nebula) but it didn’t offer a practical way of distinguishing
between robot and human being, because a robot couldn’t wait for years to see if a possible human being died and
thus proved itself to be a human being.
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Isaac Asimov's Robot City: Robots And Aliens Book 3: Intruder by Robert Thurston
Suppose you are a robot and you have to decide whether something that looks like a human being is really a human
being, and you have to do it reasonably quickly.
If the only robots that exist are primitive, there is no problem. If an object looks like a human being but is made of
metal, it is a robot. If it talks in a mechanical kind of voice. moves with awkward jerky motions, and so on and so on,
it is a robot.
But what if the robot looks, superficially, exactly like a human being (like my robot, Daneel Olivaw), How can you
tell that he’s a robot? Well, in my later robot novels, you can’t, really. Daneel Olivaw is a human being in all respects
except that he’s a lot more intelligent than most human beings, a lot more ethical, a lot kinder and more decent, a lot
more human. That makes for a good story, too, but it doesn’t help identify a robot in any practical sense. You can’t
follow a robot around to see if it is better than a human being, for you then have to ask yourself—is he (she) a robot
or just an unusually good human being?
There’s this—
A robot is bound by the Three Laws of Robotics, and a human being is not. That means, for instance, that if you are a
human being and you punch someone you think may be a robot and he punches you back, then he is not a robot. If
you yourself are a robot, then if you punch him and he punches you back, he may nevertheless be a robot, since he
may know that you are a robot, and First Law does not prevent him from hitting you. (That was a key point in my
early story, “Evidence.”) In that case, though, you must ask a human being to punch the suspected robot, and if he
punches back he is no robot.
However, it doesn’t work the other way around. If you are a human being and you hit a suspected robot, and he
doesn’t hit you back, that doesn’t mean he is a robot. He may be a human being, but a coward. He may be a human
being but an idealist, who believes in turning the other cheek.
In fact, if you are a human being and you punch a suspected robot and he punches you back, then he may still be a
robot, nevertheless.
After all, the First Law says,..A robot may not harm a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to
come to harm.” That, however, begs the question, for it assumes that a robot knows what a human being is in the first
place.
Suppose a robot is manufactured to be no better than a human being. Human beings often suppose other people are
inferior, and not fully human, if they simply don’t speak your language, or speak it with an odd accent. (That’s the
whole point of George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion.) In that case, it should be simple to build a robot within whom
the definition of a human being includes the speaking of a specific language with a specific accent. Any failure in
that respect makes a person the robot must deal with not a human being and the robot can harm or even kill him
without breaking the First Law.
In fact, I have a robot in my book Robots and Empire for which a human being is defined as speaking with a Solarian
accent, and my hero is in danger of death for that very reason.
So you see it is not easy to differentiate between a robot and a human being.
We can make the matter even more difficult, if we suppose a world of robots that have never seen human beings.
(This would be like our early unsophisticated human beings who have never met anyone outside their own tribe.)
They might still have the First Law and might still know that they must not harm a human being—but what is this
human being they must not harm?
They might well think that a human being is superior to a robot in some ways, since that would be one reason why he
must not be harmed. You ought not to offer violence to someone worthier than yourself.
On the other hand, if someone were superior to you, wouldn’t it be sensible to suppose that you couldn’t harm him?
If you could, wouldn’t that make him inferior to you? The fallacy there ought to be obvious. A robot is certainly
superior to an unthinking rock, yet a falling rock might easily harm or even destroy a robot. Therefore the inferior
can harm the superior, but in a well-run Universe it should not do so.
In that case, a robot beginning only with the Laws of Robotics might well conclude that human beings were superior
to robots.
But then, suppose that in this world of robots, one robot is superior to all the rest. Is it possible, in that case, that this
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Isaac Asimov's Robot City: Robots And Aliens Book 3: Intruder by Robert Thurston
superior robot, who has never seen a human being, might conclude that he himself is a human being?
If he can persuade the other robots that this is so then the Laws of Robotics will govern their behavior toward him
and he may well establish a despotism over them. But will it differ from a human despotism in any way? Will this
robot-human still be governed and limited by the Three Laws in certain respects, or will it be totally free of them?
In that case, if it has the appearance and mentality and behavior of a human being, and if it lacks the Three Laws, in
what way is it not a human being? Has it not become a human being in actuality?
And what happens if, then, real human beings appear on the scene? Do the Three Laws suddenly begin to function
again in the robot-human, or does he persist in considering himself human? In my very first published robot story,
“Reason,” come to think of it, I described a robot that considered himself to be superior to human beings and could
not be argued out of it.
So what with one thing or another, the problem of defining a human being is enormously complex, and while in my
various stories I’ve dealt with different aspects of it, I am glad to leave the further consideration of that problem to
Robert Thurston in this third book of the Robots and Aliens series.
CHAPTER 1
ROBOT CITY DREAMS
Derec knew he was dreaming. The street he now ambled down wasn’t real. There had never been a street anywhere
in Robot City like this distorted thoroughfare. Still, too much was familiar about it, and that really scared him.
The Compass Tower, now too far in the distance, had changed, too. There seemed to be lumps allover its surfaces,
but that was impossible. In a city where buildings could appear and disappear overnight, the Compass Tower was the
only permanent, unchangeable structure.
It was possible this strange street was newly created, but he doubted that. It was a dream-street, plain and simple, and
this had to be a dream. Anyway, where were the robots? Nobody could travel this far along a Robot City street
without encountering at least a utility robot scurrying along, on its way to some regular task; or a courier robot, its
claws clutching tools; or a witness robot, checking the movements of the humans. During a stroll like this, Derec
should have encountered a robot every few steps.
No, it was absolutely certain this was a dream. What he was doing was sleeping in his ship somewhere in space
between the blackbody planet and Robot City. He had just come off duty after dealing with the Silversides for hours,
a task that would tire a saint.
At one time, just after his father had injected chemfets into his bloodstream, he had regularly dreamed of Robot City,
but it turned out that his harrowing nightmares had all been induced by a monitor that his father had implanted in his
brain. The monitor had been trying to establish contact so he could be aware of the nature of the chemfets, which
were tiny circuit boards that grew in much the same manner as the city itself had. Replicating in his bloodstream and
programmed by his father, they were a tiny robot city in his body, one that gave him psycho-electronic control over
the city’s core computer and therefore all its robots. After he had known this and the chemfets’ replication process
had stabilized, he had had no more nightmares of a distorted Robot City.
Until now.
Since he was so aware he was dreaming, perhaps this was what Ariel had explained to him as a “lucid dream.” In the
lucid dream state, she said, the dreamer could control the events of the dream. He wanted to control this dream, but at
the moment he couldn’t think of anything particular to do.
He looked around him. The immediate streetscape seemed composed of bits and pieces from several stages of the
city’s development, a weird composite of what Derec had observed during his several stays there.
But where were the robots?
If this was a lucid dream, maybe the reason he hadn’t seen any yet was that he hadn’t guided any into the scene.
Maybe they were waiting inside the buildings to be summoned. Maybe he should do so, before he panicked. But
which one could he bring onstage? How about Lucius, the robot who had created the city’s one authentic artistic
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Isaac Asimov's Robot City: Robots And Aliens Book 3: Intruder by Robert Thurston
masterpiece, the breathtaking tetragonal, pyramidal building-sculpture entitled “Circuit Breaker”? He’d be a good
choice since, as the victim of a bizarre roboticide, he no longer existed. It certainly would be pleasant to see old
Lucius again, his body so unrobotically stooped, if only to chat with him about art. There hadn’t been much art in his
life lately, especially if you didn’t count the rather breathtaking spectacle of a thousand blackbodies spread across the
sky. That was pretty, but it wasn’t art.
He wondered why his thoughts were rambling so. Had the Silversides disturbed his mind’s equilibrium that much?
Forget them. Forget them now. Get a normal robot into the dream. One of the most unforgettable robots he had
known. Avernus, say. Let’s see his stern visage again, his jet-black metallic skin, his interchangeable hands. He
concentrated on Avernus, but the robot didn’t appear. How about Euler and his glowing photocell eyes? Nope, no
deal. Let’s try for Wohler, then, before he went nonfunctional trying to save Ariel on the outer wall of the Compass
Tower. Golden and impressive, Wohler would be a wonderful choice. But no Wohler responded to his summons. He
would have to talk to Ariel about this. As a lucid dream, it was shaping up as one hell of a failure.
Ariel, in her compartment aboard the ship, was also dreaming. Hers was not, however, a lucid dream. Deeper than
that, it was a clearcut nightmare.
Jacob Winterson, the humaniform robot who had been her servant, existed again. Jacob had been destroyed by
Neuronius, one of the flying aliens called blackbodies. He had blown up and mangled most of Jacob (and himself in
the bargain). The few charred pieces that remained were now buried in some unmarked area of the agricultural
community she had initiated as a political compromise with the blackbodies. The compromise had worked. They had
been about to destroy their planet’s new robot city entirely because it was a threat to their weather systems; however,
an agricultural community was acceptable to all sides.
She missed Jacob. Very much. In that comfortable, detached way a human could love a robot, she had loved him.
Not that it could ever have been real love. She was too much in love with Derec to be unfaithful to him except in
dreams. On the other hand, she could not deny that she had not sometimes been romantically attracted toward the
handsome and imperturbable humaniform robot.
In the dream, Jacob sat in front of a computer terminal, his humanlike fingers flying over the keyboard, pressing keys
as if he wanted to push them all the way through, making the screen shake with the ferocity of his entries.
She asked him what he was doing. He said he was searching for the formula that would transform a humaniform
robot into a human being. There was no such formula, she told him. When he turned toward her, his eyes seemed
filled with a frightening human anger. He protested that there were at least a hundred Earth and Spacer legends in
which creatures changed into human beings. Statues, puppets, fish, trees, all became human in such myths. He was
certain, he said with an un-Jacobian shrillness, that there had to be a formula by which he, too, could be
transmogrified.
Why did the Compass Tower look so diseased? Derec asked himself. Was it possible for him, as a lucid dreamer, to
change that? He concentrated on the building’s shape, trying to restore it to its architecturally magnificent pyramidal
form. But nothing happened. If anything, the tower became uglier, and he had to look away from it.
In the distance something came toward him, traveling down the street at a high speed. As it passed by buildings, the
buildings changed. When it neared, he saw it was a vehicle, but one quite unlike any Robot City mode of
transportation. It ran on three thick wheels, making it vaguely resemble a jitney, the smaller, lighter utility type of
vehicle used for taxiing around the city. The vehicle’s body was misshapen, as if a lot of ungeometric chunks had
been welded together on a long central stem. It was colored black and gray in an illogical and splotchy fashion.
Still certain he was in the midst of a lucid dream, Derec stood defiantly in the center of the roadway —daring the
vehicle to come to a screeching stop at his feet. Which it did. Good, he thought, I’m in control of the dream at last.
Just watch me now.
A large hatch at the top of the vehicle sprang open with an explosive sound, and Dr. Avery, his father, pulled himself
through the opening. What kind of a lucid dream was this? The last person he wanted to see was his megalomaniacal
father, interfering in a dream in just the way he’d interfered with Derec’s life, injecting him with chemfets and
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IsaacAsimov'sRobotCity:RobotsAndAliensBook3:IntruderbyRobert\ThurstonISAACASIMOV’SROBOTCITYROBOTSANDALIENSIntruderbyRobertThurstonCopyright©1990ForMyLovelyLadies,RosemaryandCharlotteWHATISAHUMANBEING?ISAACASIMOVItsoundslikeasimplequestion.Biologically,ahumanbeingisamembe\rofthespeciesHomosapiens.Ifw...

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