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Asimov's story "...That Thou Art Mindful of Him" has an interesting pedigree. It was initially commissioned for an original collection entitled, Final Stage: The Ultimate Science Fiction Anthology edited by Edward L. Ferman and Barry N. Malzberg. The intent of the anthology is compelling. Here's how the editors described the premise.
"The assumption was that science fiction — that branch of literature, half beast, half-civilized —sits upon perhaps, a dozen classic themes, which, in various combinations, permutations, and convolutions, underline most of the work in the field. Like the ten to twenty basic chess attacks and defenses, these themes can lead to winning combinations of great beauty or, in less talented hands, to disastrous and obvious clichés."
Some of science fiction's most astounding writers were each given one of these classic themes and charged with crafting that theme's ultimate story. The assignment of "Robots and Androids" could only have gone to the good doctor. Each contributor was also tasked with writing an afterword on the theme and their story.
Thus, "...That Thou Art Mindful of Him" was born. Ed Malzberg was also editor of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction at the time. According to Peter King writing on Amazon.com, Malzberg, upon receiving the manuscript, was compelled to include it in his magazine first. It appeared in the April 1974 issue. In his afterword to the story, The Great and Glorious Az proclaimed "...having followed matters through to the logical conclusion, I have possibly destroyed the Three Laws, and it made it impossible for me to ever write another positronic robot story."
But then, of course, he qualified it, maybe not. And he said something similar after writing the Bicentennial Man two years later (that's for next week). He qualified that as well, "But then again," he wrote, "I might. I'm not always predictable." Two novels and a bunch more short stories later, the good doctor might have been more predictable than he thought.
Anyway, we talk about it. Please tune in and join the fun! Let's go!
You can read that entire afterword on our website!
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Asimov's story "...That Thou Art Mindful of Him" has an interesting pedigree. It was initially commissioned for an original collection entitled, Final Stage: The Ultimate Science Fiction Anthology edited by Edward L. Ferman and Barry N. Malzberg. The intent of the anthology is compelling. Here's how the editors described the premise.
"The assumption was that science fiction — that branch of literature, half beast, half-civilized —sits upon perhaps, a dozen classic themes, which, in various combinations, permutations, and convolutions, underline most of the work in the field. Like the ten to twenty basic chess attacks and defenses, these themes can lead to winning combinations of great beauty or, in less talented hands, to disastrous and obvious clichés."
Some of science fiction's most astounding writers were each given one of these classic themes and charged with crafting that theme's ultimate story. The assignment of "Robots and Androids" could only have gone to the good doctor. Each contributor was also tasked with writing an afterword on the theme and their story.
Thus, "...That Thou Art Mindful of Him" was born. Ed Malzberg was also editor of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction at the time. According to Peter King writing on Amazon.com, Malzberg, upon receiving the manuscript, was compelled to include it in his magazine first. It appeared in the April 1974 issue. In his afterword to the story, The Great and Glorious Az proclaimed "...having followed matters through to the logical conclusion, I have possibly destroyed the Three Laws, and it made it impossible for me to ever write another positronic robot story."
But then, of course, he qualified it, maybe not. And he said something similar after writing the Bicentennial Man two years later (that's for next week). He qualified that as well, "But then again," he wrote, "I might. I'm not always predictable." Two novels and a bunch more short stories later, the good doctor might have been more predictable than he thought.
Anyway, we talk about it. Please tune in and join the fun! Let's go!
You can read that entire afterword on our website!