Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0.9.5
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| year = 1983
| publisher = Отечество
}}</ref> The story was reviewed by [[Valentin D. Ivanov]] in SFF review webzine ''The Portal''.<ref>[{{Cite web |url=http://sffportal.net/2011/06/lawful-little-country-the-bulgarian-laws-of-robotics/#more-2376 |title=Lawful Little Country: The Bulgarian Laws of Robotics |{{!}} The Portal<!-- Bot generated title -->] |access-date=2023-02-08 |archive-date=2011-10-06 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111006052447/http://sffportal.net/2011/06/lawful-little-country-the-bulgarian-laws-of-robotics/#more-2376 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
For the 1986 tribute anthology, ''[[Foundation's Friends]],'' [[Harry Harrison (writer)|Harry Harrison]] wrote a story entitled, "The Fourth Law of Robotics". This Fourth Law states: "A robot must reproduce. As long as such reproduction does not interfere with the First or Second or Third Law."
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# A robot must continually search for better power sources.
What is notable inWithin these three rules is that these are basically rules for "wild" life, so in essence what Tilden stated is thatbasically whatstating hehis wantedgoal wasas: "...proctoring a silicon species into sentience, but with full control over the specs. Not plant. Not animal. Something else."<ref>{{cite magazine| url=https://www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.09/tilden.html?pg=2&topic= | magazine=Wired | first=Fred | last=Hapgood | title=Chaotic Robotics (continued) | issue = 9 | date = September 1994| volume=2 }}</ref>