The search for a theory of cognition : early mechanisms and new ideas
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Bibliographic Information
The search for a theory of cognition : early mechanisms and new ideas
(Value inquiry book series, v. 238)
Rodopi, 2011
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The book brings into relief the variety of approaches and disciplines that have informed the quest for a theory of cognition. The center of interest are the historical, geographical, and theoretical peripheries of classic AI's mainstream research program. The twelve chapters bring back into focus the variety of strategies and theoretical questions that researchers explored while working toward a scientific theory of cognition and pre-cognition.
The volume is organized in four parts, each one including three essays. The first one deals with cybernetics, the approach that may be considered as the most important periphery of classic AI research. The second part focuses on the geographical periphery of AI research. It examines how the theories and techniques developed on AI's home ground were translated into countries with different cultures and traditions: Italy, France, and the Soviet Union. The third part focuses on AI's periphery understood in the cultural and historical meaning of the term. It contains essays that locate some of the central concepts of AI, like representation and computability, within a broader philosophical (Descartes, Aristotle, Leibniz) and technical background (programming theory and practice). The fourth and final part of the volume is focused directly on the limitation of Turing's classic computability theory and its possible alternatives, some of which were studied in the early years of AI's research (e.g. Ashby's re-entrant information model), while others have been intensely studied in recent times (quantum automata).
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Douglas Hofstadter: Foreword
Stefano Franchi and Francesco Bianchini: Introduction: On the Historical Dynamics of Cognitive Science: a View from the Periphery
The cybernetic suburb
Stefan Franchi: Life, Death, and Resurrection of the Homeostat
Peter Galison: The Ontology of the Enemy: Norbert Wiener and the Cybernetic Vision
Peter Asaro: Computers as Models of the Mind: On Simulations, Brains, and the Design of Computers
AI's peripheries
Claudio Pogliano: At the Periphery of the Rising Empire: the Case of Italy (1945-1968)
Patrice Maniglier: Processing Cultures: "Structuralism" in the History of Artificial Intelligence
Slava Gerovitch: Artificial Intelligence With a National Face: American and Soviet Cultural Metaphors for Thought
Margins of computations
Francesco Bianchini: The Cartesian-Leibnizian Turing Test
Maurizio Matteuzzi: Turing Computability and Leibniz Computability
Christopher M. Kelty: Logical Instruments: Regular Expressions, AI, and Thinking about Thinking
At the thresholds of computability
Solomon Feferman: Goedel, Nagel, Minds, and Machines
Rossella Lupacchini: Entangling Effective Procedures: From Logic Machines to Quantum Automata
Giorgio Sandri: Turing 1948 vs. Goedel 1972
Works Cited
Index
About the Contributors
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