- Lyuben Dilov
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Lyuben Dilov Born 25 December 1927
Cherven Bryag, BulgariaDied 10 June 2008 (aged 80)
Sofia, BulgariaOccupation writer Nationality Bulgarian Genres Science fiction, philosophy Subjects robots Lyuben Dilov (1927, Cherven Bryag - 10 June 2008, Sofia[1]), also known as Luben Dilov and Ljuben Dilov was a Bulgarian science-fiction writer.
He graduated from Sofia University, specializing Bulgarian language and literature. He started writing as a student and his first stories were published in Narodna Mladezh youth newspaper.[1]
He has won a number of domestic and international literary awards an himself established the Graviton Award in science fiction.[1]
Like Asimov, Dilov was a disbeliever in the UFO phenomena.[citation needed]
Dilov's son, Lyuben Dilov Jr. (bg:Любен Дилов-син), is a Bulgarian politician and script writer.
Works
He was an author of over 35 books.[1]
Dilov described in his 1974 novel The Trip of Icarus the Fourth Law of Robotics extending the original three laws proposed by Isaac Asimov: A robot must establish its identity as a robot in all cases." [2][3]
Dilov gives reasons for the fourth safeguard in this way: "The last Law has put an end to the expensive aberrations of designers to give psychorobots as humanlike a form as possible. And to the resulting misunderstandings..."[2]
His story Contacts of a Fourth Kind was included in the anthology Tales from the Planet Earth.
References
- ^ a b c d www.novinite.com
- ^ a b Dilov, Lyuben (aka Lyubin, Luben or Liuben) (2002). Пътят на Икар. Захари Стоянов. ISBN 954-739-338-3.
- ^ Another Fourth Law of Robotics was proposed by Harry Harrison in the tribute anthology Foundation's Friends in 1989.
Categories:- Bulgarian writers
- Science fiction writers
- 1927 births
- 2008 deaths
- European writer stubs
- Bulgarian people stubs
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