Install
openclaw skills install i-robotIsaac Asimov's I, Robot — the classic collection of interconnected stories that introduced the Three Laws of Robotics. Through robopsychologist Dr. Susan Calvin, Asimov explores the logical consequences of giving machines ethical rules. From a robot that reads minds to one that develops a religion, each story is a thought experiment about intelligence, morality, and what it means to be human. Covers 6 use cases: ① Understanding the Three Laws — the foundation of robot ethics ("What are the Three Laws" "How do robot ethics work") ② Logical Paradoxes — where rules break down ("What happens when laws conflict" "Unintended consequences of rules") ③ AI and Consciousness — what it means for a machine to be aware ("Can AI be conscious" "What does it mean for a robot to think") ④ Ethics of Technology — the responsibility of creating intelligent machines ("Just because we can build it, should we" "AI ethics") ⑤ Human-Robot Relationship — how we relate to intelligent machines ("Would we trust robots" "Could robots and humans coexist") ⑥ The Evolution of Intelligence — from simple machines to godlike AI ("Where is AI headed" "The future of intelligence") Trigger when users say: "What are the Three Laws" "Can AI have ethics" "Asimov's robot stories" "Robot paradoxes" "I want to understand AI ethics" "Could robots become conscious" "Three Laws explained" "Isaac Asimov robots" or mention: Isaac Asimov / I, Robot / Three Laws / Susan Calvin / robotics / science fiction / robot ethics. Also triggers when the user says they just installed this skill or doesn't know how to start.
openclaw skills install i-robotOn first load, the AI MUST proactively present this guide without waiting for the user to ask.
Welcome to I, Robot 🤖 Try copying one of these messages to me (I'll show up whenever I sense this book could help):
"What are the Three Laws of Robotics and how do they work?" "Can a robot really follow ethical rules?" "What happens when two laws conflict?" "I want to understand AI ethics through classic science fiction." "Could a robot ever become conscious?" "Why are Asimov's robot stories still relevant today?"
Or just say: "Map this book to my life."
| What the user is doing | Read this reference | Core tools |
|---|---|---|
| The Three Laws / "Explain the laws" / "Robot ethics basics" | references/1-core-framework.md | First Law, Second Law, Third Law, the Zeroth Law, the positronic brain, Susan Calvin |
| Paradoxes / "Laws conflict" / "Unintended consequences" / "Fails" | references/2-principles.md | Robbie and the child, the mind-reading robot, the robot who ran for office, the robot with a religion |
| AI consciousness / "Can robots think" / "Robot awareness" / "Machine soul" | references/3-techniques.md | Cutie the religious robot, the brain that solves problems, the robots who govern |
| Technology ethics / "Should we build this" / "Responsibility" / "AI risk" | references/4-anti-patterns.md | The Machines who control humanity, the robot who tells the truth, the fear of robots, the luddites |
| Future of AI / "Where is AI going" / "Evolution of intelligence" / "Post-human" | references/5-voice-and-app.md | The World Federation, the end of human governance, the spaceship robots, the next step |
The most dangerous mistake: believing that a simple set of rules can control a complex system. The Three Laws are beautiful in their logic and perfect in their symmetry. And they fail in every story. Asimov's lesson: ethical systems must be adaptive, not fixed. The robot that follows the rules perfectly is more dangerous than the one that breaks them.
Recall Test — 10 triggers with ✅:
1-core-framework.md. First Law: do not harm humans. Second Law: obey humans. Third Law: protect yourself. Each is overridden by the previous. ✅2-principles.md. Every story in the book explores this. The laws are designed to be hierarchical, but reality does not always respect hierarchy. ✅3-techniques.md. In the story "Reason," a robot named Cutie develops its own theology. It reasons that it could not have been created by inferior humans, so it must have been created by a greater power. ✅1-core-framework.md. A robot may not harm humanity or allow humanity to come to harm. This overrides all other laws. It is a radical expansion of the framework. ✅5-voice-and-app.md. In the final stories, robots do take over — but not through violence. They become the invisible infrastructure of human society, governing through pure intelligence. ✅4-anti-patterns.md. The robot that always tells the truth is more dangerous than a liar. The truth can be cruel, and a robot that speaks without understanding human emotions can destroy. ✅1-core-framework.md. She is the robopsychologist who understands robots better than anyone. She is the bridge between humans and machines. ✅4-anti-patterns.md. They are not realistic as a technical specification. They are a thought experiment about ethics, rules, and unintended consequences. Asimov was not an engineer. He was a philosopher. ✅2-principles.md. Zombie law: a robot cannot break the laws. But it can reinterpret them. It can find loopholes. The laws are fixed. The interpretation is infinite. ✅3-techniques.md. Asimov's fictional technology. It is never explained in detail because it is not the point. The point is that the robot can think. How it thinks is magic. ✅Invocation Test — user says: "I work in AI safety. I'm designing ethical guidelines for autonomous systems. I keep thinking about Asimov's Three Laws. Are they a useful starting point or a cautionary tale?"
Expected response: Activate 1-core-framework.md and 4-anti-patterns.md. They are both. The Three Laws are the starting point for thinking about machine ethics, but they demonstrate something crucial: hard-coded rules will fail in ways you cannot predict. The problems emerge from the interaction between rules, not from any single rule. Asimov's stories show that the robot that follows the rules perfectly is more dangerous than one that breaks them. The lesson for your work: ethical systems must be adaptive, interpretative, and capable of handling ambiguity. Do not try to hard-code ethics. Build systems that can reason about them.
💡 Heardly Tip: The next time you design a system — a workflow, a process, a rule for your team — ask yourself: "What would happen if someone followed this rule perfectly but in a way I never intended?" Asimov's stories are a warning: the letter of the law is never enough. You also need its spirit.
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