Machines Who Think: A Personal Inquiry Into the History and Prospects of Artificial IntelligencePamela McCorduck first went among the artificial intelligentsia when the field was fresh and new, and asked the scientists engaged in it what they were doing and why. She saw artificial intelligence as the scientific apotheosis of one of the most enduring, glorious, often amusing, and sometimes alarming, traditions of human culture: the endless fascination with artifacts that think. Machines Who Think was translated into many languages, became an international cult classic, and stayed in print for nearly twenty years. Now, Machines Who Think is back, along with an extended addition that brings the field up to date in the last quarter century, including its scientific and its public faces. McCorduck shows how, from a slightly dubious fringe science, artificial intelligence has moved slowly (though not always steadily) to a central place in our everyday lives, and how it will be even more crucial as the World Wide Web moves into its next generation. |
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Page 43
... simple ones , they need not then resemble any simple ideas , since in the course of becoming complex , novel combinations appear . His laws of association proposed the means by which this transformation takes place : resemblance or ...
... simple ones , they need not then resemble any simple ideas , since in the course of becoming complex , novel combinations appear . His laws of association proposed the means by which this transformation takes place : resemblance or ...
Page 90
... simple than organic neu- rons and synapses . But that was in the future , and for 1943 , " A Logical Calculus " was ... simple ( though not so simple as the state of neurophysiology then led them to believe ) , and the interac- tions ...
... simple than organic neu- rons and synapses . But that was in the future , and for 1943 , " A Logical Calculus " was ... simple ( though not so simple as the state of neurophysiology then led them to believe ) , and the interac- tions ...
Page 158
... simple subprocesses had been organized in a highly conditional and interactive way , and the system showed that , working in con- cert , a set of simple subprocesses that were easy to understand could lead to genuinely intelligent ...
... simple subprocesses had been organized in a highly conditional and interactive way , and the system showed that , working in con- cert , a set of simple subprocesses that were easy to understand could lead to genuinely intelligent ...
Contents
Beginnings | 1 |
From Energy to Information | 37 |
The Machinery of Wisdom | 59 |
Copyright | |
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Machines Who Think: A Personal Inquiry into the History and Prospects of ... Pamela McCorduck No preview available - 2004 |
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Allen Newell answer artificial intelligence artificial-intelligence asked automata Babbage believe brain called Carnegie chess chess-playing Claude Shannon cognitive complex computer science DARPA Dartmouth Conference DENDRAL developed Dreyfus Dreyfus's early Edward Feigenbaum effort engineering example experience fact Feigenbaum field formal gence goals Herbert Simon Hubert Dreyfus human idea information-processing intellectual intelligent behavior interesting John McCarthy John von Neumann kind knowledge laboratory later learning Logic Theorist look Marvin Minsky mathematics McCulloch means mechanical mind move natural language Neumann Newell and Simon notion organization paper philosophers play problem solving proposed psychology published puter questions RAND reason robot scientific scientists seems sense Seymour Papert Shakey Shannon Shaw simulating social sort Stanford symbolic talk tasks theorem theory there's things thinking machine thought tion trying Turing Turing's understanding University Weizenbaum Wiener write