The Descent of Artificial Intelligence: A Deep History of an Idea 400 Years in the Making
Autor Kevin Donnellyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 mai 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780822947967
ISBN-10: 082294796X
Pagini: 384
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: University of Pittsburgh Press
Colecția University of Pittsburgh Press
ISBN-10: 082294796X
Pagini: 384
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: University of Pittsburgh Press
Colecția University of Pittsburgh Press
Recenzii
“The Descent of Artificial Intelligence is an eye-opening take on the history of AI. This is a sophisticated piece of scholarship that shows us just how strongly AI innovation is connected to our scientific fascination with people. It is a must-read for all who want to look beyond the AI hype.”
—Mona Sloane, University of Virginia
“In The Descent of Artificial Intelligence, Kevin Padraic Donnelly recovers a deep history of AI, going beyond the usual emphasis on computers to focus on the ways our shifting perceptions of intelligence have, over several centuries, led some people to believe it can be modeled in ways that technology can handle. The result is an ambitious and highly readable account that puts the ongoing debates about AI in a new light.”
—Chris Renwick, University of York
“Confronted with the complexity of human minds and human social forms, the philosophers, economists, sociologists, and engineers whose history Donnelly traces here responded by imagining, and convincing the rest of us to imagine, that things like ‘minds’ and ‘intelligence’ and ‘society’ were things that social science could easily understand and measure. This is a brilliantly researched and argued book, an absolute must-read for anyone interested in understanding not only where we are today but how we got here.”
—Eric Hayot, Director of the Center for Humanities and Information, Penn State University
—Mona Sloane, University of Virginia
“In The Descent of Artificial Intelligence, Kevin Padraic Donnelly recovers a deep history of AI, going beyond the usual emphasis on computers to focus on the ways our shifting perceptions of intelligence have, over several centuries, led some people to believe it can be modeled in ways that technology can handle. The result is an ambitious and highly readable account that puts the ongoing debates about AI in a new light.”
—Chris Renwick, University of York
“Confronted with the complexity of human minds and human social forms, the philosophers, economists, sociologists, and engineers whose history Donnelly traces here responded by imagining, and convincing the rest of us to imagine, that things like ‘minds’ and ‘intelligence’ and ‘society’ were things that social science could easily understand and measure. This is a brilliantly researched and argued book, an absolute must-read for anyone interested in understanding not only where we are today but how we got here.”
—Eric Hayot, Director of the Center for Humanities and Information, Penn State University
Notă biografică
Kevin Padraic Donnelly is an associate professor of history at Alvernia University. His scholarship has appeared in the British Journal for the History of Science, History of Science, PUBLIC Journal, and History of Meteorology, and he has published several chapters in edited volumes on the role of statistics and science in shaping social thought. His previous book is a well-acclaimed history of the pioneering nineteenth-century statistician Adolphe Quetelet.