"Maverick" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bethke Bruce)Chapter 13. JanetA cool spring morning in Robot City. The black limousine rolled swiftly through the empty streets, nearly silent save for the soft thrumming of its electric motor and the gentle hiss of rubberoid tires on pavement. Inside the vehicle, Janet Anastasi sat in the passenger compartment, her nose buried in a sheaf of fax pages, while Basalom sat in the chauffeur’s compartment, jacked into the vehicle’s master control panel, driving. One of the advantages of being a robot with telesensory feeds was that Basalom could rotate his head 180 degrees and still keep an eye on the road. Confident that the vehicle was safely under control, Basalom swiveled around to look at Dr. Anastasi. He allocated every third nanosecond to introspection. Erecting an encrypted buffer without verbally Basalom gave up in defeat. A slight drop in voltage on pin 16-the positronic equivalent of a shrug-came through the data bus. “Well,” Basalom said out loud, “they got In the back seat, Dr. Anastasi peered over the top edge of the papers she was reading. “Did you say something to me, Basalom?” “No, madam. I was exchanging information with the vehicle’s onboard computer. ” “Oh. Very well. ” She looked back to the papers and then glanced out the side window. ‘. Basalom? How much longer ‘til we get to the Compass Tower?” Basalom called up an internal image of the city map, plotted their present position, and factored in the rate at which they were traveling.,. Approximately five minutes and twenty-three seconds, madam. ” Basalom managed to redirect what he was thinking into a null buffer and flush it before Personal Vehicle I had a chance to intercept the words. The limousine rolled on. A few blocks later, Janet folded the sheet she was reading, pursed her lips, and frowned. “Basalom?” “Yes, madam?” “You’ve been in fairly frequent contact with the city robots over the last few days, haven’t you?” “The term ‘frequent’ is an imprecise expression, madam. I have had 124 separate audio and commlink conversations at intervals ranging from 15 picoseconds to 6 hours. ” “Oh. Well, in your conversations, have you noticed that the robots seem a little… “ ‘Odd’ is a judgmental term, madam. In order to determine that behavior is odd, you must first establish a base level of normal behavior against which to judge. ” Janet wrinkled her nose in a frown. “I don’t understand. ” “Madam, since we have arrived here I have been unable to determine what is ‘normal’ behavior for these robots. Hence I am unable to adjudge anything as being ‘odd. ’ “ Dr. Anastasi smiled and shook her head. “I see. Serves me right for asking a vague question. Let’s try again. “Basalom, in your conversations with the local robots, have you noticed anything that might lead you to believe that the city supervisors have developed a sense of humor?” Basalom was silent a moment as he sorted through all his recorded sense impressions, searching for correlating patterns. “Madam, while I would prefer to build my judgment on a larger experience base-” “Based on the observations that I have made to date-” “I must conclude that the city supervisors have not developed a sense of humor-” “But I hasten to add that many of the city robots have developed significant aberrations and eccentricities. ” For a moment there was blessed silence on the data bus. Then the limousine’s thought stream kicked back in. Basalom fired off one more round of sampling pulses and then allowed himself a moment of pleasure. He checked his realtime clock. Close to a quarter-second had elapsed since he’d delivered his findings to Dr. Anastasi, and she was preparing to make a response. “Darn. I was hoping you’d say yes. ” She picked up the sheaf of fax pages and waved them at Basalom. “If you’d said that the supervisors were capable of intentional humor, I’d say that this was a pretty good practical joke. ” Dr. Anastasi bit her lower lip. “But if they’re completely Basalom swiveled his head around to face Dr. Anastasi and scaled his optics up to a higher magnification, but he was unable to make out the content of the fax sheets. “Serious about what, madam?” She looked at the papers again and then waved them at Basalom. “This is their proposed plan for modifying the city to suit the needs of the local inhabitants. It’s not just silly. It’s not just stupid. In fact, I think it even transcends ridiculous and scales the heights to pure idiocy. ” Basalom scanned the papers again,-but his optical character recognition routine still couldn’t read the words through the paper. “Madam?” Janet unfolded the papers and looked at them. “We have got to talk the supervisors out of this. It’s insulting. ” She peeled off a sheet and threw it aside. “Condescending. ” She peeled off another and threw it with greater vigor. “Degrading. ” She lifted the entire sheaf and threw it down on the seat beside her. “And possibly immoral. ” She looked up sharply. “Basalom, I need you to help me reach them. I can Confused potentials darted through Basalom’s brain. “Understand, madam? What’s to understand? Logic is logic. ” Dr. Anastasi caught a strand of her long blond hair between her fingers and began unconsciously twisting it. “Wrong, Basalom. Logic isn’t a universal constant, it’s a heuristic decision-making process rooted in the values, prejudices, and acquired conflict -resolution patterns of the decider. “For example, if I’d given you just a slightly stronger positive bias in your motivation circuit, you would in some situations come to exactly the opposite conclusion that you would come to now. Yet you’d still be just as certain that you’d come to the only logical conclusion. ” Dr. Anastasi smiled, in a hopeless sort of way, and looked at Basalom. “You, old friend, have got to help me figure out the underpinnings of the city supervisors’ logic. And we’ve got to do it in the next four minutes. ” The response was slow and sullen. Whaddaya want? Basalom broke off the link and physically disconnected himself from the control panel. There was a microscopic twitch-probably completely imperceptible to Dr. Anastasi-in the steering as Personal Vehicle One took over, but within a millisecond the vehicle was fully under control again. Satisfied, Basalom rotated his head to face Dr. Anastasi and switched into linear predictive mode. “Logic may not be a universal constant,” he began brusquely, “but the Three Laws are. To have maximum success with the city supervisors, mistress, you must couch your arguments in terms of the Laws of Robotics. “Here are the anomalies that I have noticed in City Supervisor Beta’s interpretation of the First Law… ” |
|
|