Zusammenfassungen
An entertaining book on all aspects of intelligent machines, with many illustrations, photographs, and Interviews with people involved in AI and related fields. In particular, topics of computation, Turing machines, and their application to human thought are discussed.
Von Rolf Pfeifer, Christian Scheier im Buch Understanding Intelligence (1999) im Text The Study of Intelligence auf Seite 33In The Age of Intelligent Machines, inventor and visionary computer scientist Raymond Kurzweil probes the past, present, and future of artificial intelligence, from its earliest philosophical and mathematical roots to tantalizing glimpses of 21st-century machines with superior intelligence and truly prodigious speed and memory. Generously illustrated and easily accessible to the nonspecialist, this book provides the background needed for a full understanding of the enormous scientific potential represented by intelligent machines as well as their equally profound philosophic, economic, and social implications. Running alongside Kurzweil's historical and scientific narrative are 23 articles examining contemporary issues in artificial intelligence. Raymond Kurzweil is the founder and chairman of Kurzweil Applied Intelligence and the Kurzweil Reading Machine division of Xerox. He was the principal developer of the first print-to-speech reading machine for the blind and other significant advances in artificial intelligence technology.
Von Klappentext im Buch The Age of Intelligent Machines (1990) What is artificial intelligence? At its essence, it is another way of answering a central question that has been debated by scientists, philosophers, and theologians for thousands of years: How does the human brain--three pounds of ordinary matter--give rise to thought? With this question in mind, inventor and visionary computer scientist Raymond Kurzweil probes the past, present, and future of artificial intelligence, from its earliest philosophical and mathematical roots through today's moving frontier, to tantalizing glimpses of 21st-century machines with superior intelligence and truly prodigious speed and memory.
Lavishly illustrated and easily accessible to the nonspecialist, The Age of Intelligent Machines provides the background needed for a full understanding of the enormous scientific potential represented by intelligent machines and of their equally profound philosophic, economic, and social implications. It examines the history of efforts to understand human intelligence and to emulate it by building devices that seem to act with human capabilities.
In a sweeping approach reflective of his intimate knowledge of the subject, Kurzweil systematically builds on the great landmarks of human intellect. He weaves together the singular achievements of such major thinkers as Plato, Euclid, Newton, Babbage, Einstein, von Neumann, and Wittgenstein to provide an orderly and comprehensive understanding of the impact intelligent machines will have on the world as it enters the third millenium.
Running alongside Kurzweil's historical and scientific narrative, are 23 articles examining contemporary issues in artificial intelligence by such luminaries as Daniel Dennett, Sherry Turkle, Douglas Hofstadter, Marvin Minsky, Seymour Papert, Edward Feigenbaum, Allen Newell, and George Gilder.
Von Klappentext im Buch The Age of Intelligent Machines (1990) Lavishly illustrated and easily accessible to the nonspecialist, The Age of Intelligent Machines provides the background needed for a full understanding of the enormous scientific potential represented by intelligent machines and of their equally profound philosophic, economic, and social implications. It examines the history of efforts to understand human intelligence and to emulate it by building devices that seem to act with human capabilities.
In a sweeping approach reflective of his intimate knowledge of the subject, Kurzweil systematically builds on the great landmarks of human intellect. He weaves together the singular achievements of such major thinkers as Plato, Euclid, Newton, Babbage, Einstein, von Neumann, and Wittgenstein to provide an orderly and comprehensive understanding of the impact intelligent machines will have on the world as it enters the third millenium.
Running alongside Kurzweil's historical and scientific narrative, are 23 articles examining contemporary issues in artificial intelligence by such luminaries as Daniel Dennett, Sherry Turkle, Douglas Hofstadter, Marvin Minsky, Seymour Papert, Edward Feigenbaum, Allen Newell, and George Gilder.
Kapitel
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Nicht erwähnte Begriffe | Chatbot, Dienste-Plattform, Digitalisierung, Protokoll-Plattform, Schule, Zellmembran |
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Zeitleiste
24 Erwähnungen
- Reflections on Stephen Wolfram's 'A New Kind of Science' (Ray Kurzweil)
- Mind as Machine - A History of Cognitive Science (Margaret A. Boden)
- The End of Work - The Decline of the Global Labor Force and the Dawn of the Post-Market Era (Jeremy Rifkin) (1995)
- Theories of the Information Society - 4th Edition (Frank Webster) (1995)
- Understanding Intelligence (Rolf Pfeifer, Christian Scheier) (1999)
- The Age of Spiritual Machines - When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence (Ray Kurzweil) (1999)
- LOG IN 2/1999 (1999)
- Können Computer denken? - Oder: Wonach genau fragt man eigentlich, wenn man fragt, ob Computer denken können? (Reinhard Golecki) (1999)
- The Religion of Technology - The Divinity of Man and the Spirit of Invention (David F. Noble) (1999)
- Children and Computer Technology - Volume 10, Number 2 - Fall/Winter 2000 of "The Future of Children" (2000)
- 5. Use of Computer Technology to Help Students with Special Needs
- Emergence - The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software (Steven Johnson) (2001)
- Erinnern und Vergessen - Blackbox Gedächtnis - NZZ Folio 12/01 (2001)
- Alan Turing - Life and Legacy of a Great Thinker (Christof Teuscher) (2003)
- The Singularity Is Near - when humans transcend biology (Ray Kurzweil) (2005)
- Radical Evolution - The Promise and Peril of Enhancing Our Minds, Our Bodies - and What It Means to Be Human (Joel Garreau) (2006)
- The Allure of Machinic Life - Cybernetics, Artificial Life, and the New AI (Bradford Books) (John Johnston) (2008)
- Transformative Approaches to New Technologies and Student Diversity in Futures Oriented Classrooms - Future Proofing Education (Leonie Rowan, Chris Bigum) (2012)
- 3. Edges, Exponentials and Education - Disenthralling the Digital (Chris Bigum)
- Critics of Digitalisation - Warners, Sceptics, Scaremongers, Apocalypticists - 20 Portraits (Otto Peters) (2012)
- Present Shock - When Everything Happens Now (Douglas Rushkoff) (2013)
- How We Got to Now - Six Innovations That Made the Modern World (Steven Johnson) (2014)
- Silicon Valley - Was aus dem mächtigsten Tal der Welt auf uns zukommt (Christoph Keese) (2014)
- Digital Sociology (Deborah Lupton) (2015)
- The Myth Of Artificial Intelligence - Why Computers Can’t Think The Way We Do (Erik J. Larson) (2021)
- DELFI 2022 - Die 20. Fachtagung Bildungstechnologien der Gesellschaft für Informatik e.V. (Peter A. Henning, Michael Striewe, Matthias Wölfel) (2022)
- Finnish 5th and 6th graders’ misconceptions about artificial intelligence (Pekka Mertala, Janne Fagerlund) (2024)
Co-zitierte Bücher
Die Debatte um künstliche Intelligenz, Bewusstsein und die Gesetze der Physik
The Emperor’s New Mind
(Roger Penrose) (1989)Sind Computer die besseren Menschen ?
Weizenbaum contra Haefner
( Klaus Haefner, Michael Haller, Joseph Weizenbaum) (1990)Mirror Worlds
(David Gelernter) (1991)Mind Children
(Hans Moravec)No Sense of Place
The Impact of Electronic Media on Social Behaviour
(Joshua Meyrowitz) (1985)(Manuel Castells) (2009)
Computation and Human Experience
(Philip E. Agre) (1997)Volltext dieses Dokuments
The Age of Intelligent Machines: Gesamtes Buch als Volltext (: , 32670 kByte) | |
What is AI, Anyway?: Artikel als Volltext (: , 605 kByte) |
Bibliographisches
Beat und dieses Buch
Beat hat dieses Buch während seiner Assistenzzeit an der ETH Zürich ins Biblionetz aufgenommen. Die bisher letzte Bearbeitung erfolgte während seiner Zeit am Institut für Medien und Schule. Beat besitzt kein physisches, aber ein digitales Exemplar. (das er aber aus Urheberrechtsgründen nicht einfach weitergeben darf). Aufgrund der vielen Verknüpfungen im Biblionetz scheint er sich intensiver damit befasst zu haben.