Isaac Asimov

I, Robot

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  • josuedr11has quoted8 years ago
    He just can’t help being faithful and loving and kind. He’s a machine-made so. That’s more than you can say for humans.
  • Yatzel Roldánhas quoted4 years ago
    ‘And that is all,’ said Dr Calvin, rising. ‘I saw it from the beginning, when the poor robots couldn’t speak, to the end, when they stand between mankind and destruction. I will see no more. My life is over. You will see what comes next.’

    I never saw Susan Calvin again. She died last month at the age of eighty-two.
  • Yatzel Roldánhas quoted4 years ago
    The Earth’s economy is stable, and will remain stable, because it is based upon the decisions of calculating machines that have the good of humanity at heart through the overwhelming force of the First Law of Robotics.’

    Stephen Byerley continued, ‘And although the Machines are nothing but the vastest conglomeration of calculating circuits ever invented, they are still robots within the meaning of the First Law, and so our Earth-wide economy is in accord with the best interests of Man. The population of Earth knows that there will be no unemployment, no overproduction or shortages. Waste and famine are words in history books. And so the question of ownership of the means of production becomes obsolescent. Whoever owned them (if such a phrase has meaning), a man, a group, a nation, or all mankind, they could be utilized only as the Machines directed. —Not because men were forced to but because it was the wisest course and men knew it
  • Yatzel Roldánhas quoted4 years ago
    If a robot can be created capable of being a civil executive, I think he’d make the best one possible. By the laws of Robotics, he’d be incapable of harming humans, incapable of tyranny, of corruption, of stupidity, of prejudice. And after he had served a decent term, he would leave, even though he were immortal, because it would be impossible for him to hurt humans by letting them know that a robot had ruled them. It would be most ideal.’
  • Yatzel Roldánhas quoted4 years ago
    The nature of a robot reaction to a dilemma is startling,’ she began. ‘Robot psychology is far from perfect – as a specialist, I can assure you of that – but it can be discussed in qualitative terms, because with all the complications introduced into a robot’s positronic brain, it is built by humans and is therefore built according to human values
  • Yatzel Roldánhas quoted4 years ago
    From a scientific standpoint the situation, while not entirely clear, is subject to intelligent analysis. The question of interstellar travel under present conditions of physical theory is … uh … vague. The matter is wide open – and the information given by Consolidated to its thinking machine, assuming these we have to be the same, was similarly wide open. Our mathematical department has given it a thorough analysis, and it seems Consolidated has included everything. Its material for submission contains all known developments of Franciacci’s space-warp theory, and, apparently, all pertinent astrophysical and electronic data. It’s quite a mouthful.’
  • Yatzel Roldánhas quoted4 years ago
    The work here is rough and most of us get a little jagged. Fooling around with hyperspace isn’t fun.’ He smiled feebly, finding pleasure in confession. ‘We run the risk continually of blowing a hole in normal space-time fabric and dropping right out of the universe, asteroid and all
  • Yatzel Roldánhas quoted4 years ago
    But can you translate that into crude psychological thought? All normal life, Peter, consciously or otherwise, resents domination. If the domination is by an inferior, or by a supposed inferior, the resentment becomes stronger. Physically, and, to an extent, mentally, a robot – any robot – is superior to human beings. What makes him slavish, then? Only the First Law! Why, without it, the first order you tried to give a robot would result in your death. Unstable? What do you think?’
  • Yatzel Roldánhas quoted4 years ago
    Lanning swiveled about in his chair and faced Calvin, ‘You’ll have to tackle the job from the other direction. You’re the robo-psychologist of the plant, so you’re to study the robot itself and work backward. Try to find out how he ticks. See what else is tied up with his telepathic powers, how far they extend, how they warp his outlook, and just exactly what harm it has done to his ordinary RB properties. You’ve got that?’
  • Yatzel Roldánhas quoted4 years ago
    ‘We are so accustomed to considering our own thoughts private.’
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