Titre : |
Computers and common sense |
Type de document : |
texte imprimé |
Auteurs : |
Mortimer Taube (1910-1965), Auteur |
Editeur : |
New York : McGraw-Hill |
Année de publication : |
1963 |
Collection : |
McGraw-Hill paperbacks |
Sous-collection : |
Science, mathematics and engineering num. 62928 |
Importance : |
136 p. |
Présentation : |
ill. |
Format : |
20 cm |
Note générale : |
Index |
Langues : |
Anglais (eng) |
Mots-clés : |
Cybernetics
Artificial intelligence |
Index. décimale : |
681.3 Appareils et matériel de traitement de données. Informatique |
Résumé : |
The literature arising in academic circles and research organizations on the new "thinking machines" is staggering. "The class of machines described in this literature", writes Dr. Taube, "are supposedly able to translate languages, learns, make decisions, and, in short, carry out any intelligent operation that a human being is capable of carrying out. The various chapters of this book examine the evidence for the existence and the possible existence at some future time of such machines. |
Note de contenu : |
Summary :
1. Introduction : mechanization and formalization.
2. Possibility as a guide to research activity.
3. Mechanical translation.
4. Learning-machines.
5. The claims of linguistic analysis.
6. Man-machine relations.
7. Man-machine relations in defense systems.
8. Meaning as a continuum.
9. addendum : on scientific aberrations. |
Computers and common sense [texte imprimé] / Mortimer Taube (1910-1965), Auteur . - New York : McGraw-Hill, 1963 . - 136 p. : ill. ; 20 cm. - ( McGraw-Hill paperbacks. Science, mathematics and engineering; 62928) . Index Langues : Anglais ( eng)
Mots-clés : |
Cybernetics
Artificial intelligence |
Index. décimale : |
681.3 Appareils et matériel de traitement de données. Informatique |
Résumé : |
The literature arising in academic circles and research organizations on the new "thinking machines" is staggering. "The class of machines described in this literature", writes Dr. Taube, "are supposedly able to translate languages, learns, make decisions, and, in short, carry out any intelligent operation that a human being is capable of carrying out. The various chapters of this book examine the evidence for the existence and the possible existence at some future time of such machines. |
Note de contenu : |
Summary :
1. Introduction : mechanization and formalization.
2. Possibility as a guide to research activity.
3. Mechanical translation.
4. Learning-machines.
5. The claims of linguistic analysis.
6. Man-machine relations.
7. Man-machine relations in defense systems.
8. Meaning as a continuum.
9. addendum : on scientific aberrations. |
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