Asimov and The Future

19/10/2025 4 min

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Isaac Asimov: The Architect of the Three Laws and the GalaxiesIt was a cold afternoon in Brooklyn, New York, when little Isaac Asimov, just three years old, arrived in the United States with his parents — Russian immigrants in search of a better life. Born on January 2, 1920, in the small town of Petrovichi, in what was then the Soviet Union, Isaac was a curious child — and that curiosity would follow him for life, burning like an unquenchable flame within him.His parents opened a small candy store in Brooklyn, and it was there, among shelves of sweets and pulp sci-fi magazines, that Isaac taught himself to read — at the age of five. Words came naturally to him. He devoured magazines like Amazing Stories and Astounding Science Fiction while his classmates were still learning the alphabet.At school, he was brilliant and precocious. By the age of 15, he was already in college. Later, he earned a PhD in biochemistry from Columbia University. Although science was his academic career, it was through writing that he would become immortal.Asimov wrote his first science fiction story at 19. His talent caught the eye of John W. Campbell, the legendary editor of Astounding Science Fiction. From there, his literary career took off like a Foundation starship.And what a career it was! Isaac Asimov wrote or edited more than 500 books and thousands of essays and letters. He moved fluidly between science fiction, science writing, history, the Bible, Shakespeare, classical literature, and more. A true modern polymath.But it was through science fiction that he shaped the future.In the 1940s, Asimov created the Three Laws of Robotics, a set of ethical principles his intelligent machines would obey — principles that continue to inspire discussions around artificial intelligence and robotics today. 1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm. 2. A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law. 3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.These laws gave birth to the world of robot stories and the classic “I, Robot”, where Asimov not only created robots but also deep philosophical and moral dilemmas — exploring what it means to be conscious, ethical, and above all, human.But his grand epic came with the Foundation series — a sweeping saga that blends science, history, politics, and psychology, following the decline and rebirth of a galactic empire through the use of “psychohistory,” a fictional science capable of predicting the behavior of large populations. Inspired by Edward Gibbon and his work on the fall of the Roman Empire, Asimov transported Rome’s fall to the stars.Even with his literary fame, Asimov never abandoned science. He became a professor at Boston University and one of the greatest science communicators of the 20th century. His popular science books — like The Book of Physics, The Book of Chemistry, and The Land of Canaan — inspired generations with clear, accessible, and often humorous explanations.And he was also witty. Proud of knowing practically “everything,” he loved to say: “I don’t just believe in God — I know He’s a fan of Asimov.” Always with a sarcastic smile.Isaac Asimov died on April 6, 1992, from complications related to AIDS, contracted during a blood transfusion in a heart surgery years earlier — a fact kept secret until after his death.He passed on, but left behind an entire universe.Today, when we think of ethical robots, galactic empires, mathematical predictions of human behavior, or how to teach science with clarity and passion, we are following in Asimov’s footsteps. His ideas live on — on screens, in books, in debates about technology, and in the hearts of everyone who looks to the future and asks: “What if?”