Total Number of Books in Collection Library : 127

 

Page number: 36
 

The Emperor's New Mind : Concerning Computers, Minds, and the Laws of Physics

Author: Roger Penrose
ISBN: 0192861980
Publisher: Oxford University Press         Place:
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Format: Paperback         # Pages: 640
Reader Rating: 3.5 (55 votes)
Release: 2002
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Summary: Some love it, some hate it, but "The Emperor's New Mind", physicist Roger Penrose's 1989 treatise attacking the foundations of strong artificial intelligence, is crucial for anyone interested in the history of thinking about AI and consciousness. Part survey of modern physics, part exploration of the philosophy of mind, the book is not for casual readers--though it's not overly technical, it rarely pauses to let the reader catch a breath. The overview of relativity and quantum theory, written by a master, is priceless and uncontroversial. The exploration of consciousness and AI, though, is generally considered as resting on shakier ground.
Penrose claims that there is an intimate, perhaps unknowable relation between quantum effects and our thinking, and ultimately derives his anti-AI stance from his proposition that some, if not all, of our thinking is non-algorithmic. Of course, these days we believe that there are other avenues to AI than traditional algorithmic programming; while he has been accused of setting up straw robots to knock down, this accusation is unfair. Little was then known about the power of neural networks and behavior-based robotics to simulate (and, some would say, "produce") intelligent problem-solving behavior. Whether these tools will lead to strong AI is ultimately a question of belief, not proof, and "The Emperor's New Mind" offers powerful arguments useful to believer and nonbeliever alike. "--Rob Lightner"


 

The Fabric of the Cosmos : Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality

Author: Brian Greene
ISBN: 0375727205
Publisher: Vintage         Place:
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Format: Paperback         # Pages: 592
Reader Rating: 4.5 (131 votes)
Release: 2005
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Summary: As a boy, Brian Greene read Albert Camus' "The Myth of Sisyphus" and was transformed. Camus, in Greene's paraphrase, insisted that the hero triumphs "by relinquishing everything beyond immediate experience." After wrestling with this idea, however, Greene rejected Camus and realized that his true idols were physicists; scientists who struggled "to assess life and to experience the universe at all possible levels, not just those that happened to be accessible to our frail human senses." His driving question in "The Fabric of the Cosmos", then, is fundamental: "What "is" reality?" Over sixteen chapters, he traces the evolving human understanding of the substrate of the universe, from classical physics to ten-dimensional M-Theory.
Assuming an audience of non-specialists, Greene has set himself a daunting task: to explain non-intuitive, mathematical concepts like String Theory, the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, and Inflationary Cosmology with analogies drawn from common experience. For the most part, he succeeds. His language reflects a deep passion for science and a gift for translating concepts into poetic images. When explaining, for example, the inability to see the higher dimensions inherent in string theory, Greene writes: "We don't see them because of the "way" we see…like an ant walking along a lily pad…we could be floating within a grand, expansive, higher-dimensional space."
For Greene, Rhodes Scholar and professor of physics and mathematics at Columbia University, speculative science is not always as thorough and successful. His discussion of teleportation, for example, introduces and then quickly tables a valuable philosophical probing of identity. The paradoxes of time travel, however, are treated with greater depth, and his vision of life in a three-brane universe is compelling and--to use his description for quantum reality--"weird."
In the final pages Greene turns from science fiction back to the fringes of science fact, and he returns with rigor to frame discoveries likely to be made in the coming decades. "We are, most definitely, still wandering in the jungle," he concludes. Thanks to Greene, though, some of the underbrush has been cleared. "--Patrick O'Kelley"


 

The Inflationary Universe: The Quest for a New Theory of Cosmic Origins

Author: Alan H. Guth
ISBN: 0201328402
Publisher: Perseus Books Group         Place:
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Format: Paperback         # Pages: 358
Reader Rating: 4.5 (27 votes)
Release: 1998
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Summary: Just about everyone in the scientific community accepts the theory that our universe began in a "big bang"--but that theory leaves numerous unanswered questions about why the cosmos formed in just the manner we observe today. In "The Inflationary Universe," physicist Alan Guth recounts his and others' struggle to expound a theory that could plug the gaps. The outcome is a theory of "inflation" that postulates that the universe underwent an incomprehensibly large expansion in the first fraction of a microsecond of its existence. With the perspective that only a first-person account could provide, "The Inflationary Universe" sheds light on a leading theory in humankind's continuing quest to understand the universe we live in.


 

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