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Encyclopedia > Berserker (Saberhagen)

Frederick Thomas (born 1930) is an American science fiction and fantasy fiction author most famous for his Berserker series of science fiction stories. ...Fred Saberhagen's Berserker series is a For other meanings of this term see Space Opera (disambiguation). ...space opera in which robotic A clanking replicator is an artificial self_replicating system that relies on conventional large_scale technology and automation. ...self_replicating machines intend to destroy all organic life. The Berserkers are a Mutual assured destruction (MAD) is the doctrine of military strategy in which a full scale use of nuclear weapons by one of two opposing sides would result in the destruction of both the attacker and the defender. ...doomsday weapon from an ancient interstellar war. Humans are the only sentient species that is aggressive enough to put up a fight.


"Berserker" stories — many of the books are This article is in need of attention. ...short story collections — describe humans' fight with the Berserkers, ancient asteroid_sized killing machines and their smaller robotic minions designed to destroy all living things in the universe. Another feature of the series is that the term "humanity" refers to all sentient life in the Galaxy; thus, homo sapiens are referred to as "Earth_Descended" or "ED" humans, or as "Solarians." This terminology emphasizes the common threat the Berserkers pose toward of all life in the Galaxy. The only major sentient ally Earth_Descended humans have is the Carmpan, a subtle and mysterious race that is apparently incapable of direct aggression. The first stories in the series are related by an individual Carmpan, the 3rd Historian, who seeks to chronicle life in the Galaxy and the struggle against the Berserkers.

The first story, "Without a Thought" (1963), was basically a puzzle story where the The protagonist is the central figure of a story, and is often referred to as a storys main character. ...protagonist faced a problem of simulating intelligence to fool an enemy trying to determine whether there was any conscious being present on a ship.


Saberhagen came up with the Berserker as the rationale for the story on the spur of the moment, but the basic concept was so fruitful, with so many possible ramifications, that he has used it as the basis of many of his stories. A common theme in the stories is of how the apparent weaknesses and inconsistencies of living beings are actually the strengths that enable the machines' eventual defeat.


In later stories there are "goodlife" — i.e., Sophont is a term (derived from Greek) for an intelligent being (including non_human forms of life), most commonly used in science fiction. ...sophont traitors or Collaboration, literally, consists of working together with one or more others. ...collaborators — who cooperate with the berserker machines to stay alive, at least for a while.


Berserker books

  • Berserker (collection, 1967)
  • Berserker Wars (collection, 1981)
  • Berserker Blue Death (1985)
  • Berserker Throne (1986)
  • Berserker Base (1987)
  • Ultimate Enemy (collection, 1987)
  • Berserker Attack (collection, 1987) (Limited edition collection)
  • Berserker Planet (1991)
  • Berserker Lies (collection, 1991)
  • Berserker Man (1992)
  • Berserker Kill (1993)
  • Brother Assassin (collection, 1993)
  • Berserker Fury (1997)
  • Shiva in Steel (1998)
  • Berserker Star (2003)
  • Berserker Prime (2003)
  • Rogue Berserker (2005)

Some of the collections have duplicate stories.


The Berserker stories most likely inspired the Star Trek episode The Doomsday Machine is an episode of Star Trek: The Original Series. ...The Doomsday Machine in which it is postulated by Kirk that the giant robot planet_killer might be the remnants of two long gone warring races. Although the term Berserker wasn't used in the episode, the Doomsday Machine's planet killer has been nicknamed Berserker in various Trek publications.


Note: "Berserker" is a The Bass Red Triangle, was the first trademark registered in Britain in 1876. ...registered trademark of Frederick Thomas (born 1930) is an American science fiction and fantasy fiction author most famous for his Berserker series of science fiction stories. ...Fred Saberhagen (presumably only in the field of science fiction?).


See also

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Berserker (Saberhagen): Definition and Links by Encyclopedian.com (303 words)
Fred Saberhagen[?]’s Berserker series is a space opera where robotic machines intend to destroy all life.
The Berserkers were a doomsday weapon from an ancient interstellar war[?].
Saberhagen came up with the Berserker as the rationale for the story on the spur of the moment, but the basic concept was so fruitful, with so many possible ramifications that it has since been the basis for many of his stories.
Berserker (Saberhagen) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (438 words)
Fred Saberhagen's Berserker series is a space opera in which robotic self-replicating machines intend to destroy all organic life.
These berserkers, a doomsday weapon left over from an interstellar war 50,000 years ago, are killer spaceships furnished with machine intelligence, operating from asteroid-sized berserker bases where they are capable of building more Berserkers and auxiliary machines.
Saberhagen came up with the berserker as the rationale for the story on the spur of the moment, but the basic concept was so fruitful, with so many possible ramifications, that he has used it as the basis of many of his stories.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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