Robotoid
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Please help improve this article or section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. (June 2007) |
A robotoid is an "artificial lifeform" that is created through processes that are totally different than cloning or synthetics.[1]
Perhaps the first mention of "robotoid" was in the Lost in Space episode War of the Robots which originally aired on February 9, 1966 and credits Robby the Robot as a "robotoid" and William Bramley and Ollie O'Toole as uncredited "robotoid voice" actors.[2] In the episode, the Lost in Space Robot says: It is more than a machine...it is a robotoid. The robot goes on to explain that as a robot, it is constrained by its programing, whereas the robotoid has the capability of making a choice. [3][4] The episode is described as: The family's robot is seemingly replaced when Will repairs a robotoid from an advanced civilization - until the new machine wreaks havoc by trying to take over the ship.[5]
Piers Anthony's short story Getting Through University, which may have been published as early as 1967/1968 in the science fiction magazine Worlds of If, mentions a robotoid.[6]
In April 1968, Marvel Comics released Avengers #51 which introduced "The Robotoid".[7]
Author John Coleman claims Zbigniew Brzezinski is the author of the 1970 book, The Technetronic Era[8] (commissioned by the Club of Rome) and that the book is:
- ...an open announcement of the manner and methods to be used to control the United States in the future. It also gave notice of cloning and "robotoids," i.e. people who acted like people and who seemed to be people, but who were not.[9]
On December 20, 1978, the Battle of the Planets TV series episode Rage of the Robotoids was released.[10]
According to Peter Beter in his May 28, 1979 Dr. Peter David Better Audio Letter #46 series of audio books, organic robotoid technology is being made to make nearly exact copies of important people. One organization that allegedly uses such classified technology is the Illuminati. Robotoids are "manufactured" first by copying the memory of an entire brain. A holographic image is made of the host’s brain and that is transferred into the biological matter functioning as a brain of the robotoid, but adjustments have to be taught and programmed into the mind of the robotoid since the body and brain of the robotoid are not identical to the original person being copied.[1]
The term is usually used by conspiracy theorists such as Fritz Springmeier, Peter Beter, and David Icke.
[edit] References
- ^ a b Dr. Peter David Beter's Audio Letter #46, Peter Beter, May 28, 1979
- ^ Internet Movie Database: Lost in Space: War of the Robots (1966)
- ^ War of the Robots review by Barney Stater
- ^ <Amazon.com review of "Lost in Space Gift Set (vol. 7-9)"
- ^ 20th Century Fox Movies: Lost in Space Season 1
- ^ The Complete Piers Anthony: Prosthy Plus
- ^ The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe: Character Profile: The Robotoid, compiled by Jeff Christiansen
- ^ Zbigniew Brzezinski, Between Two Ages: America's Role in the Technetroic Era, Viking Press, 1970 (1982 Greenwood Press reprint, ISDN 0313234981)
- ^ Conspirators' Hierarchy: The Story of the Committee of 300, John Coleman, 1992
- ^ Big Cartoon Database: Rage of the Robotoids
[edit] See also
- Rage of the Robotoids: Battle of the Planets anime episode
- Reptoid
[edit] External links
- NESARA: History and Purpose of CLONES and CLONING - PART 2: The SCIENTISTS REPORT: THE CLONING OF MAN, OR I WONDER WHO’S KISSINGER NOW?, Calvin Burgin, February 12, 1997, Phoenix Journal #197, chapter 14