Tuesday, October 13, 2009

I, Robot - Chapter 9: The Evitable Conflict

October 11th 2009

The final chapter is basically an overview of the world in the year 2052. Powerful machines that run Earths economy and production, known as “The Machines”, have given orders against their function. These malfunctions haven’t caused much harm yet, but the fact that they are simply appearing is alarming. Stephen Byerley, the new elected World Coordinator, asks for advice from leaders of regions of the world, and Susan Calvin herself.

This final closing chapter to the book leaves me with tons of questions, and has me wondering. Could there ever be a world in the future that relies on Machines to run our economy? To me this idea seems great. If we could have these machines make our economic decisions in the most intelligent ways, then the idea of these machines sounds brilliant. Relating to the book however, our technology would have to be controlled so that malfunctions like this aren’t possible. It would be hard to have these machines run the government, for the sake that a malfunction like this could really mess up our government.

These machines believe that in order for humanity to not be lost in the near future, some inaction of law #1 is needed, ultimately causing small loss to the humans race to prevent mass loss in the future.

This is how I, and many other people like Asimov probably have envisioned a robots race’s fate. If humans ever created robots as what they are portrayed as in I, Robot, then the ultimate climax is that these robots, will malfunction, error and overpowering us to the point of our, or their destruction. I think that intelligence of robot in the future will be so great that robots will be able to become self-conscience, and will have the ability to make their own decisions, whether positive or negative.

My overall take on this book is that if you love challenging novels, and have an interest in science fiction, this is the perfect book for you! Each chapter is a different tale, and can be read in different order. There is no, one plot building up throughout the whole books. Only small plots in each chapter. They all, however, share the theme of humans, robots, and mortality.

For me, this book was slightly more challenging then I expected. Small details included very space like words and dialogue that you really have to read over carefully and think about what they mean, in order to understand these small details. Characters were hard to relate to, in terms of what they did. There wasn’t enough detail given on some character to determine relations

My rating on this book: 7/10

2 comments:

  1. excellent, thoughtful mature responses..tough book for a grade 9
    well done

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