Difference between revisions of "Reason"

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'''Asimov, Isaac. "Reason."''' ''Astounding'' 1941. Coll. [[I, Robot]], q.v.. Rpt. ''Science Fiction: A Historical Anthology'', q.v. under Anthologies.  
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'''Asimov, Isaac. "Reason."''' ''Astounding'' 1941. Coll. ''[[I, Robot (Asimov)|I, Robot]]'', q.v.. Rpt. ''[[Science Fiction: A Historical Anthology]]'', q.v. under Anthologies.  
  
 
QT-1, a robot controlling a high-energy beam from Solar Station #5, recapitulates R. Descartes's skeptical reasoning toward God (in the ''Discourse on Method'') and concludes QT-1 is superior to the humans with him and subject to the will of only "the Master," which includes spreading the word among robots that the Master is the Master and QT-1 his prophet. Fortunately for Earth, the will of the Master is also for QT-1 to keep "all dials at equilibrium," which, incidentally, keeps the beam focused on the receiving station on Earth, providing power, and not frying large swaths of the planet (''Historical'' ''Anthology'' 326-7, 335).  
 
QT-1, a robot controlling a high-energy beam from Solar Station #5, recapitulates R. Descartes's skeptical reasoning toward God (in the ''Discourse on Method'') and concludes QT-1 is superior to the humans with him and subject to the will of only "the Master," which includes spreading the word among robots that the Master is the Master and QT-1 his prophet. Fortunately for Earth, the will of the Master is also for QT-1 to keep "all dials at equilibrium," which, incidentally, keeps the beam focused on the receiving station on Earth, providing power, and not frying large swaths of the planet (''Historical'' ''Anthology'' 326-7, 335).  
 
[[category: fiction]]
 
[[category: fiction]]

Latest revision as of 18:14, 21 October 2021

Asimov, Isaac. "Reason." Astounding 1941. Coll. I, Robot, q.v.. Rpt. Science Fiction: A Historical Anthology, q.v. under Anthologies.

QT-1, a robot controlling a high-energy beam from Solar Station #5, recapitulates R. Descartes's skeptical reasoning toward God (in the Discourse on Method) and concludes QT-1 is superior to the humans with him and subject to the will of only "the Master," which includes spreading the word among robots that the Master is the Master and QT-1 his prophet. Fortunately for Earth, the will of the Master is also for QT-1 to keep "all dials at equilibrium," which, incidentally, keeps the beam focused on the receiving station on Earth, providing power, and not frying large swaths of the planet (Historical Anthology 326-7, 335).