Possible Minds: 25 Ways of Looking at AI
Appearance
Introduction: On the Promise and Peril of AI
- Before AI, there was cybernetics - the idea of automatic, self-regulating control, laid out in Norbert Wiener's foundational text of 1948.
- John Cage had picked up on McLuhan's idea that by inventing electronic technologies we had externalized our central nervous system - that is, our minds - and that we now had to presume that "there's only one mind, the one we all share."
- JZ Young "Doubt and Certainty in Science" - We create tools and we mold ourselves through our use of them.
- Warren Weaver and Claude Shannon "Recent Contributions to the Mathematical Theory of Communication" - "The word communication will be used here in a very broad sense to include all of the procedures by which one minds may affect another. This, of course, involves not only written and oral speech, but also music, the pictorial arts, the theater, the ballet, and in fact all human behavior."
- John McCarty disliked Wiener and refused to use the term "cybernetics", creating the term "artificial intelligence" instead.
- While Von Neumann, Shannon, and Wiener were concerned about systems of control and communication of observed systems, Warren McCullough wanted to include mind. He turned to cultural anthropologists Gregory Bateson and Margaret Mead to make the connection to the social sciences.
- Bateson, in particular, was increasingly talking about patterns and processes, or "the pattern that connects." He called for a new kind of systems ecology in which organisms and the environment in which they live are one and the same and should be considered as a single circuit.
- By the early 1970s the cybernetics of observed systems - first order cybernetics - move to the cybernetics of observing systems - second order cybernetics, or "the Cybernetics of Cybernetics".
- Cybernetics, rather than disappearing, was becoming metabolized into everything, so we no longer saw it as a separate, distinct new discipline. And there it remains, hiding in plain sight.
- "Einstein, Gertrude Stein, Wittgenstein, and Frankenstein":
- Einstein: The revolution in 20th C physics
- Gertrude Stein: The first writer who made integral to her work the idea of an indeterminate and discontinuous universe. Words represented neither character nor activity.
- Wittgenstein: "The limits of my language mean the limits of my world." - the end of the distinction between observer and observed.
- Frankenstein: Cybernetics, AI, robotics.
- Wallace Stevens "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird" - not meant to be a collection of epigrams or of ideas, but of sensations. An exercise in perspectivism, consisting of short, separate sections, each of which mentions blackbirds in some way. The poem is about his own imagination; it concerns what he attends to.
- He knew the danger was not machines beoming more like humans, but humans being treated like machines.