翻訳と辞書
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・ The Evil of the Day
・ The Evil One
・ The Evil Powers of Rock 'n' Roll
・ The Evil Queen (Once Upon a Time)
・ The Evil Stairs
・ The Evil That Men Do
・ The Evil That Men Do (Buffy novel)
・ The Evil That Men Do (film)
・ The Evil That Men Do (song)
・ The Evil That Warmen Do
・ The Evil Thereof (1913 film)
・ The Evil Thereof (1916 film)
・ The Evil Touch
・ The Evil Within
・ The Evil Within (disambiguation)
The Evitable Conflict
・ The Evolution (Made Men Music Group album)
・ The Evolution Control Committee
・ The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate
・ The Evolution of Chaos
・ The Evolution of Cooperation
・ The Evolution of Education Museum
・ The Evolution of God
・ The Evolution of Gospel
・ The Evolution of Human Sexuality
・ The Evolution of Katherine
・ The Evolution of Man
・ The Evolution of Melanism
・ The Evolution of Naval Weapons
・ The Evolution of Physics


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The Evitable Conflict : ウィキペディア英語版
The Evitable Conflict

"The Evitable Conflict" is a science fiction short story by Isaac Asimov. It first appeared in the June 1950 issue of ''Astounding Science Fiction'' and subsequently appeared in the collections ''I, Robot'' (1950), ''The Complete Robot'' (1982), and ''Robot Visions'' (1990). It features the character Stephen Byerley from the earlier story ''Evidence''.
==Plot summary==
Following on from the previous story 'Evidence', in the year 2052, Stephen Byerley has been elected World
Co-ordinator for a second term. He has been consulting the four other Regional Co-ordinators on various matters concerning activities in their geographic areas. In particular, he is concerned with their relationships with the Machines and any anti-Machine movements. He then asks Susan Calvin for her opinion.
They conclude that the Machines have generalized the First Law to mean "No machine may harm humanity; or, through inaction, allow humanity to come to harm." (This is similar to the Zeroth Law which Asimov developed in later novels.)
Byerley proposes, in effect a 'witchhunt', in which all anti-Machine movements, in particular the 'Society for Humanity', are outlawed. Any executive and technical appointments must require the signing of an anti-society oath. Calvin refuses her support; concluding that the "glitches" are deliberate acts by the Machines. They allow a small amount of harm to come to selected individuals in order to prevent a large amount of harm coming to humanity as a whole.
In effect, the Machines have decided that the only way to follow the First Law is to take control of humanity, which is one of the events that the three Laws are supposed to prevent.
Asimov returned to this theme in ''The Naked Sun'' and ''The Robots of Dawn'', in which the controlling influence is not a small conspiracy of Machines but instead the aggregate influence of many robots, each individually tasked to prevent harm.


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