A
science fiction novel by
Isaac Asimov, first published in
1954 by
Doubleday. It was
Asimov's ninth novel, and the first in what has come to be known as the "
Robot
series".
As
the Good Doctor tells it in his self-titled
autobiography, the origins of
The Caves of
Steel begin in a conversation with
Horace Gold, then editor of the (now long-defunct)
magazine
Galaxy Science Fiction. Gold was trying to convince Asimov to write a novel
involving
robots taking human jobs in a future world crippled with
overpopulation. Asimov
balked at the idea as too depressing, but Gold insisted, suggesting that he write it as a
mystery novel. This struck a chord with Asimov, perhaps especially since he was at the time
growing more and more distant from his mentor,
John W. Campbell, Jr., who had
frequently said that it was impossible to have a SF mystery, because the detective could always
pull out some gadget that would magically solve the case. Asimov sought to disprove Campbell's
pronouncement in
The Caves of Steel.
Background
The Caves of Steel takes place sometime several thousand years in the future. The Earth's
population has expanded to a burgeoning eight billion, which has resulted in a number of radical
changes. The most striking of these is that everyone now lives underground, in huge Cities going
a mile deep and spanning hundreds of miles across. (The actual size of these Cities is perhaps
best illustrated by the offhand mention of
Jersey City and
White Plains as "
boroughs" of
New York City.) Special privileges - like
having a
sink in one's own apartment, or getting a few meals of real food a week instead of
flavored
yeast - are allotted in accordance to one's rated importance (though noone is left to
starve). One major consequence of this way of life is that nearly all Earthmen are
agoraphobic, unable to stand the open spaces of the surface - the very food and
resources which keep their
civilization from collapsing are grown and mined by
robots. Most
Earthmen would rather not think of that, however; most hate robots passionately, partially out
of fear that they will steal valuable jobs from human beings. Certainly, they could not fear the
robots themselves, for all robots have hardwired into their
positronic brains the
Three Laws
of Robotics:
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.
Through the invention of a "
hyperspace" engine that allows ships to travel hundreds of
lightyears in mere moments,
mankind has settled on 50 more
planets throughout the galaxy;
but no Earthmen have emigrated to these worlds almost since the initial wave of colonization,
some three thousand or so years earlier. These "Spacers" have, through the use of robots for
manual labor, the lack of indigenous disease, and the general advance of
medical science
been able to extend their lifetimes to be several centuries long. They keep their planets
relatively empty - the most populous world, Aurora, has no more than 200 million inhabitants at
any time. They hold Earth in the highest contempt and bar the immigration of Earthpeople, who
they consider to be at best genetically inferior (and at worst, subhuman). Even if most Spacers
did not consider them to be little more than
barbarians, it would be dangerous for one to
remain in close proximity to an Earthman for long - having being born and raised on worlds where
there is no
viral or
bacterial disease, their bodies have severely weakened
immune systems, to the point where even the
common cold could potentially be lethal.
There are some Spacers, however, who feel that it is ultimately in the interest of
humankind
for Earth to be modernized - in particular, for it to develop the same "
robot culture" present
on the Outer Worlds. On Earth, robots are only used for farming and mining on the surface and
for a few limited tasks in the Cities - but on Aurora and its sister planets, robots perform
nearly all forms of manual and
skilled labor. All humans on Spacer worlds are free to pursue
more intellectual professions, and each person has a small
army of robots at their beck and
call. Spacers consider this to be the most civilized way of life imaginable, and for the purpose
of helping to bring it to Earth, the Spacers have set up a small domed city on the surface above
New York, nicknamed "Spacetown". Earth, for its part, resents the Spacers deeply and is
suspicious of the "help" Spacetown is supposed to give, but has no choice but to appease the
vastly powerful Outer Worlds.
The Novel Itself
It begins shortly after the murder of a resident of Spacetown - the prominent
roboticist Roj
Nemennuh Sarton, killed by a
blaster fired at the chest. The Spacers insist that the culprit
must be an Earthman - no blaster has been found in or around Spacetown, and no Spacer had left
the settlement. Yet the same scanners that detected no Spacer leaving the town with a blaster
would also keep an Earthman from being able to enter with one. There were plenty of ways into
Spacetown by the surface, of course - yet what Earthman, no matter how fanatical in his hatred
of Spacers, could brave the unenclosed fields surrounding the town?
Given the task of solving this seemingly impossible mystery is Plainclothesman
Elijah Baley,
rating C-5, a detective in the
New York Police Department. Warned that failure to find
the murderer may result in declassification (that is, losing one's job and status and being
reduced to minimal living requirements), Baley sets out on his mission - but with one more
caveat. The Spacers, it seems, do not entirely trust a lowly Earthman to solve this case
himself. Thus, they require that he be partnered with one
Daneel Olivaw. Daneel is a
humaniform robot - not only does he look human, but his brain was designed to be as human as
possible (with the exception that he is still bound by the Three Laws) - and he was built in
part by Dr. Sarton himself. Programmed with what he calls a "desire to promote justice", he and
Baley set out to uncover the
conspiracy behind his creator's death.
The Caves of Steel is one of those science fiction novels that truly stands the test of
time. There are a few references that make it seem dated - in particular, Asimov's estimate of
eight billion Earthmen seems way below the mark - but they are relatively insignificant. The
story is fast-paced and engaging, and the revelation of the murderer's identity represents one
of the few times a novel has actually surprised me. Each time Baley thinks he's found his lead,
it turns out being a
dead end, but he presses on and shocks everyone with his success.
The
Caves of Steel is Asimov at his best, giving us a hard SF mystery with no cheap gimmicks - and
perhaps most importantly, no magic gadgets.
The Three Laws, as quoted, are under copyright by the Asimov estate. Fair use and all
that.