"Allen, Roger MacBride - Isaac Asimov's Robot Mysteries 02 - Isaac Asimov's Inferno" - читать интересную книгу автора (Allen Roger Macbride)ISAAC
ASIMOVТS INFERNO BY ROGER MacBRIDE ALLEN Copyright й 1994 For Isaac Acknowledgments I wish to thank the many people who helped this book come into being. Thanks to my editor, David Harris, for catching gaffes, large and small, in the first draft, and generally keeping me honest. Thanks to John Betancourt, and Leigh Grossman of Byron Preiss Visual Publications for keeping me as informed as possible about the state of play--and to Byron Preiss for making me diliver. Thanks to Susan Allison, Laura Anne Gilman, and Ginjer Buchanan at Ace Books, for much appreciated advice and encouragement, and a vast supply of undeserved patience. Thanks to Eleanore Fox, who put up with a great deal of typing on the premises when I should have been helping her explore London. Thanks to my parents, Tom and Scottie Allen, who have always provided me with both familial and editorial support. But needless to say, thanks most of all to Isaac Asimov, to whom this book is dedicated. It would require a volume longer than this one to tell all of what we owe him. Suffice to say that, without him, there would be no Three Laws, no robots, no Spacers or Settlers--and no Inferno. We will miss him. --Roger MacBride Allen THE ORIGINAL LAWS OF ROBOTICS I A robot May Not Injure a Human Being, or, Through Inaction, Allow a Human Being to Come to Harm. II A Robot Must Obey the Orders Given It by Human Beings Except Where Such Orders Would Conflict with the First Law. III A Robot Must Protect Its Own Existence As Long as Such Protection Does Not Conflict with the First or Second Law THE NEW LAWS OF ROBOTICS I A Robot May Not Injure a Human Being. II A Robot Must Cooperate with Human Beings Except Where Such Cooperation Would Conflict with the First Law. III A Robot Must Protect Its Own Existence, As Long As Such Protection Does Not Conflict with the First Law. |
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