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E-grāmata: The Mechanical Mind in History

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Edited by (University of Stirling), Edited by (University of Essex), Edited by (University of Sussex)
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Scientists, artists, historians, and philosophers trace the evolution of the idea of intelligent machines, reflecting on the multidisciplinary quest to explain mind scientifically as a wholly mechanical process.

The idea of intelligent machines has become part of popular culture, and t tracing the history of the actual science of machine intelligence reveals a rich network of cross-disciplinary contributions—the unrecognized origins of ideas now central to artificial intelligence, artificial life, cognitive science, and neuroscience. In The Mechanical Mind in History, scientists, artists, historians, and philosophers discuss the multidisciplinary quest to formalize and understand the generation of intelligent behavior in natural and artificial systems as a wholly mechanical process.

The contributions illustrate the diverse and interacting notions that chart the evolution of the idea of the mechanical mind. They describe the mechanized mind as, among other things, an analogue system, an organized suite of chemical interactions, a self-organizing electromechanical device, an automated general-purpose information processor, and an integrated collection of symbol manipulating mechanisms. They investigate the views of pivotal figures that range from Descartes and Heidegger to Alan Turing and Charles Babbage, and they emphasize such frequently overlooked areas as British cybernetic and pre-cybernetic thinkers. The volume concludes with the personal insights of five highly influential figures in the field: John Maynard Smith, John Holland, Oliver Selfridge, Horace Barlow, and Jack Cowan.

Contributors:
Peter Asaro, Horace Barlow, Andy Beckett, Margaret Boden, Jon Bird, Paul Brown, Seth Bullock, Roberto Cordeschi, Jack Cowan, Ezequiel Di Paolo, Hubert Dreyfus, Andrew Hodges, Owen Holland, Jana Horakova, Philip Husbands, Jozef Kelemen, John Maynard Smith, Donald Michie, Oliver Selfridge, Michael Wheeler.
Preface vii
Introduction: The Mechanical Mind
1(18)
Philip Husbands
Michael Wheeler
Owen Holland
Charles Babbage and the Emergence of Automated Reason
19(22)
Seth Bullock
D'Arcy Thompson: A Grandfather of A-Life
41(20)
Margaret A. Boden
Alan Turing's Mind Machines
61(14)
Donald Michie
What Did Alan Turing Mean by ``Machine''?
75(16)
Andrew Hodges
The Ratio Club: A Hub of British Cybernetics
91(58)
Philip Husbands
Owen Holland
From Mechanisms of Adaptation to Intelligence Amplifiers: The Philosophy of W. Ross Ashby
149(36)
Peter M. Asaro
Gordon Pask and His Maverick Machines
185(28)
Jon Bird
Ezequiel Di Paolo
Santiago Dreaming
213(6)
Andy Beckett
Steps Toward the Synthetic Method: Symbolic Information Processing and Self-Organizing Systems in Early Artificial Intelligence Modeling
219(40)
Roberto Cordeschi
The Mechanization of Art
259(24)
Paul Brown
The Robot Story: Why Robots Were Born and How They Grew Up
283(24)
Jana Horakova
Jozef Kelemen
God's Machines: Descartes on the Mechanization of Mind
307(24)
Michael Wheeler
Why Heideggerian Al Failed and How Fixing It Would Require Making It More Heideggerian
331(42)
Hubert L. Dreyfus
An Interview with John Maynard Smith
373(10)
An Interview with John Holland
383(14)
An Interview with Oliver Selfridge
397(12)
An Interview with Horace Barlow
409(22)
An Interview with Jack Cowan
431(16)
About the Contributors 447(2)
Index 449