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From AI to cybernetics

AI and Society 5 (2):155-161 (1991)

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  1. Embodiments of Mind.Warren S. McCulloch - 1963 - MIT Press.
    Writings by a thinker—a psychiatrist, a philosopher, a cybernetician, and a poet—whose ideas about mind and brain were far ahead of his time. Warren S. McCulloch was an original thinker, in many respects far ahead of his time. McCulloch, who was a psychiatrist, a philosopher, a teacher, a mathematician, and a poet, termed his work “experimental epistemology.” He said, “There is one answer, only one, toward which I've groped for thirty years: to find out how brains work.” Embodiments of Mind, (...)
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  • Cybernetics.Norbert Wiener - 1948 - New York,: M.I.T. Press.
  • The human use of human beings.Norbert Wiener - 1950 - Boston,: Houghton Mifflin.
    As this book reveals, his vision was much more complex and interesting. He hoped that machines would release people from relentless and repetitive drudgery in order to achieve more creative pursuits.
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  • Science and the modern world.Alfred North Whitehead - 1927 - New York,: Free Press.
    Alfred North Whitehead's SCIENCE AND THE MODERN WORLD, originally published in 1925, redefines the concept of modern science.
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  • Meaning.Michael Polanyi - 1975 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Harry Prosch.
    Published very shortly before his death in February 1976, Meaning is the culmination of Michael Polanyi's philosophic endeavors.
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  • Behavior, purpose and teleology.Arturo Rosenblueth, Norbert Wiener & Julian Bigelow - 1943 - Philosophy of Science 10 (1):18-24.
    This essay has two goals. The first is to define the behavioristic study of natural events and to classify behavior. The second is to stress the importance of the concept of purpose.Given any object, relatively abstracted from its surroundings for study, the behavioristic approach consists in the examination of the output of the object and of the relations of this output to the input. By output is meant any change produced in the surroundings by the object. By input, conversely, is (...)
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  • Society of mind.Marvin Minsky - 1991 - Artificial Intelligence 48 (3):371-396.
  • The socratic and platonic basis of cognitivism.Hubert L. Dreyfus - 1988 - AI and Society 2 (2):99-112.
    Artificial Intelligence, and the cognitivist view of mind on which it is based, represent the last stage of the rationalist tradition in philosophy. This tradition begins when Socrates assumes that intelligence is based on principles and when Plato adds the requirement that these principles must be strict rules, not based on taken-for-granted background understanding. This philosophical position, refined by Hobbes, Descartes and Leibniz, is finally converted into a research program by Herbert Simon and Allen Newell. That research program is now (...)
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  • Steps to an Ecology of Mind.G. Bateson - 1972 - Jason Aronson.
  • Semantic Information Processing.Marvin Lee Minsky (ed.) - 1968 - MIT Press.
  • The Mind’s New Science: A History of the Cognitive Revolution.Howard Gardner - 1985 - Basic Books.
    The first full-scale history of cognitive science, this work addresses a central issue: What is the nature of knowledge?
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  • What Computers Can’T Do: The Limits of Artificial Intelligence.Hubert L. Dreyfus - 1972 - Harper & Row.
  • Science and the Modern World.Alfred North Whitehead - 1925 - Humana Mente 1 (3):380-385.
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  • Cybernetics.N. Wiener - 1952 - Scientia 46 (87):234.
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  • Meaning.Michael Polanyi & Harry Prosch - 1975 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 10 (2):123-125.
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  • The Human Use of Human Beings.Norbert Wiener - 1952 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 3 (9):91-92.
     
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  • What Computers Can't Do.H. Dreyfus - 1976 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 27 (2):177-185.
     
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