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Mind Children - The Future of Robot and Human Intelligence (Paperback, Revised)
Loot Price: R791
Discovery Miles 7 910
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Mind Children - The Future of Robot and Human Intelligence (Paperback, Revised)
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Imagine attending a lecture at the turn of the twentieth century in
which Orville Wright speculates about the future of transportation,
or one in which Alexander Graham Bell envisages satellite
communications and global data banks. Mind Children, written by an
internationally renowned roboticist, offers a comparable
experience-a mind-boggling glimpse of a world we may soon share
with our artificial progeny. Filled with fresh ideas and insights,
this book is one of the most engaging and controversial visions of
the future ever written by a serious scholar. Hans Moravec
convincingly argues that we are approaching a watershed in the
history of life-a time when the boundaries between biological and
postbiological intelligence will begin to dissolve. Within forty
years, Moravec believes, we will achieve human equivalence in our
machines, not only in their capacity to reason but also in their
ability to perceive, interact with, and change their complex
environment. The critical factor is mobility. A computer rooted to
one place is doomed to static iterations, whereas a machine on the
prowl, like a mobile organism, must evolve a richer fund of
knowledge about an ever-changing world upon which to base its
actions. In order to achieve anything near human equivalence,
robots will need, at the least, the capacity to perform ten
trillion calculations per second. Given the trillion-fold increase
in computational power since the end of the nineteenth century, and
the promise of exotic technologies far surpassing the now-familiar
lasers and even superconductors, Moravec concludes that our
hardware will have no trouble meeting this forty-year timetable.
But human equivalence is just the beginning, not an upper bound.
Once the tireless thinking capacity of robots is directed to the
problem of their own improvement and reproduction, even the sky
will not limit their voracious exploration of the universe. In the
concluding chapters Moravec challenges us to imagine with him the
possibilities and pitfalls of such a scenario. Rather than warning
us of takeover by robots, the author invites us, as we approach the
end of this millennium, to speculate about a plausible, wonderful
postbiological future and the ways in which our minds might
participate in its unfolding.
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