List of fictional military robots explained
Contemporary discourse about the ethical implications of military robots has been shaped by their portrayal in science fiction.[1] In particular, Isaac Asimov's "Three Laws of Robotics", which set forth basic premises about human-robot relationships in his fictional universe, significantly influenced other science fiction writers and helped to establish many of them as experts taken seriously by military policy makers.The following is a list of fictional works with military robots.
Film
Near future
Land design
- Kill Command (2016) – S.A.R
- Fahrenheit 451 (1953) – Mechanical hound
- Red Planet (2000) – AMEE (Autonomous Mapping Exploration and Evasion)
- (2001) – S.I.M.O.N.
- RoboCop (1987) – ED-209 (Enforcement Droid Series 209)
- (2003) – T-1 Battlefield Robot
- Short Circuit (1986) – Nova S-A-I-N-T (Strategic-Artificially-Intelligent-Nuclear-Transport) "Johnny 5"
- Hardware (1990) – M.A.R.K. 13 prototype killer combat droid
Air Models
- Stealth (2005) – EDI (Extreme Deep Invader)
- (2003) – T-1 airborne VTOL craft
Land and Air Models
High futurist
Humanoids
- Terminator series (1984/1991/2003) – Cyberdyne T-800/T-850 Terminator Endoskeleton
- Star Wars Episodes I, II, III (1999/2002/2005) – Eos B-1 Battle Droid
- Star Wars Episodes II, III (2002/2005) – Eos B-2 Super Battle Droid
- Star Wars Episode III (2005) – Holowan IG-100 MagnaGuards
- Transformers (2007) – Decepticons
- Saturn 3 (1980) – "Hector" Model
- The Black Hole (1979) – S.T.A.R. (Special Troops/Arms Regiment)
- Battlestar Galactica (1978) – Cylon Centurion (Military androids with silver armor)
- Fallout (series) (1997-present) – Protectron (General purpose robot, police variant available), Liberty Prime (Giant military robot), Synth (Generation 1 and 2), Assaultron
- Aliens (1986) – (Aliens) Lance Bishop Hyperdyne Systems model 341-B Synthetic
Androids
- Terminator series (1984/1991/2003) – Cyberdyne T-800 (Series 800, Model 101, Version 2.4)
- – Cyberdyne T-1000 a shape-shifter android assassin
- (2003) – T-X "Terminatrix"
- Fallout (series) (2016-present) – Synth (Generation 3, which is a nearly perfect replica of the human body)
Other designs
- The Matrix series (1999/2003) – Sentinels
- Lost in Space (1998) – B9 "Robot"
- Star Wars Episodes I, II, III (1999/2002/2005) – Droideka (Destroyer Droid)
- Star Wars series (1977/2005) – R2-D2 (Astromech droid)
- The Black Hole (1979) – V.I.N.CENT (Vital Information Necessary CENTralized)
- The Black Hole (1979) – B.O.B. (BiO-sanitation Battalion)
- The Black Hole (1979) – Maximilian
- Fallout series (1997–present) – Mister Gutsy, Robobrains (Controlled by an organic brain), Securitron, Sentry Bot, Liberator
- Halo 1, 2, and 3 (2001–2007) – Sentinels, and Super Sentinels
- Screamers (1995) – Screamers
Powered Exoskeletons
Television
Literature
- Various books by Isaac Asimov
- Shooting War by Anthony Lappé
- The Bolo stories of Keith Laumer and others.
- Starship Troopers by Robert A. Heinlein
- Various Dale Brown books
- The Cybernetic Infantry Device manned robot and Tin Man robotic battle armor.
- "Malak" by Peter Watts
- Second Variety by Philip K. Dick
- The 1964 novel The Invincible by Polish writer Stanisław Lem described the ultimate evolution of military robots: swarms of minuscule, insect-like micromachines which defeat any "intellegent" machinery. This idea of an "ultimate weapon system" was finalized by Lem in his fictitious review "Weapon Systems of the Twenty First Century or The Upside-down Evolution".[2]
Computer/video games
Notes and References
- Halpern . Mark . 2009 . Military Robots and the Redefinition of "Autonomy" . Vocabula Review . 11 . 12 . 1–12 . EBSCOHost.
- https://solaris.lem.pl/ksiazki/beletrystyka/niezwyciezony/96-poslowie-niezwyciezony, "CAŁY TEN ZŁOM"