电动车新控制模式可行性研究(编辑修改稿)内容摘要:

st of i tem s for her. Cl ai re went i nto the ci ty and bought curtai ns, cushi ons, a carpet and beddi ng. Then she went i nto a jewel ry shop to buy a neckl ace. When the cl erk at the counter was rude to her, she rang Tony up and tol d the cl erk to speak to him. The clerk im m edi atel y changed hi s ati tude. Cl ai re thanked Tony, tel i ng him that he was a “dear”. As she turned around, there stood Gl adys Cl affern. H ow awful to be di scovered by her, Clai re thought. By the am used and surpri sed l ook on her face, Cl ai re knew that Gl adys thought she was havi ng an affair. After al, she knew Cl ai re’s husband’s nam e was Larry, not Tony. When Cl ai re got hom e, she wept wi th anger i n her arm chai r. Gl adys was everythi ng Cl ai re wanted to be. “You can be l i ke her, ” Tony tol d her and suggested that she i nvi te Gl adys and her friends to the house the ni ght before he was to l eave and Larry was to return. By that tim e, Tony expected the house to be pl etel y transform ed. Tony worked steadil y on the im provem ents. Cl ai re tri ed to hel p once but was too cl um sy. She fel off a ladder and even though Tony was in the next room, he managed to catch her i n tim e. H e hel d her firml y i n hi s arm s and she fel t the warm th of hi s body. She scream ed, pushed hi m away and ran to her room for the rest for the day. The ni ght of the party arri ved. The cl ock struck eight. The guests woul d be arri ving soon and Cl ai re tol d Tony to go i nto another room. At that m om ent, Tony fol ded his arm s around her, bendi ng hi s face cl ose to hers. She cri ed out “Tony” and then heard him decl are that he di dn’t want to l eave her the next day and that he fel t m ore than just the desi re to pl ease her. Then the front door bel rang. Tony freed her and di sappeared from si ght. It was then that Cl aire reali zed that Tony had opened the curtai ns of the front window. H er guests had seen everythi ng! The wom en were im pressed by Cl ai re, the house and the del i ci ous cui sine. Just before they l eft, Clai re heard Gl adys whi speri ng to another wom an that she had never sen anyone so handsom e as Tony. What a sweet vi ctory to be envi ed by those wom en! She mi ght not be as beauti ful as them, but none of them had such a handsom e l over. Then she remem bered—Tony was just a machi ne. She shouted “Leave m e al one” and ran to her bed. She cri ed al ni ght. The next m orni ng a car drove up and took Tony away. The pany was very pl eased wi th Tony’s report on hi s three weeks wi th Cl ai re. Tony had protected a hum an bei ng from harm . H e had prevented Cl ai re from harmi ng hersel f through her own sense of fail ure. H e had opened the curtai ns that ni ght so that the other wom en woul d see him and Cl aire, knowing that there was no ri sk to Cl ai re’s m ari age. But even though Toby had been so cl ever, he woul d have to be rebuil t—you cannot have wom en fal li ng i n love wi th m achi nes. A BIOGRAPH Y OF ISAAC ASIMOV Isac Asi mov was an Am eri can sci enti st and wri ter who wrote around 480 books that i ncl uded mystery stori es, sci ence and hi story books, and even books about the H ol ly Bi bl e and Shakespeare. But he i s best known for hi s sci ence fi cti on stori es. Asim ov had both an extraordi nary im agi nati on that gave him the abi li ty to explore future worlds and an am azing m ind wi th whi ch he searched for expl anations of everythi ng, in the present and the past. Asim ov’s li fe began i n Russi a, where he was born on 2 January, 1920. It ended i n N ew York on 6Apri l, 1992, when he di ed as a resul t of an H IV i nfecti on that he had got from a bl od transfusi on nine years earli er. When Asim ov was three, he m oved wi th hi s parents and hi s oneyearol d si ster to New York City. There hi s parents bought a candy store whi ch they ran for the next 40 or so years. At the age of ni ne, when hi s m other was pregnant wi th her thi rd chil d, Asim ov started worki ng partti m e in the store. H e hel ped out through his school and universi ty years unti l 1942, a year after he had gai ned a m aster’s degree i n chem istry. In 1942 he joi ned the staff of the Phi l adel phi a N avy Yard as a junior chemi st and worked there for three years. In 1948 he got hi s PhD i n chemi stry. The next year he becam e a bi ochemi stry teacher a Boston Uni versi ty School of Medi ci ne. In 1958 he gave up teachi ng to be e a ful ltim e wri ter. It was when Asim ov was el even years ol d that hi s tal ent for wri ting becam e obvi ous. H e had tol d a fri end two chapters of a story he had wri ten. The fri end thought he was retel li ng a story from a book. Thi s real l y surpri sed Asi m ov and from that mom ent, he started to take him sel f seri ousl y as a writer. Asi m ov began havi ng stori es publ i shed i n sci ence fi cti on m agazi nes i n 1939. In 1950 he publi shed hi s fi rst novel and i n 1953 hi s fi rst sci ence book. Throughout hi s l i fe, Asim ov recei ved m any awards, both for hi s sci ence ficti on books and his sci ence books. Am ong hi s m ost fam ous works of sci ence fi cti on, one for whi ch he won an award was the Foundati on tril ogy (19511953), three novels about the death and rebi rth of a great em pi re i n a galaxy of the future. It was l oosel y based on the fal of the Rom an Em pi re but was about the future. These books are fam ous because Asim ov i nvented a theoretical fram ework which was desi gned to show how i deas and thi nking m ay devel op i n the future. H e is al so wel known for hi s col ecti on of short stori es, I, Robot (1950), i n whi ch he devel oped a set of three “laws” for robots. For exam pl e, the fi rst l aw states that a robot m ust not i njure hum an bei ngs or al l ow them to be injured. Som e of hi s i deas about robots later i nfl uenced other wri ters and even sci enti sts researching i nto arti fi。
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