Introducing a cast of known and unknown characters, George B. Dyson traces the course of the information revolution, illuminating the lives and work of visionaries - from the time of Thomas Hobbes to the time of John von Neumann - who foresaw the development of artificial intelligence, artificial life, and artificial mind. This book derives both its title and its outlook from Samuel Butler's 1863 essay "Darwin Among the Machines." Observing the beginnings of miniaturization, self-reproduction, and telecommunication among machines, Butler predicted that nature's intelligence, only temporarily subservient to technology, would resurface to claim our creations as her own. Weaving a cohesive narrative among his brilliant predecessors, Dyson constructs a straightforward, convincing, and occasionally frightening view of the evolution of mind in the global network, on a level transcending our own. Dyson concludes that we are in the midst of an experiment that echoes the prehistory of human intelligence and the origins of life. Just as the exchange of coded molecular instructions brought life as we know it to the early earth's primordial soup, and as language and mind combined to form the culture in which we live, so, in the digital universe, are computer programs and worldwide networks combining to produce an evolutionary theater in which the distinctions between nature and technology are increasingly obscured. Nature, believes Dyson, is on the side of the machines.
As timely now as it was when it was first published in 1997, Darwin Among the Machines tells the story of humankind’s long journey into the digital age.
This book offers a cogent account of what such a move does to our understanding of the nature of learning, rationality, and intelligence.
This book focuses on two of Samuel Butler's more intriguing writings concerning machine evolution and intelligence, including his most famous piece "Darwin Among the Machines" and his chapter in Erewhon on "The Book of the Machines.
Julian H. Bigelow to Frank Aydelotte, July 3, I947, IAS. Bernetta A. Miller to Frank Aydelotte, September 19, 1947. IAS; Morris Rubinolf, interview with Richard Mertz. Freeman Dyson, comments atJulian Bigelow memorial, March 29. 2.003.
Optimistic and challenging, thought-provoking and engaging, The Age of Spiritual Machines is the ultimate guide on our road into the next century.
A FINANCIAL TIMES BOOK OF THE YEAR 2020 How did we end up in a world where humans coexist with technologies we can no longer fully control or understand? George...
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Li in that case could not possibly be “the origin of activity,” as Confucianism taught. “I do not believe [the Chinese] to be so stupid or absurd,” Leibniz wrote, as to attribute “the active power, and the perception that regulates this ...
In this book the authors provide a chronological survey and comprehensive archive of the early history of thought about machine self-reproduction and evolution.
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